The status quo is shattered with the arrival of Laura (Dafne Keen), a young girl with powers strikingly similar to Logan's. Created in a lab from Logan's DNA, Laura represents the very thing Logan has spent his life running from: his legacy as a weapon.
The story picks up in 2029, a desolate time when no new mutants have been born in 25 years. We find a weary Logan working as a limo driver near the Mexican border, his legendary healing factor failing as the adamantium on his bones slowly poisons him. He isn’t saving the world anymore; he’s just trying to save enough money for a boat so he can care for an ailing, senile Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart) in peace. Redemption in the Form of X-23
Unlike standard superhero fare, Logan leans heavily into mature themes: Review: "Logan" (2017) - GEOFF COX
Released in 2017, Logan didn't just end an era for Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine; it redefined what a comic book movie could be. Directed by James Mangold, this R-rated swan song traded colorful spandex and world-ending portals for the gritty, dust-caked atmosphere of a neo-Western. A Grim Vision of the Future