Deadpool Introduction Introduction
Release Year: 2016
Genre: Action, Comedy, Superhero
Director: Tim Miller
Writers: Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick
Stars: Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, Ed Skrein
Way back in 2016, pop culture had reached peak superhero season. It seemed like every other weekend, another man or woman in tights was saving the world from a maniacal supervillain or retrieving a magical stone or hanging out with a sentient tree named Groot. We even got a movie about a guy who can communicate with ants called Ant-Man, for crying out loud. As a genre, superheroes were maxed out.
Enter Deadpool.
Released on February 12, 2016—just in time for a bloody good Valentine's Day—Deadpool shook up the super-status quo. Ryan Reynolds, who was instrumental in shepherding "the Merc with a Mouth" from panel to screen and who was undoubtedly itching to erase 2011's mega-flop Green Lantern from moviegoers' minds, plays our leading man, Deadpool. And this guy has an origin story that's unlike any other comic book character's: joyfully demented and thoroughly hilarious.
Director Tim Miller's first feature film is also incredibly violent and heavy on the adult fare in general. Spider-Man this was not, as Deadpool snagged the R rating to prove it. While that eliminated kids and most teens from Deadpool's audience on opening weekend, it did nothing to diminish the film's impact at the box office. Produced on a slim $58 million budget (slim for a superhero flick, anyway), Deadpool went on to earn two Golden Globe nominations—Best Comedy and Best Actor—and gross over $363 million in just the United States alone. That's a whole lot of chimichangas. https://nerdist.com/deadpool-chimichangas-recipe/
When it comes to Deadpool's particular brand of fast-talking, entrails-spilling, Limp Bizkit-dragging style of heroism, audiences were all in. Critics, on the other hand, didn't quite know what to make of the film. Some dug the foul-mouthed splatterfest; others found its sophomoric humor and buckets of gore grating.
There was one thing that almost all reviewers agreed upon, though: for all its faults, guts, and dated pop culture references, Deadpool is a whole lot of fun.
Why Should I Care?
Forget what you've heard: Deadpool isn't the first R-rated superhero movie. Before Ryan Reynolds started shredding bad guys and dropping off-color insults faster than you can say "Mom, I'll just watch this one alone," there was Watchmen, Blade, Constantine, Dredd…You get it.
Deadpool is the first self-aware superhero, though, and that's a pretty big deal. Unlike every other major comic book character, Wade Wilson knows that he's in a comic book movie. He mentions it frequently, in fact. He addresses the audience directly. He even critiques his own film—including why he's headlining his own movie in the first place.
That doesn't mean that Deadpool avoids all the usual tropes of the average superhero flick, though. There's still a damsel in distress. There's still a big action set piece at the end. Good still triumphs over evil—okay, so good-ish triumphs over evil.
What sets Deadpool apart is that Deadpool calls these clichés out. Because he's self-aware, because he's in on the joke, Deadpool the movie can get away with indulging in a few tried and true superhero stereotypes to tell its story, and Deadpool the character can lay claim to being the first postmodern superhero.