Deadpool and Wolverine

final-deadpool-and-wolverine-trailer-features-a-familiar-face-from-logan

Final Deadpool and Wolverine trailer features a familiar face from Logan

Are you ready? —

We all have a moment that defines us.

Ryan Reynolds and High Jackman join forces in Deadpool and Wolverine.

If there’s anything the Deadpool franchise is known for, it’s R-rated cheeky irreverence. The forthcoming Deadpool and Wolverine clearly has that in spades, but the final trailer strikes an uncharacteristically somber note, reminding us just what Wade Wilson/Deadpool stands to lose if Wolverine can’t rise to the challenge. Bonus: There’s a surprise cameo from Hugh Jackman’s co-star in Logan.

As previously reported, Ryan Reynolds found the perfect fit with 2016’s Deadpool, starring as Wade Wilson, a former Canadian special forces operative (dishonorably discharged) who develops regenerative healing powers that heal his cancer but leave him permanently disfigured with scars all over his body. Wade decides to become a masked vigilante, turning down an invitation to join the X-Men and abandon his bad-boy ways. The first Deadpool was a big hit, racking up $782 million at the global box office, critical praise, and a couple of Golden Globe nominations for good measure. Deadpool 2 was released in 2018 and was just as successful.

Deadpool and Wolverine reunites Reynolds with many familiar faces from the first two films. Morena Baccarin is back as Wade’s girlfriend Vanessa, along with Leslie Uggams as Blind Al; Karan Soni as Wade’s personal chauffeur, taxi driver Dopinder; Brianna Hildebrand as Negasonic Teenage Warhead; Stefan Kapičić as the voice of Colossus; Shioli Kutsuna as Negasonic’s mutant girlfriend, Yukio; Randal Reeder as Buck; and Lewis Tan as X-Force member Shatterstar.

Along with Sabretooth, the mutants Toad and Dogpool should be on hand to make some trouble. New to the franchise are Matthew MacFadyen as a Time Variance Authority agent named Paradox and Emma Corrin as the lead villain. There have been rumors that Owen Wilson’s Mobius and the animated Miss Minutes from Loki may also appear in the film.

Marvel released a two-minute teaser for the new movie during the Super Bowl in February, featuring the trademark cheeky irreverence that made audiences embrace Reynold’s R-rated superhero in the first place, plus a glimpse of Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine—or rather, his distinctive shadow. And yes, Marvel is retaining that R rating—a big step given that all the prior MCU films have been resoundingly PG-13. Marvel dropped a full trailer in April that was chock-full of off-color witticisms, meta-references, slo-mo action, and a generous sprinkling of F-bombs. And last month, another one-minute trailer dropper with a surprise appearance: Sabretooth, played by the same actor, Tyler Mane, who portrayed the character in 2000’s X-Men.

Someone needs a pep talk

This final trailer takes an entirely different tone, playing like a love letter to the Wolverine of the X-Men franchise. It’s basically Wade/Deadpool having a bona fide heart-to-heart with the Wolverine in this alternate timeline. “I know I turn everything into a joke, but I care,” he says in a voiceover accompanying footage from prior X-Men films, rendered in nostalgic gray tones. “I waited a long time for this team-up. In my world, you’re well-regarded. You were an X-Man. Fuck that, you were THE X-Man. The Wolverine. He was a hero in my world.”

Wolverine’s response: “Yeah well, he ain’t shit in mine.” We learn that this version of Wolverine resisted all attempts to persuade him to officially don the suit and join the X-Men and now he believes it’s just too late to make a difference. As a last-ditch effort, Wade shows him a picture of the nine people he loves who make up his entire world and tells him he has no idea how to save them—but Wolverine does.

And who shows up at the crucial moment but Dafne Keene’s Laura Kinney, the cloned mutant formerly known as X-23, who inherited the Wolverine mantle in the comics. When Wolverine insists they’ve got the wrong guy, she replies, “You were always the wrong guy… until you weren’t.” We’re betting Wolverine’s gonna step up.

Deadpool and Wolverine hits theaters on July 26, 2024.

Listing image by YouTube/Marvel Studios

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Wade Wilson is kidnapped by the TVA in Deadpool and Wolverine teaser

Everyone deserves a happy ending —

“Your little cinematic universe is about to change forever.”

Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds), aka Deadpool, is back to save the MCU: “I am Marvel Jesus.”

