
Age: 74
male
Martin Brest (born August 8, 1951) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer. After his feature debut, Going in Style (1979), he directed the action comedies Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and Midnight Run (1988), which were critical and commercial hits. He then directed Scent of a Woman (1992), starring Al Pacino, who won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance, and earned Brest nominations for Best Director and Best Picture. He followed it with Meet Joe Black (1998), which received mixed reviews. Brest's next film was Gigli (2003). After disagreements between Brest and Revolution Studios, creative control was taken from him, resulting in a radically re-written and re-shot version of the original film being released, which became his first and only unprofitable film and, in fact, a major box-office bomb and was widely panned. It remains his last film to date. Description above from the Wikipedia article Martin Brest, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

In a different timeline, after suffering too many losses in all his long-living, a man named Logan, aka WOLVERINE, decides to go it alone as a drifter and vigilante. Little does Logan know that he's being watched, along with other Mutants, by a psychic paralyzed professor named Charles Xavier, aka PROFESSOR X. After rescuing two teenagers [who got exposed to a Mutant serum giving them powers (eventually becoming Rogue and Iceman)], all three of them get recruited by Professor X to join a legion of Mutants who vowed to protect the world from any threat alike, especially the legion of evil Mutants called the Brotherhood, led by Magneto (a former friend of Charles who became hardened by losses like Logan). An enemy from another dimension is out destroy all Mutants, including the X-Men and the Brotherhood. It'll have elements from the comics, the original movies, and the cartoon from the '90s.


