Review of Deadpool 2016 Full Movie: In terms of performance - because this is important, even in a blockbuster comic book - a huge cast is even bigger with the addition of Marvel characters from the past and future films. Everyone gets a moment to shine, but it is often tempting and perhaps not enough. In addition to Evans and Downey - seem to like these characters in every fiber of his being, for now - there is Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow, Jeremy Renner as Hawkeye, Anthony Mackie as Falcon, Paul Rudd as Ant-Man, Elizabeth Olsen as Scarlet and Paul Bethany as Vision.

The great versatility Chadwick Bozeman, Jackie Robinson ( "42") and James Brown ( "Get On Up") have played only in recent years, the excitement, offering both physically and emotionally as a newcomer Black Panther - and you get their movie directed by Ryan Cooler has in 2018. But the best part of "civil war" for me was the reintroduction of Peter Parker / Spider-Man. Tom Holland is the perfect tone Webs longer we have seen in countless other incarnations. Tobey Maguire was equipped and Andrew Garfield was angry and this iconic role is played with varying success. Holland gets youth vertigo of having superpowers; their joy is contagious, and his exchange with Downey positively crackles. And unlike the movie Black Panther, just wait until "Spider-Man: Homecomings “next year, no matter how well each of these films is individual, although the huge Marvel gear machines.
I'm happy to see the scores for this movie be so high because, frankly, this had the makings of being a movie that people just wouldn't "get." I have to say that, while I'm not surprised it was successful, the records "Deadpool" broke in its opening weekend have absolutely stunned me. One, it's a rated R movie. That alone should have tamed any expectations. Two, it made more money in its opening weekend than "Man of Steel," Batman Beyond," and "X-Men" movie, "Iron Man," "Captain America: First Avenger," "Spider-Man," "The Incredible Hulk," and even "X-Men Origins: Wolverine," the disaster of a movie that had the completely wrong first incarnation of Deadpool.
From a comic book fan perspective, this movie represents a complete change in generations. I was a huge Avengers fan and stopped collecting in the late 80s. When I was a collector, artists were becoming the big reason to like comics. Frank Miller, John Byrne, etc. When Todd McFarlane, Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld came onto the scene as I was leaving the hobby, I missed out on the whole multiple-covers, poly-bagged, trading card, the overly-collector-driven disaster of comics that exploded with the X-Men reboot, X-Force, Deadpool introduction, etc. Over the years as I dabbled back and forth into the hobby, I read about Deadpool, Cable, X-Force, etc. and found it intriguing, but once the artists mentioned above moved on to create Image Comics, and Rob Liefeld, the douchebag creator of Deadpool, began his series of back and forth love/hate situations with fans, his colleagues, his stupid Spike Lee Levis 501 jeans commercials, etc., I could tell that I had little interest in investing myself in this idiot's work.
His artwork was unique and I never quite understood it, but I was never as critical of it as many people are. The Internet has volumes of hate for this guy. If you regularly read his Twitter feed too, it's clear this idiot has never learned his lesson. He's a moron of the highest order. Despite Rob's strong denial, Deadpool is, in fact, a blatant rip-off, structurally, of DC's Deathstroke with a dab of Spider-Man. Deathstroke's real name is Slade Wilson. Deadpool's is Wade Wilson. The costume is designed similarly with pouches, swords, and guns. Sure the personalities are completely different, but I attribute that to Fabien Nicieza and subsequent writers like Gail Simone.
The appeal of Deadpool has always been his 4th-wall interaction with readers, his insane anti-hero antics, his vulgar humor, etc., all completely different comics than the ones I collected. While I appreciated the jolt that gave to the industry, which was getting kind of stale, I believe it single-handedly killed kid interest in the genre. It became an industry for adults, which has an ever-diminishing audience. Look at the sales numbers today and the past 20 years, and that is very clear. Liefeld's era ruined comics. That being said, for everything Deadpool isn't in terms of his look (which is Liefeld's fault), he is very unique in personality and character development. The brilliant writers over the past 20 years have built upon that initial insanity and kept him relevant. Frankly, it's overdue that he had a film, especially since Spawn had a movie in the late 90s.