After some rather lackluster performances at the box office over the last year or so, Marvel Studios has scaled back its MCU offerings for 2024. We’re getting just one: Deadpool and Wolverine. Maybe one is all we need. Marvel released a two-minute teaser during yesterday’s Super Bowl. And if this is the future of the MCU, count us in. The teaser has already racked up more than 12 million views on YouTube, and deservedly so. It has the cheeky irreverence that made audiences embrace Ryan Reynold’s R-rated superhero in the first place, plus a glimpse of Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine—or rather, his distinctive shadow. And yes, Marvel is retaining that R rating—a big step given that all the prior MCU films have been resoundingly PG-13.

(Some spoilers for the first two films below.)

Reynolds famously made his first foray into big-screen superhero movies in 2011’s The Green Lantern, which was a box office disappointment and not especially good. But he found the perfect fit with 2016’s Deadpool, starring as Wade Wilson, a former Canadian special forces operative (dishonorably discharged) who develops regenerative healing powers that heal his cancer but leave him permanently disfigured with scars all over his body. Wade decides to become a masked vigilante, turning down an invitation to join the X-Men and abandon his bad-boy ways.

The first Deadpool was a big hit, racking up $782 million at the global box office, critical praise, and a couple of Golden Globe nominations for good measure. So 20th Century Fox naturally commissioned a sequel. Deadpool 2 was released in 2018 and was just as successful. The adult humor and playful pop culture references were a big part of both films’ appeal, including their respective post-credits scenes. The first film had a post-credits scene spoofing Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. The sequel’s mid-credits sequence showed a couple of X-Men repairing a time travel device for Deadpool, which he used to save his girlfriend Vanessa (Morena Baccarin‚—whose tragic death kicked off Deadpool 2—and kill Ryan Reynolds, just as the actor finished reading the script for Green Lantern.

This time around, Shawn Levy takes the director’s chair; he also directed Reynolds in the thoroughly delightful Free Guy (2021), which had similar tonal elements, minus the R-rated humorous riffs. Once we learned that Jackman had agreed to co-star, reprising his iconic X-Men role, fan anticipation shot through the roof. Filming (and hence the release date) was delayed by last summer’s Hollywood strikes but finally wrapped early this year.

Deadpool and Wolverine reunites many familiar faces from the first two films: Reynolds and Baccarin, obviously, but also Leslie Uggams as Blind Al; Karan Soni as Wade’s personal chauffeur, taxi driver Dopinder; Brianna Hildebrand as Negasonic Teenage Warhead; Stefan Kapičić as the voice of Colossus; Shioli Kutsuna as Negasonic’s mutant girlfriend Yukio; Randal Reeder as Buck; and Lewis Tan as X-Force member Shatterstar.

We’re also getting some characters drawn from various films under the 20th Century Fox Marvel umbrella: Pyro (Aaron Stanford)—last seen in 2006’s X-Men: The Last Stand—and Jennifer Garner’s Elektra who appeared in the 2003 Daredevil film as well as 2005’s Elektra. Apparently, the mutants Sabretooth and Toad will also appear, along with Dogpool. New to the franchise are Matthew MadFadyen as a Time Variance Authority agent named Paradox and Emma Corrin as the lead villain. There are rumors that Owen Wilson’s Mobius and the animated Miss Minutes from Loki will also appear in the film, which makes sense, given the TVA’s key role in the plot.

The teaser opens with Wade celebrating his birthday with Vanessa and all their friends, only to then have a group of formidable TVA agents knock on his door, brandishing their wands. (“Is that supposed to be scary?” Wade responds. “Pegging isn’t new for me, friendo, but it is for Disney.”) He’s tossed through a portal and ends up at TVA headquarters, face to face with Paradox, who offers him a chance to be “a hero among heroes.” And Wade decides he’s game, declaring himself a superhero Messiah: “I… am… Marvel Jesus.” He suits up as Deadpool, and violence inevitably ensues.

Then comes the shot we’ve all been waiting for: Deadpool lying on his back on icy terrain after being tossed through a wall, with a Wolverine-shaped shadow falling across his body. “Don’t just stand there, you ape—give me a hand up,” Deadpool says, and then sees the claws. We get the briefest glimpse of Wolverine’s trademark yellow X-Men uniform before the credits roll.

Deadpool and Wolverine hits theaters on July 26, 2024.

Listing image by YouTube/Marvel Studios

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