Film review: Deadpool 2 ***

Film review: Deadpool 2 ***

by Joseph Anthony
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News arrives that Avengers: Infinity War is now the fifth-biggest film of all time (unadjusted for inflation), having made $1,638 million in the three weeks since it came out; another of this yearโ€™s superhero movies, Black Panther, is ninth, with $1,342 million since February. The box-office clout of comic-book flicks is breathtaking, indeed theyโ€™re so successful they can even afford to employ a court jester taking the mickey out of superhero-dom. That would be Wade Wilson, a.k.a. Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) โ€“ a pest and a smartass, not so much X-Man as just X-hausting. Youโ€™re not a hero, heโ€™s told in this surprisingly glorious sequel, just โ€œan angry clown dressed up as a sex toyโ€. Harsh!


The first Deadpool was a flippant, annoying little film that made much (too much) of its feisty irreverence. The sequel is better, partly because it has a better director (David Leitch, of Atomic Blonde) but also because Logan has intervened in the two years since the original; that film โ€“ Wolverineโ€™s swansong โ€“ was purposely morbid and despairing, and Deadpool 2 picks up a lot of that vibe. โ€™Pool has a death wish, like Logan in Logan; heโ€™s depressed and wants to die โ€“ which is actually not that hard, since his superpowers are the only thing keeping terminal cancer at bay. He also chats about Logan, and how Wolverine โ€œupped the ante by dyingโ€ in that movie, and of course he also chats about this movie, the one youโ€™re watching. The weird combination of blithe, none-of-this-is-real fourth-wall breakage and heavy, un-ironic desolation gives the sequel a sharp, singular flavour.

Deadpool 2 is endlessly self-conscious. There are jokes about its star, Ryan Reynolds (who had a hand in the script), including a mid-credits burn on his least successful movie. There are jokes about comic-book franchises. There are jokes about films as disparate as Yentl, Say Anything and Interview With the Vampire. The plot apes Logan, teaming Deadpool with a mutant kid (Julian Dennison, from Hunt for the Wilderpeople), and the kid makes an in-jokey reference to the current fuss over inequality in Hollywood: โ€œThe industry discriminatesโ€. There are jokes about buzzwords du jour, from Tinder to (Jared) Kushner. While in jail, Deadpool meets a mutant called โ€˜Black Tomโ€™, even though Black Tom is white: โ€œWhatโ€™s your superpower,โ€ quips our clued-in hero, โ€œcultural appropriation?โ€.

I know how it probably sounds; like a smug, insufferable jape, like the first Deadpool in fact. Those who absolutely hated the original are unlikely to love the sequel โ€“ but thereโ€™s something different here, less spurting blood (though the violence is still quite extreme) and more introspection. Deadpoolโ€™s superpower โ€“ that his wounds heal, meaning heโ€™s able to absorb punishment โ€“ is appropriate, adding to the sense of a wry hero battered by a cruel world. A man arrives from the future (Josh Brolin as โ€˜Cableโ€™) and confirms, inter alia, that everyone will be dead in 50 years, humankind being on the verge of destroying the planet. Later, in the filmโ€™s ballsiest move, โ€™Pool puts together a team of wannabe superheroes โ€“ but they all come to a bad end, all except the girl (Zazie Beetz, a.k.a. the sole bright spot in Geostorm) whose only superpower is being lucky.


Did you get that? This is a universe where dumb luck โ€“ not strength, not even agency โ€“ is the greatest superpower one can have. Deadpool revelled in being โ€˜darkโ€™, but mostly it was just gleefully gory; Deadpool 2 really is dark, a film very much of its moment, reflecting deep-seated fears about Trump, global warming, automation, you name it โ€“ a fear, in short, of feeling helpless as the world seemingly slides towards disaster. (You canโ€™t stop it; all you can do is be lucky.) Itโ€™s probably no accident that comic-book movies, the dominant genre of our time, are so apocalyptic โ€“ a recent article in the Village Voice also made this point, titled โ€˜Apocalypse Numbโ€™ โ€“ though this one doesnโ€™t feature any grand global threat; instead, in a grim reversal of The Terminator, Cable has come from the future to kill little Julian before the boy commits his first murder and develops a taste for it (another echo of Logan, with its lethal little girl). Kids arenโ€™t immune to the darkness, quite the opposite.

Deadpool 2 is strong stuff. Itโ€™s also funny, though the humour works better in context (itโ€™s really the same snarky, outrageous humour as in the first film). Fake opening credits mock Wadeโ€™s pain. Our hero โ€“ having literally been ripped in half โ€“ spends a memorably gross scene as a grotesque half-man, half-baby, while his body grows a new lower section. Why should this angry clown seem more palatable now than he did two years ago? Is it just a case of familiarity breeding affection, which might also explain why comic-book flicks just keep getting bigger and bigger? Maybe โ€“ but affection isnโ€™t really the proper response to this twisted, rather ugly, yet fascinating movie. โ€œI know what youโ€™re thinking,โ€ smirks โ€™Pool in voice-over: โ€œโ€˜Iโ€™m so glad I left the kiddos at homeโ€™.โ€ Indeed.

DIRECTED BY David Leitch

STARRING Ryan Reynolds, Josh Brolin, Morena Baccarin

ACTION COMEDY

US 2018                         119 mins

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