However, it's good that Fox waited. It's even better than they yielded to how horrible of a depiction they did in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" and allowed Ryan Reynolds and the brilliant writing team in this film to go full Deadpool, no questions asked, no limits, nothing. The brilliance of Deadpool IS the writing (sorry, Rob). There is not a better way to have made a Deadpool movie than this film. Ryan Reynolds IS Deadpool. He was born to play him. Physique, humor, age, everything. His love of the character and his commitment to getting this movie made was redeemed with this massive opening weekend. The movie never falls into a boring state. It's consistently funny. It's action-packed.
It's got the perfect immersion in the X-Men world. It sets up perfectly for a sequel that will obviously include Cable and, hopefully, leads to an X-Force movie. It is the breath of fresh air that the X-Men franchise needed, especially after we see what appears to be an awful translation of the Apocalypse storyline. Just like in the comics, Deadpool is taking the movies to a vulgar, more sophomoric version of the status quo. People believed it was a breath of fresh air back then, even if it ended up ruining the genre. While I believe this was the perfect Deadpool movie that could have ever been made, could seeing movies made from this 90s generation of comics also kill off the comic movie industry as they appeal more to adults? The similarities are...ahem...uncanny.
Now, this is what you call an awesome superhero film that is not afraid to push the boundaries. Deadpool is one of the most fun, funny and very entertaining film of all time and I gotta say its just fucking good I mean I couldn't stop laughing at this film it was too damn funny that's how good the film was with well-done humor and the humor was very funny and dark at the same time and you know what I like it and it fits the film perfectly. Now the character is perfect I love Deadpool he is one of my favorite superheroes ever in Marvel I always love this hero ever since I was a kid and seeing him coming to life in this film was outstanding and Ryan Reynolds is perfect in the film he is Deadpool and he did an awesome job bringing this hero to life and what a joy it was for this film plus the other characters are lovable too and the actors did a good job too.
The action was so stylish and I love films that have stylish action and this one really does so bloody and gory but it was awesome and cool the action was perfect in every way I love it and the story was good as well very dark and fun with a little bit of heart and all of that fit very well that is what you call well-crafted filmmaking right there. Overall Deadpool is a very well crafted superhero film with stylish action, a well-done story, fun, funny, and just plain awesome plus the characters are so lovable and come on Deadpool is an awesome hero and really a funny one too that's why he's my favorite hero ever. Well done Tim miller you made a very awesome and really well-crafted superhero film that is not afraid to push the boundaries and you made it with style. good job and well done can wait for the second film so David Leitch makes me proud and do your best to give me an awesome squeal. GO DEADPOOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
Time has slowly passed on since the release of Tim Miller and Ryan Reynolds MUCH delayed and well-received adaptation of Deadpool, and I remember my first time watching the film I absolutely loved it; crude humour and generic origin story galore. And rightly so; I'm one of those people who doesn't (for the most part) hate comic book Rob Liefeld nor the character of Deadpool as in the comics he's given a ton of neat anti-hero storylines and fun and goofy stories. And hearing that after the test footage that was leaked (pretty much confirmed to be from Ryan Reynolds) and FOX would finally green-light a much needed hard R rating for the character, it would be reasonable to assume I fanboyed hard for the release of the film.
Now however with time passing and the release of its sequel (with sadly Tim Miller went from helping) I decided to revisit the film to see how it's held up. And truth be told, while I can't say it holds up to well from release I can say that I'm still glad we got this film and that everyone on the film, who are CLEAR fans of this character, managed to make the film to be with. Where it works with a great cast (with no-brainer Ryan Reynolds doing great being "God's Perfect Idiot"), a decently constructed DEADPOOL narrative that makes use of its small budget for some fun set pieces and action sequences, nice attention to detail in sets that help give the film a nice feel to its characters, a pretty decently constructed script that makes use of its Deadpool/Romance/Revenge plot line and tone, and great and decently made CGI that never holds the film down say for moments where its obvious, it can't, unfortunately, hold some of the film being held by some heavy problems (but not enough to break the film entirely); with a very unnecessary origin story for WADE WILSON that holds the film back from making Deadpool interesting and intervening his schizophrenic depression as a character trait to drive the story and focusing on his cancer battle for dramatic purposing added some odd drama that isn't needed, humour that I have to, unfortunately, doesn't hold up as well as while its in character and gets a chuckle every now and then suffers from execution, side characters that I wish had better development, and unfortunately while really decent direction from Tim Miller is missing some visual flavour and energy to accompany otherwise well done Deadpool moments.
