Faith Can Move Mountains... But Dynamite Works Better
Showing posts with label Morena Baccarin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morena Baccarin. Show all posts

Saturday, December 15, 2018

The Kidnapping Of Fred Savage


“You’re in a PG-13 version of Deadpool, filtered through the prism of childlike innocence.” ~ Deadpool 
“I’m a grown man.” ~ Fred 
“Nobody does childlike innocence like you, Fred. Nobody. I need you, almost as much as you need me.” ~ Deadpool 
“I don’t need you at all.” ~ Fred 
“You need me to untie you once we’re done.” ~ Deadpool

“You’re Marvel licensed by Fox. It’s like if the Beatles were produced by Nickelback. It’s music, but it sucks.” ~ Fred 
“You were nicer as a kid!” ~ Deadpool


The two Deadpool movies have turned the comic book adaptation on their heads, giving Ryan Reynolds a chance to exercise his inner snark in violent, bloody, and hilarious ways in films that have been R-rated for a reason. Following the adventures of an X-Men connected superpowered mercenary with loose scruples, a face that looks like it’s been sandpapered, and an odd healing factor allowing him to come back from anything, the movies have been popular with audiences. Studios tried to persuade the creative team in the beginning to do a more family friendly film, but the material pretty much required the R rating. Until star Reynolds agreed to do a re-edited version of the second film with two conditions- a charitable cause and the kidnapping of a beloved former child star.


Once Upon A Deadpool tells the story of the second film, in which Wade Wilson (Reynolds) loses his lady love Vanessa (Morena Baccarin), feels sorry for himself, hangs around with some of the X-Men, gets tossed into a prison where his powers are negated. He falls in with Russell (Julian Dennison), a young mutant who’s a troubled and abused kid, but fated to become a monster in the future. And from that future, Cable (Josh Brolin) comes to kill Russell. The story, reedited for language and some of that aforementioned violence, gets new scenes in the form of a subversive and hilarious framing sequence that pops up throughout the movie: Deadpool breaking through the Fourth Wall, kidnapping Fred Savage (playing himself), and telling him the more or less family friendly version of the film, all while the two bicker and spar with each other.


Back when the sequel was released, Reynolds suggested the framing sequence to writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick- a parody of The Princess Bride and its narration sequences in which Peter Falk`s grandfather reads his grandson (Savage) the story while avoiding those parts that might be too scary for a youngster. The subversive element (in parodying a film that was already subversive in its own way in skewering fairy tales) is taking the same young actor and putting him in the same position as a grown adult, and as himself, not as the character. Thus scenes were written for Reynolds and Savage, the latter agreed to do the role, and director David Leitch returned to film the scenes that were added into the film.


Much of the story remains as is, changed only by judicious re-edits. What is new here are the narrative sequences that Leitch has filmed, and the attention to detail in these scenes brought a frequent smile to my face. The bedroom that Fred Savage finds himself looks very much like the childhood bedroom of The Princess Bride, including many of the items around the room. This includes the fact that he’s wearing the same shirt that his character wore in that film (not the same shirt, he’d have outgrown it, but the same style of Chicago Bears fan shirt). Some of the camera takes feel the same too, as Deadpool, taking the place of Peter Falk, bickers and spars with Fred while retelling the story.


The cast of the main story remains as they already were in the first film. Stefan Kapicic voices the calm and resolute Colossus, trying to coax Wade into being a better human being. Brianna Hildebrand returns as the teen mutant with an attitude and eye roll to match, Negasonic Teenage Warhead, promoted to X-Men status. Her girlfriend Yukio is played by Shioli Kutsuna, still as cheerfully happy as ever. Julian Dennison as Russell elicits both horror and sympathy as the young mutant has dealt with a life of abuse from a horrible schoolmaster and is on the edge of travelling down a dark path.


Zazie Beetz inhabits the role of Domino, whose abilities involve the altering of probabilities, a luck power that keeps her alive in situations where anyone else would die. She plays the part with sass, confidence, and the right amount of attitude. Josh Brolin remains as cranky and gruff as ever, looking older than he usually does as the weathered future warrior Cable, who comes back in time to save his family by killing the man who killed them before he gets a chance to become that man. Cable is humourless and bleak at times, but possessed of a moral code. Morena Baccarin as Wade’s lover Vanessa provides more of a spiritual presence through the film, coaxing Wade along the path he has to follow.


