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ROOM TO GROW: Starting in 2000, Hugh Jackman has sliced, diced and used his healing factor across nine (!) movies. We take a look at his evolution from baby-faced anti-hero to grizzled veteran. X-MEN (2000) Jackman dons our hero's adamantium claws for the first time, looking svelte and fresh-faced.Everett Collection
X2: X-MEN UNITED (2002) Returning in the sequel, Jackman is still sporting a slim physique, but his hair more closely resembles the iconic comic book coif. Kerry Hayes
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X-MEN: THE LAST STAND (2006) A significantly buffer Jackman arrives in the final movie of the original "X" trilogy. 0th Century Fox Film Corp
X-MEN ORIGINS: WOLVERINE (2009) His first solo appearance is a critical bomb, but a more mature Jackman begins to emerge.Everett Collection
X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (2014) Seven movies in and Jackman looks better than ever in this time-bending entry into the canon.Everett Collection
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LOGAN (2017) The finale of the trio of solo Wolverine movies -- and the alleged end of Jackman in the role -- finds our hero in the future looking less ripped and more weary from his adventures. Ben Rothstein
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At least he won’t need someone to cut his meat at the retirement home.

After 17 years in the star-making role, Hugh Jackman is hanging up Wolverine’s claws. “Logan,” out Friday, will be his final outing, he’s said.

It’s an appropriate send-off. “Logan” is set some 20 years in the future and finds the graying X-Man weakened and weary, living in an abandoned factory in Mexico — his only companions an albino mutant (Stephen Merchant) and an increasingly unstable Professor X (Patrick Stewart).

Wolverine isn’t the only Marvel superhero whose cinematic future is uncertain. Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) blasted off in 2008 and has been a stalwart of the Avengers films. That’s likely over after the next installment.Paramount PicturesWolverine isn’t the only Marvel superhero whose cinematic future is uncertain. Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) blasted off in 2008 and has been a stalwart of the Avengers films. That’s likely over after the next installment.Paramount Pictures

Jackman’s departure marks a Sentinel-size challenge for studio Fox, and whatever solution it comes up with could signal what audiences should expect from superhero movies in the future.

Since the current comic book boom got underway with 2000’s “X-Men,” studios have not really had to deal with the issue of marquee actors moving on, but that day is now upon us, and the coming upheaval could endanger the success of a genre that has dominated Hollywood.

Stewart has said he is also leaving the X-Men. He and Jackman recently watched “Logan” together and both found themselves wiping away tears at the finale.

“So, I told [Hugh] that same evening, ‘I’m done, too. It’s all over,’” he told a SiriusXM Town Hall last month.

Perhaps the most successful purveyor of spandex in Hollywood, Marvel Studios also finds itself with a bill coming due. Robert Downey Jr., who’s owed a lot of credit for successfully launching Marvel’s cinematic universe with 2008’s “Iron Man,” is likely to walk away after next year’s “Avengers: Infinity War.”

Chris Evans, a k a Captain America, has also said he plans to ditch the role when his contract is up.

So what now?

It’s only been six years, but Chris Evans reportedly won’t re-up his star-spangled contract as Captain America.Jay MaidmentIt’s only been six years, but Chris Evans reportedly won’t re-up his star-spangled contract as Captain America.Jay Maidment

“My own feeling is almost always to find another actor,” says Roy Thomas, former Marvel editor-in-chief and Wolverine’s co-creator. “No one is indispensable if the stories are good, as good as Jackman was.”

The actor has echoed that sentiment. He has said that the character will almost certainly go on with someone else playing him. (His choice is Bollywood actor Shah Ruhk Khan.)

“You can look to Sherlock Holmes, James Bond, and Batman as characters that last longer than any one actor playing them,” Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige told Variety last year. “There’s a precedent for it in other franchises that suggests it’s possible.”

But the problem Fox and Marvel have is not just that the actors have become so closely associated with the roles, but one of continuity. Audiences didn’t much mind when Christian Bale’s Batman gave way to Ben Affleck’s because the movies they were in were not connected. But Fox and Marvel have been telling basically a single story through their movies, and replacing an actor could be jarring. (“X-Men” has used a time-travel cheat to introduce a younger crop of actors in some roles.)

Patrick Stewart has played Professor X, the leader of the X-Men, for as long as Jackman has been Wolverine. He has said he’s “done” portraying the psychic mutant.20th Century Fox/The Kobal CollectionPatrick Stewart has played Professor X, the leader of the X-Men, for as long as Jackman has been Wolverine. He has said he’s “done” portraying the psychic mutant.20th Century Fox/The Kobal Collection

Another solution would be to take a page from the print comic book universe and pass the mantle to a successor. “Logan” introduces Laura (Dafne Keen), a little girl with the claws, healing factor and blood lust of Wolverine.

Could she carry the franchise going forward? Would audiences accept Bucky (Sebastian Stan) hoisting up Captain America’s shield?

The studios could also make like Paul McCartney and just let it be — allow the characters to walk off into the sunset.

Marvel Studios is already pushing forward a new roster of heroes (solo movies for Black Panther and Captain Marvel are planned in the next two years) that are likely meant to fill the void if Iron Man and the other vets exit stage left.

Then again, they could always just wait a few years and return with a lukewarm reboot. And that’s something Hollywood definitely knows how to do.

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