So while it seems I'm being very critical to the aspects of the film that theoretically should make the film lower scored, it doesn't necessarily mean that the film isn't still enjoyable to watch and neither to commend for still being made. It had a lot it needed to try and sell to audiences on its character and especially be even made and despite it missing out on REALLY shining its source material it's understandable it would do some of its faults. So yes while I'm giving a pass on these issues (somewhat) it doesn't mean it holds the film back and hurts its quality, but regardless the film when its regardless sticking to its story does well enough and has enough fun moments and a great after credit scene to give it some life. And hopefully, with the sequel, a lot of these issues can help improve the first film brought.

From a comic book fan perspective, this movie represents a complete change in generations. I was a huge Avengers fan and stopped collecting in the late 80s. When I was a collector, artists were becoming the big reason to like comics. Frank Miller, John Byrne, etc. When Todd McFarlane, Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld came onto the scene as I was leaving the hobby, I missed out on the whole multiple-covers, poly-bagged, trading card, the overly-collector-driven disaster of comics that exploded with the X-Men reboot, X-Force, Deadpool introduction, etc. Over the years as I dabbled back and forth into the hobby, I read about Deadpool, Cable, X-Force, etc. and found it intriguing, but once the artists mentioned above moved on to create Image Comics, and Rob Liefeld, the douchebag creator of Deadpool, began his series of back and forth love/hate situations with fans, his colleagues, his stupid Spike Lee Levis 501 jeans commercials, etc., I could tell that I had little interest in investing myself in this idiot's work.

The appeal of Deadpool has always been his 4th-wall interaction with readers, his insane anti-hero antics, his vulgar humor, etc., all completely different comics than the ones I collected. While I appreciated the jolt that gave to the industry, which was getting kind of stale, I believe it single-handedly killed kid interest in the genre. It became an industry for adults, which has an ever-diminishing audience. Look at the sales numbers today and the past 20 years, and that is very clear. Liefeld's era ruined comics. That being said, for everything Deadpool isn't in terms of his look (which is Liefeld's fault), he is very unique in personality and character development. The brilliant writers over the past 20 years have built upon that initial insanity and kept him relevant. Frankly, it's overdue that he had a film, especially since Spawn had a movie in the late 90s.
However, it's good that Fox waited. It's even better than they yielded to how horrible of a depiction they did in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" and allowed Ryan Reynolds and the brilliant writing team in this film to go full Deadpool, no questions asked, no limits, nothing. The brilliance of Deadpool IS the writing (sorry, Rob). There is not a better way to have made a Deadpool movie than this film. Ryan Reynolds IS Deadpool. He was born to play him. Physique, humor, age, everything. His love of the character and his commitment to getting this movie made was redeemed with this massive opening weekend. The movie never falls into a boring state. It's consistently funny. It's action-packed.
It's got the perfect immersion in the X-Men world. It sets up perfectly for a sequel that will obviously include Cable and, hopefully, leads to an X-Force movie. It is the breath of fresh air that the X-Men franchise needed, especially after we see what appears to be an awful translation of the Apocalypse storyline. Just like in the comics, Deadpool is taking the movies to a vulgar, more sophomoric version of the status quo. People believed it was a breath of fresh air back then, even if it ended up ruining the genre. While I believe this was the perfect Deadpool movie that could have ever been made, could seeing movies made from this 90s generation of comics also kill off the comic movie industry as they appeal more to adults? The similarities are...ahem...uncanny.