What makes this re-edit work (as opposed to, say, an American cable version with their own puritanical edits) is the framing sequence, which maintains the anarchic and Fourth Wall breaking tone of the two movies. And so it’s the two actors involved in that which must be touched upon. Fred Savage as a child actor was known for The Princess Bride and a long running television show, The Wonder Years. In that series he played Kevin Arnold, a boy growing up in the late 60s and early 70s. It established him as a child star, and the film plays off of that as well. Savage is playing himself, at least a version of himself, a grown adult who’s aware that he played a role in The Princess Bride and aware that he’s being held captive by a member of the not quite Marvel cinematic universe (licensed to Fox, so it’s not really true Marvel cinematic universe, something he has no problem pointing out). Savage seems to have a blast subverting himself as he bickers and banters with Wade and breaks the Fourth Wall. He brings good comic timing to the film as he spars with the Merc With A Mouth. Though I never saw the television series, one of the things that passed through my mind watching the film was Savage helming an update with the series- with Kevin Arnold having gone from an innocent kid to an ethically challenged arms dealer in the late 90s.


Reynolds maintains the snarky, reality challenged tone of Deadpool in how he plays the part, both in the main story and in the narrative framing. The character is sarcastic in a way that not even Spider-Man ever was, self-aware that he’s in a comic book, or a film. He can be thoughtless and careless and rarely thinks things through, preferring to live life as a constant improvisation. And yet he has a conscience. Reynolds plays these contrasting elements in his character, and is clearly having a ball playing the part. The narrative framing adds onto the anarchy, as Wade finds himself telling a toned down version of the film to the supposed ‘childlike innocence’ of a kid he remembered, all while feeling genuinely hurt that the kid has grown up and has become snarky in his own right. Reynolds subverts his character while also poking fun at the grandfather role in The Princess Bride, and the energy and dynamic between the two actors in these scenes as the film goes along gives the film its own gleefully chaotic sense of purpose, making it more than a re-edited and toned down version you would see on cable (AMC, I’m looking at you).


Is Once Upon A Deadpool a Christmas movie? Well, no, it just happens to be released around this time of year, and there are bits and pieces of the film that give a nod towards the season. Yes, it has a man in red who’s got a list that he’s checking twice (but he’s less forgiving than the jolly old elf and in better shape). It re-edits the second film and does so in a way that doesn’t sacrifice the main tone of the film. But where it succeeds is subverting what is already subversive- The Princess Bride- with its narrative sequences. The subversion is respectful, oddly- one gets the sense that Reynolds, Leitch, and the writers are big fans of that movie. Reynolds and Savage, in the way they work off each other in those sequences, are a treat to watch, trading insults and one liners as they go along. That makes this film a welcome early Christmas present.

Monday, May 21, 2018

Return Of A Demented Merc


“Move or die.” ~ Cable

“When’s the last time you saw a plus size superhero? Never.”  ~ Russell

“With training, you can be X-Men.” ~ Colossus

“Kiss me like you miss me, Red.” ~ Vanessa

“Tell me they got that in slow motion.” ~ Deadpool


After the success of the first Deadpool film in 2016, it was inevitable that the R-rated entry in the X-Men franchise would get a sequel and the Merc With A Mouth would return for more mayhem and breaking the fourth wall. And so Ryan Reynolds returns as the wisecracking, healing factor possessing lunatic in this follow up feature that finds him carrying on his romance with the woman in his life, forming a posse, and facing a time travelling soldier with a mission of his own in a violent but hilarious film that matches the tone of its predecessor.


Two years after the events of the last film, Wade Wilson (Reynolds) is a mercenary working his trade around the world as Deadpool, the masked man with a motor-mouth who simply can’t be killed. He has a good thing going with his girlfriend Vanessa (Morena Baccarin) until things go awry. At loose ends, Wade finds himself drawn into the X-Men (courtesy of returning mutants Colossus and Negasonic Teenage Warhead) and a mission involving a young mutant named Russell (Julian Dennison) and a time traveling cybernetic mutant soldier named Cable (Josh Brolin).


Reynolds is part of the writing team (and in fact provides more than one character performance), providing input with writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick. The script fits the demented tone of the character, weaving together the violence and the humour of in the right way. There’s a lot of in-jokes in the script that are both tied to the X-Men cinematic world and far beyond it, wrecking gleeful havoc with popular culture in the form of meta gags as it goes along. It incorporates themes and elements common to comic books- time travel, misunderstandings, enemies turned allies- with human elements like selflessness versus carelessness, doing right for the sake of doing right… and bantering with your buddies.


The story narrative does show growth in the characters- Deadpool’s responses to events suggest he’s moved past the self-absorbed buffoon we first met at the beginning of the first film, even while he has his moments of immaturity mixed in with his despair. Personal growth is also seen in Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand), who’s still got something of the punk we saw in the first film, but has grown and matured as well. The writing introduces new characters like Cable (whose entire history in the comics is the ultimate example of convoluted) and Domino (Zazie Beetz) in ways that feel true to their roots.


