When Bryan Singer brought Marvel's mutants to the big screen for the first time in 2000's X-Menthe team featured a small roster of the most popular mutants, which included Cyclops, Jean Grey, Wolverine, and Storm. Halley Berry was cast as Ororo Munroe for Fox's cinematic franchise, though there was some controversy regarding the comic accuracy of her Storm.

RELATED: X-Men: 10 Times Storm Earned Her Status As An Omega-Level Mutant

With comic adaptations these days striving to remain true to the source material in most cases, it can be surprising to see some of the huge glaring differences in Halle Berry's portrayal of Storm. While there were some comic beats that the film managed to hit with the character, fans are still hoping the new MCU version of Storm will remain true to the comics.

10 ACCURATE: LEADER OF THE X-MEN

Halle Berry's Storm became one of the central characters of the franchise as she eventually took over leadership of the X-Men and the Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters after the deaths of Cyclops, Professor Xavier, and Jean Grey in X-Men: The Last Stand.

Storm has been a leader of the X-Men for years, both unofficially while the team was on the run and after she beat Cyclops in a duel for leadership (while depowered), which led to her leading her own teams or co-leading the X-Men, and she currently sits on the Quiet Council of Krakoa as a leader of mutantkind.

9 INACCURATE: TIMELINE WITH THE X-MEN

The first X-Men film establishes that Berry's Storm was one of Xavier's first students alongside Cyclops and Jean Grey, and by the time Wolverine and Rogue join up with the team, the school was filled with students and Storm was a teacher.

While many of those events do occur in Storm's comic timeline, she was actually part of the second major roster of the X-Men, and she joined alongside Wolverine, working together for years before the school accepted students on that scale.

8 ACCURATE: MUTANT POWERS

Halley Berry as Storm in X-Men: Days of Future Past

While Storm's mutant ability to control the weather in its various forms was represented on the big screen with her control of the wind and lightning, the films really only scratched the surface of Ororo's omega-level abilities.

RELATED: The 10 Best Characters in the X-Men Universe, Ranked By Power

Before Storm had spent any time training with the X-Men, her powers left her to be revered as a goddess, and she is capable of so much more than fans got to see from Halle Berry's Storm, though there were a couple of memorable scenes in X2: X-Men United and X-Men: Days of Future Past that showcased her real power.

7 INACCURATE: ORIGINS

Ororo Munroe has a rich and full backstory that connects her to other Marvel characters like Black Panther and villains like the Shadow King, though Berry's cinematic version wasn't given much development beyond her role with the team.

Even when Alexandra Shipp portrayed a younger version of the character, fans got to see a small part of her origins in Cairo, but the traumatic death of her parents that left her orphaned and claustrophobic and her time as an African Goddess has been completely unexplored on the big screen.

6 ACCURATE: RELATIONSHIP WITH LOGAN

Wolverine and Storm on a date in Marvel Comics

Storm and Wolverine became a consistent presence in Fox's cinematic universe, and their close relationship definitely reflected the friendship that had grown between the two since they first joined the team in 1975's Giant-Size X-Men #1.

The relationship has also been romantic at times in the comics, which was even shown briefly with a passionate kiss between Ororo and Logan in X-Men: Days of Future Past, though the scene was cut from the theatrical version of the film.

5 INACCURATE: THE VOICE

It might be hard to fault a portrayal for its comic inaccuracy based on the voice of the character, but Storm's various animated representations and her comic dialogue has always shown a strong, powerful voice that makes it impossible to laugh at proclamations like "with me comes the fury of nature herself!"

Halle Berry's first appearance as Storm in X-Men featured a fairly weak African accent that was off-putting, and the accent wouldn't appear in her subsequent appearances, which unfortunately left some of the character's heritage unrepresented on the big screen.

4 ACCURATE: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST

X-Men: Days of Future Past adapted the classic comic storyline to work for Fox's franchise and managed to tie two generations of X-Men together at different points in the timeline, with Halle Berry's Storm appearing as one of the surviving X-Men in the future, much like her comic counterpart.

RELATED: X-Men: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Storm In Marvel Comics

Unfortunately, it wasn't only her survival in the dark future timeline that was true to the comics, as her death played out in a similar way in the film, as she was impaled by advanced future Sentinels after helping take out some of the incoming fleets of mutant-killing machines.

3 INACCURATE: COSTUMES

HALLE BERRY STORM - Costumes

While Halle Berry's various wigs throughout the franchise weren't great they at least tried to replicate Storm's iconic hair, the rest of her costume was changed with the rest of the team for dark leather uniforms instead of the brightly colored costumes from the comics and animated series.

While Storm's various film costumes introduced elements from the comics like her cape, the evolution of the cinematic costumes continued to follow the trend of the rest of the X-Men instead of following her own style, which fans have seen well represented by her various beautiful comic costumes over the years.

2 INACCURATE: FIGHTING PROWESS

storm-cyclops-duel-display

Halle Berry's Storm was certainly no lightweight on the big screen and held her own in a number of fights, but much like her origins and lack of development in the films, she was never really given a chance to display her fighting prowess from the comics.

Storm's major fight scenes in the films are all mutant power-based fights, and she is even briefly taken out by Toad before electrocuting him. Yet the comic Storm has bested both Cyclops and Callisto, without using her powers, for the leadership of the X-Men and the Morlocks, which never felt represented on the big screen.

1 INACCURATE: HERITAGE

It’s important for Black characters like Storm, who is a Kenyan woman from a long line of African priestesses, to be equally represented on screen by an African actor, as there is a low representation of Black female characters in Hollywood.

The role of Storm would be a good opportunity to give an African actor the chance to accurately represent themselves, and fans are hoping that the inevitable MCU appearance of the X-Men will take that into consideration when casting the next Storm.

NEXT: 10 Storm Cosplay That Look Just Like The X-Men Comics