Now, this is what you call an awesome superhero film that is not afraid to push the boundaries. Deadpool is one of the most fun, funny and very entertaining film of all time and I gotta say its just fucking good I mean I couldn't stop laughing at this film it was too damn funny that's how good the film was with well-done humor and the humor was very funny and dark at the same time and you know what I like it and it fits the film perfectly. Now the character is perfect I love Deadpool he is one of my favorite superheroes ever in Marvel I always love this hero ever since I was a kid and seeing him coming to life in this film was outstanding and Ryan Reynolds is perfect in the film he is Deadpool and he did an awesome job bringing this hero to life and what a joy it was for this film plus the other characters are lovable too and the actors did a good job too.
The action was so stylish and I love films that have stylish action and this one really does so bloody and gory but it was awesome and cool the action was perfect in every way I love it and the story was good as well very dark and fun with a little bit of heart and all of that fit very well that is what you call well-crafted filmmaking right there. Overall Deadpool is a very well crafted superhero film with stylish action, a well-done story, fun, funny, and just plain awesome plus the characters are so lovable and come on Deadpool is an awesome hero and really a funny one too that's why he's my favorite hero ever. Well done Tim miller you made a very awesome and really well-crafted superhero film that is not afraid to push the boundaries and you made it with style. good job and well done can wait for the second film so David Leitch makes me proud and do your best to give me an awesome squeal. GO DEADPOOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
Time has slowly passed on since the release of Tim Miller and Ryan Reynolds MUCH delayed and well-received adaptation of Deadpool, and I remember my first time watching the film I absolutely loved it; crude humour and generic origin story galore. And rightly so; I'm one of those people who doesn't (for the most part) hate comic book Rob Liefeld nor the character of Deadpool as in the comics he's given a ton of neat anti-hero storylines and fun and goofy stories. And hearing that after the test footage that was leaked (pretty much confirmed to be from Ryan Reynolds) and FOX would finally green-light a much needed hard R rating for the character, it would be reasonable to assume I fanboyed hard for the release of the film.
Now however with time passing and the release of its sequel (with sadly Tim Miller went from helping) I decided to revisit the film to see how it's held up. And truth be told, while I can't say it holds up to well from release I can say that I'm still glad we got this film and that everyone on the film, who are CLEAR fans of this character, managed to make the film to be with. Where it works with a great cast (with no-brainer Ryan Reynolds doing great being "God's Perfect Idiot"), a decently constructed DEADPOOL narrative that makes use of its small budget for some fun set pieces and action sequences, nice attention to detail in sets that help give the film a nice feel to its characters, a pretty decently constructed script that makes use of its Deadpool/Romance/Revenge plot line and tone, and great and decently made CGI that never holds the film down say for moments where its obvious, it can't, unfortunately, hold some of the film being held by some heavy problems (but not enough to break the film entirely); with a very unnecessary origin story for WADE WILSON that holds the film back from making Deadpool interesting and intervening his schizophrenic depression as a character trait to drive the story and focusing on his cancer battle for dramatic purposing added some odd drama that isn't needed, humour that I have to, unfortunately, doesn't hold up as well as while its in character and gets a chuckle every now and then suffers from execution, side characters that I wish had better development, and unfortunately while really decent direction from Tim Miller is missing some visual flavour and energy to accompany otherwise well done Deadpool moments.
So while it seems I'm being very critical to the aspects of the film that theoretically should make the film lower scored, it doesn't necessarily mean that the film isn't still enjoyable to watch and neither to commend for still being made. It had a lot it needed to try and sell to audiences on its character and especially be even made and despite it missing out on REALLY shining its source material it's understandable it would do some of its faults. So yes while I'm giving a pass on these issues (somewhat) it doesn't mean it holds the film back and hurts its quality, but regardless the film when its regardless sticking to its story does well enough and has enough fun moments and a great after credit scene to give it some life. And hopefully, with the sequel, a lot of these issues can help improve the first film brought.
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