Adamantium is indestructible, right?
If so, how could Wolverine's claws be cut?
Show me the holes!
If so, how could Wolverine's claws be cut?
Show me the holes!
Adamantium is referred to as indestructible but all that really means is that a method for destroying it is unknown.
shareI figured the sword was adamantium and heating it up gave it the extra boost needed to chop off his claws.
shareFirst of all Admantium can't cut through Admantium. And if you think about it logically, the heated sword would actually be weaker than Wolverine 's claws because when any metal is heated it becomes softer and more malleable.
shareI get that, but if you remember, adamantium is supposed to be liquid in it's natural state. How many metal liquids are virtually indestructible when cooled?
shareI get that, but if you remember, adamantium is supposed to be liquid in it's natural state. How many metal liquids are virtually indestructible when cooled?
I know we're discussing pseudoscience, but even in fiction there needs to be rules set and followed in order to make the thing believable and enjoyable.
but if you remember, adamantium is supposed to be liquid in it's natural state.
Didn't he also say that if you manage to find it in it's natural, liquid state you had to keep it that way?
shareDidn't he also say that if you manage to find it in it's natural, liquid state you had to keep it that way?
In the comics it is an alloy so (if the movies had stuck to that) the process of creating it gives you the hot liquid "raw" (on the atomic level, I guess?) form but once it cools it's virtually indestructible.
I don't think the baddies in this simply heated up the adamantium sword.
Also, this: http://www.imdb.com/board/bd0000130/nest/263626706
Well you can't technically destroy anything really...
shareExactly. This whole movie is just one plot hole after another. The biggest being that there is no way they could cut off his claws because the metal is indestructible. They explain it in X2. If you find adamantium in it's rare liquid form, you have to keep it that way by keeping it hot. Once it cools, it's indestructible.
Also, why does drilling where the claws used to be give someone else Wolverine's powers?? That has never been the case. Mutants desperate to be normal would just have people drill their bones.
Plain and simple, this is the worst comic book movie I've ever seen. And I LOVE the X-men franchise more than any franchise out there.
I throughly agree. It is a terrible film.
shareExactly. This whole movie is just one plot hole after another. The biggest being that there is no way they could cut off his claws because the metal is indestructible. They explain it in X2. If you find adamantium in it's rare liquid form, you have to keep it that way by keeping it hot. Once it cools, it's indestructible.
Also, why does drilling where the claws used to be give someone else Wolverine's powers?? That has never been the case. Mutants desperate to be normal would just have people drill their bones.
Adamantium being indestructible is not opinion, it is fact. The comic book writers even had to invent their own metal because there is no "indestructible" metal in reality. And if drilling bone marrow just automatically transfers mutant abilities (which it never has) then why haven't we seen anyone else do this? Who needs Rogue's powers when you can permanently keep as many powers as you can get your hands on? The idea is utter stupidity. In fact the idea of it would be enough to practically destroy the X-men (and any other comic book) universe. This whole movie is not only filled with the plot holes I've mentioned before, but with many others as well. How did the human henchman stay on the train without an adamantium skeleton? With a little pocket knife? How exactly do you explain Mariko, a tiny woman knocking an adamantium robot suit over a cliff? The fact that the words "Adamantium Robot suit" were just used in order to discuss this movie just proves how stupid it is. And that's not even scratching the surface.
shareAdamantium being indestructible is not opinion, it is fact. The comic book writers even had to invent their own metal because there is no "indestructible" metal in reality.
And if drilling bone marrow just automatically transfers mutant abilities (which it never has) then why haven't we seen anyone else do this?
Who needs Rogue's powers when you can permanently keep as many powers as you can get your hands on? The idea is utter stupidity. In fact the idea of it would be enough to practically destroy the X-men (and any other comic book) universe.
This whole movie is not only filled with the plot holes I've mentioned before, but with many others as well.
How did the human henchman stay on the train without an adamantium skeleton?
How exactly do you explain Mariko, a tiny woman knocking an adamantium robot suit over a cliff?
Forgetting what the case is with the comics, (I know, it's difficult for someone like you to grasp, but these are different universes and thus are not beholden to one another) unless it has been shown in the movie universe
I already explained to you that it was a NEW technique
the sentinels in the Rogue Cut of DOFP were working on replicating Rogue's power so they could steal powers (as opposed to just mimic them) so it's likely a matter of time before someone else independently develops something like that.
The problem is that you do not seem to understand what a plot hole is. So far you've used it only to refer to things you don't like/didn't understand.
Now, Mariko did knock into Yashida when he was getting ready to cut off Wolverine's claws (this was when Wolverine was restrained) so maybe that's what you're thinking of.
They specifically state it in X-men 2! What more proof do you need! ... and it's fact in the movies. Get over it.
It is fact in the comics
Oh it all makes sense now. It's NEW. That makes it ok. No, the idea is still stupid. Now anyone can be a mutant if they want? Anyone can get rid of their powers if they want? Rogue's powers are meaningless? It's ridiculous. Doesn't matter when the idea was created if its a crappy idea for a movie.
Now that at least makes sense. They NEEDED Rogue in order to replicate powers. I hate that he was able to just able to recreate this with a drill.
Definition of Plot Hole:"A plot hole or plot error is a gap or inconsistency in a storyline that goes against the flow of logic established by the story's plot, or constitutes a blatant omission of relevant information regarding the plot."
My question is, would the adamantium part of the claws grow back? Or he's stuck with organic claws now?
shareMy question is, would the adamantium part of the claws grow back? Or he's stuck with organic claws now?
Yes, Adamantium is indestructible, which is why the ending makes no goddamned sense. That should not have happened.
shareStryker says in X2 that once you manage to turn adamantium to it's liquid form, you have to keep it that way because once it solidifies, it is indestructible. He's had that adamantium in molten form at his Alkali Lake base ever since the original Weapon X program he diod on Logan, and he later used it on Yuriko (Lady Deathstrike).
The idea here is that adamantium can be cut by heated adamantium. Yes, it goes against what Stryker said in X2, but hey, perhaps Stryker had never tried it before! They did the same thing in Xmen Origins: Wolverine, where Stryker had an adamantium bullet which is what penetrated Logan's adamantium skull and gave him amnesia. Fans hated it, though, because it was a silly idea.
I love The Wolverine, but the giant adamantium robot at the end was the weak point in an otherwise fantastic film.
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I am not a fan. I just happen to enjoy movies. Fans are embarrassing.
The sword was also adamantium and it was heated up. It's literally pure science
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