Marvel goes full Mel Brooks for its superhero satire “Deadpool & Wolverine” (2024)… 

******SOME SPOILERS******

As I’ve said in earlier columns, I’ve gotten away from the superhero genre lately, which more or less peaked for me with 2019’s “Avengers: Endgame.” Now, with the seemingly endless flood of Disney/Marvel multiverse product, my eyes glaze over whenever I’ve tried to get into a new Marvel movie or show, and I become disengaged. However, as “The Godfather III”’s Michael Corleone says through gritted teeth, “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!”  

Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) finally get the chance to undo their first misguided meeting from 2009’s “X-Men Origins: Wolverine.”

My wife mentioned she wanted to see the new “Deadpool & Wolverine” movie, which I was lukewarm on seeing, at best.  Yes, I loved the R-rated humor and meta self-awareness of the first “Deadpool” movie, and “Deadpool 2” got a few laughs out of me, but lately, the superhero genre, which often epitomizes soulless corporate filmmaking, feels tired and played out.

Grave-robbing Deadpool realizes the Time Variance Authority doesn’t take too kindly to desecrating superhero graves…

Most Marvel content these days feels like a dinner consisting of popcorn, gum, and cotton candy; fun to eat, but not terribly filling.  Frankly, I forget all about them a few minutes after I see them. All the same, I was vaguely curious to see Hugh Jackman return as “Wolverine” in a team-up with Ryan Reynolds’ smart-ass “Deadpool”; a partnership that has been slowly percolating since 2009’s dull “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” movie and in the previous “Deadpool” films. 

“Remember to silence your damn phones…”

For this column, I won’t do one of my usual deep-dive reviews for two reasons; first, having dropped out of Marvel media a couple years ago, I’m not quite up to speed on their current eye-crossing crop of multiverse streaming shows and movies. Secondly, this film is very new, and making considerable box-office (nearly half a billion as of this writing) so I don’t want to give too much away.

Summing It Up

“Do we have the rights to sing ‘Happy Birthday’?”
Deadpool celebrates another trip around the sun with a few friends, including workplace pal Peter (Bob Delaney) and longtime roommate Blind Al (Leslie Uggams).

Cowritten by star-producer Ryan Reynolds and directed by Reynolds’ longtime collaborator and cowriter Shawn Levy (“The Adam Project,” “Free Guy”), the refreshingly R-rated Deadpool (Reynolds) returns, and life hasn’t been so great for the wannabe Avenger, who’s stuck in a dead end job (insert irony here) with his paunchy, sympathetic coworker-friend Peter (Bob Delaney), and still rooming in the projects with ol’ Blind Al, played by the returning Leslie Uggams (a legend in her own right).

The one that got away…
Vanessa (Morena Baccarin) is still around, despite a new boyfriend, and her ex’s unfortunate “hair system.”

Having recently broken up with love-of-his-life Vanessa (Morena Baccarin), Deadpool, aka Wade Williams, is celebrating a modest birthday with his tight-nit group of friends (super and otherwise), until he is unceremoniously snatched from his universe by the Time Variance Authority; a retro-styled, “Mad Men”-looking agency existing outside of spacetime that was first seen in the Disney streaming series “Loki” (which was about where I jumped off the Marvel multiverse a couple years ago). 

“Someday, all of this…won’t be yours.”
Deadpool is welcomed to the Time Variance Authority’s shady rogue middle-manager, Paradox (Matthew Macfadyen).

There, Deadpool meets shifty bureaucrat named Paradox (Matthew Macfadyen), who makes Deadpool an offer of greatness with the hope of saving his timeline.  To accomplish this, our fourth-wall breaking hero realizes he needs the help of long-deceased X-Man Logan, aka Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), who still exists in alternate timelines. After several hilariously meta attempts to find the ‘right’ Logan for the job (including desecrating Prime Wolverine’s grave), the disputatious duo then find themselves in a nether dimension between timelines known as “the Void”…

Never Say Die…
Deadpool teams up with Wolverine, having finally found an undead, tall-enough incarnation of the legendary superhero.

This is where Marvel smartly and playfully mixes action figures from a few expired timelines, with the Void acting as an “Island of Misfit Toys” for under-loved or otherwise retired superhero movie franchises that never made the Avengers’ cut. This leads to surprising supporting roles from a few banished superheroes, including one who was successful under another studio’s banner, until bad blood (hint hint) led to this star’s falling out with his last director (and former costar Reynolds).  Setting up Marvel’s recent announcement of Robert Downey Jr.’s return as another character, we also see former Avenger Chris Evans returning as well…

A bald mutant who enters people’s minds…nope, doesn’t ring a bell.
Cassandra Nova (Emma Corrin) is the despotic X-Men adjacent ruler of “The Void.”

The Void is currently under the despotic rule of a supervillain named Cassandra Nova (Emma Corrin), a powerful, hairless mind-melder and manipulator with direct ties to the greater X-Men universe (gee, lemme guess…). Cassandra has her own designs on the Marvel multiverse, which includes using her exiled superheroes and supervillains for her own purposes.  Cassandra is the living embodiment of corporate Disney; trying to snuff out all that exists beyond her own realm in order to consolidate power and keep the toy box under her thumb. 

Annoyed in the Void.

Strewn with visual cues and a few sight gags, the Void looks like a cross between the “Mad Max” and “Planet of the Apes” universes; two other 20th Century Studios franchises in this salute to and sendup of the studio which first launched the “X-Men” cinematic universe; before Disney acquired it under the Marvel-Disney banner. Acting as the baton from 20th Century to Disney (stay during and after the end credits), the movie’s dialogue sometimes feels like uncensored transcripts from a Fox board meeting.