Director David Leitch (John Wick, Atomic Blonde) has already established a good reputation for the mayhem of action films, and he has the right touch for that here. He deftly paces the action as things go along, and yet amid all of the action, he maintains a hold on the foundation of the story- the characters, particularly the dynamic often seen in comics of two protagonists taking shots at each other and then settling their differences and working together. His style, coupled with CGI that meshes well with the physical, results in a film that has the gleefully anarchic energy it needs, with the right touches of humanity and even self-sacrifice. The meshing of CGI and the physical probably presents itself best in the Juggernaut- a combination of Ryan Reynolds doing stop motion capture and voice for the villain (another double duty for the actor) with the CGI enhancements; it works well for the Hulk over in the MCU and works for this behemoth far better than his previous X-Men cinematic universe appearance during X-Men The Last Stand. A lot of the action sequences, done in a way that is smooth even among all the chaos, is physical as opposed to CGI, and the director deftly films things in ways that don’t get the viewer lost in the chaos.


The cast are all well selected. Julian Dennison plays Russell, the boy mutant who appears as one thing initially- someone who must be protected- but goes off in a different direction as the story requires, becoming a threat in a distant future. The actor plays the role with different nuances- a typical teenager at first with the requisite attitude and snark that might make you want to strangle him just on principle, but he’s got grudges, deeply felt pain, and legitimate grievances- the sort of grudges that are meant to grow over time and make him problematic.


Morena Baccarin appears less than she did in the first film, with something of a different capacity, let’s just put it at that, this time out. Vanessa’s chemistry with Wade feels real, and the two characters are likable together, even if one of them looks like they had their face sandpapered (hint: it’s not her). She acts as Wade’s conscience, aside from being his lover, and that plays itself out as the film goes along, and the actress plays to that, as well as investing the character with a dry sense of humour.


Stefan Kapicic returns to voice the X-Man Colossus once again, the mountain of organic steel from the first film. The character is more CGI than physical presence, but that CGI renders him fully meshed into the scene, and Kapicic’s vocal take gives the character a steady strength and more warmth than you expect out of the comics character. Colossus is an experienced member of his team who works to make Wade a better person, and the actor’s take gives him a sense of optimism. Brianna Hildebrand’s return as the weirdly codenamed mutant teen Negasonic Teenage Warhead (complete with her adorably perky girlfriend/ classmate Yukio) is fun- she still has the punk screw you attitude the actress gave her in the first film, but she’s matured, and the actress plays that quality too.


Domino is a character I like from the comics, and this happens to be the first time she’s ever appeared in the movies. The character’s mutant ability involves manipulating luck in her favour, and aside from that is a formidable fighter. Zazie Beetz gives the role a fun, snarky energy, and gets in more than her share of wisecracks. She also shows the character’s resourceful, tenacious side, and makes a serious impression in her debut of this character. I’m looking forward to more of what she can do with the character, and other roles.


Josh Brolin, who recently spent time as the villain Thanos in Avengers Infinity War, gets to play a very different character as Cable. The character, a partially cybernetic warrior from the future, is older and gruff, an experienced soldier with mutant abilities and next to no sense of humour. He has good reason to come back in time, not to mention target an unlikely subject like Russell for death, and the actor plays Cable as gritty, tough, and not terribly talkative. At first the character is a man of mystery and an antagonist, but when we see and understand his motives, there are more nuances to him, and so as the film develops, he goes from one capacity to another, and makes the character compelling to watch. Even if he can barely crack a smile.


Ryan Reynolds seems to be having a blast throughout the film (even when his character is in the midst of despair) as Wade, wisecracking and tweaking the conventions of the superhero genre once again. He’s still full of snark, despite the despair, and when he finds himself having a purpose, it gives him a sense of growth that we’d have never seen in the character as he originally appeared (even if he tempers that growth with endless amounts of being a wiseass). Wade takes a stand on both principle and bitter experience, even if it sets him against those he’s worked with before, and even if it puts him in the crosshairs of a very grumpy soldier from the future. The actor plays that mix of sympathetic and snark and despair, and runs wild with the meta gag quality of what makes Deadpool work, skewering everything from fanny packs to Disney to the Marvel and DC cinematic universes to even himself as an actor, and seems to be having a ball doing so. He makes Deadpool hilarious but human throughout, and a protagonist we can root for, even if he is a violent, foul mouthed lunatic at times.


