Count me in. The buddy movie reinvented, the MCU legend trashed, all set in the ideal MCU location, The Void (worthy of two capital letters, I guess), the place where long-forgetten Marvel characters from the pre-Disney multiverse hang out, and it’s a fun ride. Whether of course this proves the death knell for the MCU after so much fan backlash and poor reviews remains to be seen. Next weekend’s box office will decide its fate one way or another.
But who the hell cares? If this is the extinction of the MCU, as some predict, then it is going out with a bang, a crazy superhero mash-up where you need to keep an MCU dictionary to hand so you can work who’s going to turn up next. Wesley Snipes, not seen in that Blade badass rig since 2004, and it’s not Capt America but Chris Evans’ earlier incarnation of Johnny Storm not seen since 2007, and there’s Channing Tatum as a character Gambit whose stand-alone picture never materialized, despite scoring highly in animated form.

Anything that MCU got wrong or was criticized for – the multiverse and the varying timelines – turn up here as plot. The “sacred time lime” is almost a character in itself and if you ever wanted to invent the most ideal/ironic MCU character, who else would that be but Mr Paradox (Matthew Macfadyen)?
The entire storyline is so off-the-wall that you’d think it’s never going to work but then when Deadpool’s around walls are toys, especially the fourth wall, that magical trick of speaking direct to the camera. And it’s Deadpool and his continual wisecrack commentary on proceedings that turns what could be a s**tshow into a hoot.
But some of the twists transform what could be another deathly routine of superheroes saving the universe (yawn, what again?) into something more human. Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) only wants to save his own tiny universe of half a dozen people, everyone who matters to him, and not a gazillion others. Somehow he teams up with the previously deceased Logan a.k.a. (in case you don’t have your MCU Dictionary handy) Wolverine to revive the moribund buddy movie, the best kickass bickering pair since Mel Gibson and Danny Glover in Lethal Weapon.
Or whatever. Anyway, they find themselves in The Void doing battle with that sweet Charles Xavier guy’s nasty twin sister Cassandra Nova (Emma Corrin). And, yes, there’s still so much jiggering about with time that you’d think the Time Bandits or Doctor Who would be claiming copyright infringement. And sometimes you can almost hear the clack of the typewriter as the screenwriter tries to fix that last loose end.

But, as I said, whenever the going gets tough – especially when the going gets tough – you can depend on Deadpool’s motormouth to see the narrative through. Deadpool and Wolverine do make a great screen team, ideal opposites, growl vs grit, class vs. sass, and really you could just junk the narrative – or come up with an entirely different one – and still this picture would work because the two principles set the screen alight.
This is akin to when Guardians of the Galaxy ripped up the MCU playbook a decade ago and influenced every movie thereafter. The guess now is whether Deadpool and Wolverine will take MCU down a new stylistic avenue or whether this is a deliberate cul de sac. I’d guess not, since it’s going to be such a money-spinner, and I could see this pair worming their way into the new Avengers team to brighten up whatever doom-laden occasion is heading our way.
Maybe the MCU is giving the finger to the fanboys, hoping to attract a wider audience rather than pandering to an audience that seemed to have made up its mind about everything way in advance and wasn’t inclined to go along with any MCU experiment, feint or development. The audience I saw it with were clearly of mixed opinion, some feeling betrayed or at the very least insulted.
But I have a good bit less invested in the MCU. It takes me all my time to keep up with who’s who in this expanding universe. So treating this picture on its own merits, I thought it generated more than its fair share of laughs, and not always rude ones, although anyone with a woke inclination would be advised to steer clear.
Shawn Levy (Free Guy, 2021) directed.
Make up your own mind.
Wait, is Tatum not Gambit?
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Couldn’t work out what he was saying. Could have been the Man in the Moon for all I know. This MCU bunch really need for formally introduce characters instead of assuming we all know who they are. A Guy with a deck of cards? Ga,bler. Obviously.
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I looked it up and he is playing Gambit. I neither know nor care. I never want to see Snipes as Blade again after two lousy sequels. Or Garner as Elektra. It’s weird how were meant to clap for stuff we hated. I think this is a cup de sac. And I don’t think bringing back Downey Jr as a masked villains will bring back the glory days for MCU. This is the last hurrah. Good for the box office, but a firm full stop on a rambling sentence that has gone on far too long.
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I heard a lot like that playing out in the coffee bar afterwards. Doubt if they’ll bring back any of the old gang. Hollywood, more than the audience, will be holding its breath.
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Great reviews as always. I honestly wasn’t planning on seeing this movie but your review has compelled me to check it out. I’m not a huge fan of Marvel movies which I feel have declined in quality. That being said, I am a fan of The Wolverine and love the way that the superhero has been portrayed in movies by Hugh Jackman. Jackman did such an extraordinary job of portraying the hero that it was impossible to imagine anyone else in the role. He was particularly excellent in the 2013 film “The Wolverine”. So, I’ll keep this film on my watchlist to see this summer. Hugh Jackman is great in the role, so it’s nice to see him back on the big-screen.
Here’s my thoughts on “The Wolverine”:
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Thought Logan was excellent.
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Great review once again. I had a chance to see this film recently and absolutely loved it. It’s a spectacular sequel which celebrated a legendary hero. I loved the way the movie brought Wolverine back on the big-screen. While it’s far from a perfect movie, I really enjoyed it.
Here’s my thoughts on the movie:
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