Racing to save the multiverse, but with plenty of time for a bad-ass, slow-motion entrance…

After its middle act in the Void, the movie becomes a mad dash to save the multiverse (no less) in yet another of the sprawling, reality-threatening perils that are the cliché-laden final acts for all these kinds of movies.  Such overstuffed final acts are part of what turned me off from these films in the first place.  Fortunately, “Deadpool & Wolverine” is waaay ahead of such audience’s gripes (including mine), nimbly skewering every tired trope these movies too often toss our way. 

Wolverine takes awhile to warm up to Deadpool’s new, so-ugly-she’s-cute canine companion, Dogpool (Peggy).

Typical of most action movies these days (and most movies in general), “Deadpool & Wolverine” could easily afford to trim a good ten minutes or so off its runtime. This is another fact the movie is aware of, as Deadpool tells the audience not to worry…they’re in the home stretch.  Keeping the R-rated blood, guts and richly raunchy language of previous “Deadpool” movies is Disney’s reassurance to fans that it’s not going to neuter Deadpool, now that the character has been (more or less) officially welcomed into the Disney-Marvel canon.

Deadpool remains the fourth-wall breaker while a guilt-ridden Wolverine provides the gravitas and guns…

Just as über talented writer-director-actor-songwriter Mel Brooks hilariously sent up westerns and Universal horror movies in his 1974 heyday (the year that saw both “Blazing Saddles” and “Young Frankenstein” hit theaters), cowriter Reynolds and collaborator-director Shawn Levy have done a successful sendup of the superhero genre; both commending and mocking all of the genre’s tired, overblown tropes, making “Deadpool & Wolverine” a bit critic-proof, since the movie is completely in on its own joke.

With “Deadpool & Wolverine,” Disneyfied-Marvel finally welcomes its R-rated crass crusader into the fold, celebrating overblown superhero flicks while gleefully flipping a black-gloved middle finger at them, too.

Bonus Features

My wife and I recently attended San Diego Comic Con 2024, and while we did not attend the high-profile “Deadpool & Wolverine” panel in the convention center nearly-impermeable Hall H venue, we did see some very interesting items related to the movie, including screen-used costumes, and a Guinness World Record-setting drone show; which my wife was lucky enough to have come across on the way back to our hotel…

From SDCC 2024: Screen-used costumes for Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds), his pet, Dogpool (Peggy), and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) were major draws at the Marvel booth.
Costumes for Paradox (Matthew Mcfayden), Cassandra Nova (Emma Corrin) and a Time Variance Authority soldier, from Marvel’s “Deadpool & Wolverine.”
My wife’s video of the full “Deadpool & Wolverine” fireworks and drone show, from her YouTube channel, SacredGeometry.

The 11-minute drone show used 2,396 drones to form the images of Deadpool and Wolverine, breaking the Guinness World Record for the largest aerial display of a fictional character formed by drones. My wife only had one complaint; the accompanying fireworks obscured some of the drones. Nevertheless, this is a SDCC moment for the history books, and my wife was there to catch it.

Where to Watch

“Deadpool & Wolverine” is currently in theatrical release only, with no digital or physical media releases announced as of this writing.

Images: Marvel Studios, Disney, Author, Author’s wife

26 Comments Add yours

  1. scifimike70 says:

    As disengaged as I am too from the superhero genre, seeing this one was worth it just to see how they can resurrect Wolverine. As overwhelmingly extravagant as the multiverse can be for the Marvel movies, it may at least work best in the comedic sense. But all the same it makes me more nostalgic for the simpler kinds of superhero films from my younger years. Still a most efficiently enjoyable movie as a friend of mine who saw it with me can certainly agree. Thank you for your review.

    1. Thanks for your always thoughtful comments, Mike!

      I, too, enjoyed this movie as a ‘buddy comedy’ (as my wife put it), and its raunchy, R-rated playfulness kept my attention, even after swearing up and down that I was done with the modern superhero genre.

      Regarding your nostalgia for simpler superhero stories? We’re on the same page, as I re-watched “Superman: The Movie” and the Donner Cut of “Superman II” back-to-back over two nights last week, and I was almost reduced to tears by the grandeur and elegance of these films.

      Hearing that regal John Williams’ score and seeing the late Christopher Reeve and the late Margot Kidder at their peaks was both heartbreaking and joyous.

      ~sigh~

      They really don’t make ’em like that anymore…

      1. scifimike70 says:

        You’re very welcome. Superman 2 I saw first (thanks to a school outing to the cinema at the time) sometime before seeing Superman 1 on TV. It was Tim Burton’s quite lavish reinvention of Batman and especially Batman Returns that made me want to see more superhero films in the cinema.

  2. Lady Maneth says:

    Yes, I must admit I enjoyed this one more than any Marvel or DC movie I’ve seen since Avengers: Endgame, and I’ve seen most of them thanks to our 15 year old.

    My husband and I aren’t particularly worried about him seeing movies that feature swearing, exaggerated comedic violence, or even nudity as long as the sex is consensual, and Deadpool & Wolverine was right up his alley. His comment after the Furiosa line in the Void? “So, Mad Max is a part of the MCU now, huh?”

    (Sexual violence is my personal no-no, I can’t understand how anyone can find any entertainment in it. I recognize that because sexual violence is a sad fact of life, some biographical stories may need to feature it to tell the true story, but personally I find such movies too disturbing to watch.)

    1. Agreed on your last point, very strongly, as well as the rest.

      And yes, I agree; when it comes to violence and swearing, I certainly saw much worse than this movie when I was 15. ;-D

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    1. scifimike70 says:

      I like Andrea Riseborough. What she could do for MCU could be interesting.

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      That is a lot of “I thinks”. I hope for your sake you copy/pasted. If nothing else for the fate of the nerves in your wrist.

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