The Merc
with a Mouth has finally got his own feature-length film. Deadpool has been a long time in the making. Ryan Reynolds has been
waiting to do a proper Deadpool movie since before 2009's X-Men Origins: Wolverine in which Reynolds first played the
quick-mouthed anti-hero. X-Men Origins was
less than well received and, whilst Reynolds showed glimpses of a potentially strong performance
as Wade Wilson, the film-makers for some reason decided to take away Deadpool's
deadliest weapon: his mouth. 6 years later, Deadpool
has been eagerly anticipated by nerds everywhere. After all this time, can
it possibly live up to the hype?
For me the
answer is a pretty strong "yes".
In a time
where it seems like a new superhero movie is coming out every month, where the
MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe) and DC are battling it out to be the darkest, edgiest
superhero franchise and where, on top of all that, Sony and Fox keep churning
out films starring the Marvel heroes that they managed to bag before MCU got hold
of them, it’s not so easy to produce a film starring spandex-clad warriors that
feels fresh. Whilst it is perhaps "not as anarchic as it thinks it
is" (to steal a phrase from Mark Kermode), Deadpool probably succeeds
better than any other superhero movie (apart from Kick Ass if you count that) at giving us something different.
I'm sure
you'll have heard already that Deadpool is not your average superhero. The film-makers keep telling us this, critics
keep telling us this and, in fact, the eponymous hero tells us himself on a
number of occasions throughout Deadpool. This is a superhero film that from start to
finish throws epic gore and foul language at us, to the extent that one
questions why it only has a 15 rating. The most odd (and most talked about)
feature of this film however is the amount to which it breaks the fourth wall
(i.e. winks at the audience). If you can't imagine how this works, think of anything
you've seen Kevin Spacey in (OK, so maybe just American Beauty and House of
Cards).
There are
multiple references to Ryan Reynolds' career and the not-so-great success of
his previous superhero outing, The Green
Lantern. There are also, more unusually, multiple references to Hugh
Jackman. I'm not so sure how much the latter counts as breaking the fourth wall
but it didn't half make me laugh! Some people will inevitably find the film's
constant referencing to its lead actor, limited budget and its place within the
superhero movie universe incredibly annoying. I however think it worked very
well and enjoyed a bit of a change. One of the moments that most made me laugh
was a point in the film where I started to question a particularly contrived
meet-up between Deadpool and the two X-Men we see in the film and, before I could
finish my critical thought, Deadpool himself basically says "gosh, that's
a bit contrived".
There are
jokes aplenty in this film, not just in the fourth-wall breaking and this is a
film which, if it makes you laugh once, it will keep you laughing from start to
finish. Literally, the opening and closed credits are crammed with humour. And
this is where the casting becomes so genius. Comedies are really where Ryan
Reynolds comes into his own (Two Guys and
a Girl, anyone?) and his sense of humour has always been highly sarcastic
and childish. If you then take into account his face and body, Reynolds really
was born to play this part. On top of that, you have Wade Wilson's best friend
and geeky sidekick, played by T J Miller, who is one of my favourite comedic
actors at the moment.
This film is
far from perfect, don't get me wrong. There are some awesome action sequences
(see car chase which is cleverly interspersed throughout the movie), but the
film falls into the same trap that the first Captain America and all of the Iron-Man
films fell into in that the final fight, the big finale, is a bit dull and
generic. This may be partly due to the fact that the film's villain (evil bald British
guy) is also a bit generic. Although to be fair, we are warned about this in
the opening credits which name him as "A British Villain".
Another
problem (if you can really call it that) with Deadpool is it's just not as "outside the box" as it
likes to think it is. Wade's main goal is to get his life back on track so that
he can get his gorgeous girlfriend back. The movie begins with an origin story
and ends with the aforementioned battle between good and evil, Wade Wilson v
the British Villain. And whilst Wade may be a bit of an anti-hero, at the end
of the day he only kills and maims bad guys. He's clearly not a bad guy himself
or Professor X wouldn't keep trying to recruit him.
Yes, Deadpool is not perhaps the daring,
rebellious movie it was set up to be and there are some points where
improvements could be made, but all in all, this is a very funny, very
entertaining film with a great lead actor and I eagerly anticipate Deadpool 2!
P.s. I just have to mention the bit with the hand. Love it! You'll know what I mean when you watch the film.
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