Deadpool 2 serves up more of the mayhem, carnage, and laughs of the original film, building on and expanding the X-Men universe in a way that deserves its R-rating. There’s a lot of violence, a lot of language, and a lot of bloodshed. This is not a comic book film that you take a young child to. But it is a comic book adaptation that is uproariously funny (stay for the credits sequences and be mindful of some blink and you’ll miss it cameos) and emotionally human and even poignant. I want to see more of the Merc With A Mouth on the big screen- I just wouldn’t want to know him in real life.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Unleashing The Merc With A Mouth


“Crime’s the disease, meet the cure. Okay, not the cure, but more like a topical cream to reduce the swelling and itch.” ~ Deadpool

“Just promise you’ll do right by me, so I can do right by someone else. And don’t make the super suit green. Or animated.” ~ Deadpool

“Wow, this is such a big house, but I only ever see the two of you here. It’s like the studio didn’t have  enough money for any more X-Men.” ~ Deadpool

“I had another Liam Neeson nightmare. I kidnapped his daughter and he just wasn’t having it. They made three of those movies. At some point you have to wonder if he’s just a bad parent.” ~ Deadpool


Back in the day, writer Fabien Nicieza and artist Rob Liefeld (who’s established a well deserved reputation as one of the worst comic book artists of all time) created an unlikely character named Wade Wilson, otherwise known as Deadpool, a mercenary with a smart aleck attitude, a healing factor, and an ability to understand that he was a comic book character, thus breaking the Fourth Wall. The character has been around the Marvel universe ever since, annoying pretty much anyone he’s come into contact with, proving to be an antihero with mileage. Now the character has hit theatres with a solo film of his own, starring Ryan Reynolds, who played at least a version of the character previously in X-Men Origins: Wolverine.


Wade (Reynolds) is a mercenary in New York, a former special forces operative with a motor mouth and shaky ethics. Vanessa Carlyle (Morena Baccarin) is the woman in his life, but life throws him a bad loop and he ends up diagnosed with terminal cancer. This being a comic book adaptation and not My Life, the story of course will not involve long vigils at hospital bedsides and a teary eyed fiancée watching her guy waste away. Wade is given a chance at a secret program, with an experimental cure dangled in his face.


The program includes one Francis Freeman (Ed Skrein), aka Ajax, who has a formula meant to trigger mutant genes, though there are of course other agendas involved, including torture for the sake of torture. Ajax and his right hand Angel Dust (Gina Carano) aren’t nice people, and Wade’s experiences in the program lead to a cure of sorts, an accelerated healing factor, not to mention a wee bit of a disfigurement soon requiring a red and black mask and costume.


The character had been in the works for a film treatment for years. Reynolds first became interested in the role after a comic book reference by Wade comparing his appearance to “Ryan Reynolds crossed with a shar-pei.” Wade turned up in the aforementioned Wolverine film, carrying some of the character’s habit to irritate everyone around him before ending up in a very different state than when he began, but this film pretty much feels like it’s ignoring that film- with the odd exception here and there. One wonders as an aside, with the time altering events of the most recent X-Men film, did that movie even happen?


The story is squarely set in the X-Men cinematic universe though, with the appearance of one of the team as well as a trainee with a really weird name, as opposed to the Marvel cinematic universe of the Avengers films. The script by Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick is strongly influenced by the comic history, but even more by the tone of the character. Deadpool (often referred to as the Merc With A Mouth) has long been the sort of character who understands he’s in a comic book and frequently breaks the Fourth Wall, something that’s done in the film as well. It’s a meta sort of film where the protagonist knows he’s in a film and riffs on that, and the writing plays to that in a hilarious way, tweaking the conventions of action, comic adaptations, and even romance in various ways. The previous take on Wade in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, as well as Reynold’s role in the ill fated Green Lantern, as well as Spider-Man, the X-Men, Batman, and much more all become targets for the humour of the film.


The script gives us a protagonist who’s not that sympathetic- Wade’s ethics as a vigilante are shifty to say the least, and he’s not out to save the world. He’s crass and thoughtless at times, tends to lean towards selfishness at times. The villains are suitably nasty- and prone to getting very quickly irritated by the protagonists. The writers play to those elements, and give the script a funny, demented, and skewed tone that fits Deadpool perfectly.


Director Tim Miller comes from a background in animation, short films, and title sequences for other films. This is his first feature where he’s helming the whole thing as a director, and yet he seems well suited for it. Filming was done in Vancouver (which so often fills in for American cities), and Miller’s use of the urban environment makes up for the relatively low budget of the production. Miller does well with working on action sequences, and gives the film a gritty feel in the way he films things.


The cast are relatively well cast. T.J. Miller plays the role of Weasel, Wade’s friend, an import from the comics where the character is a long suffering support to Deadpool. I wondered where I’d seen him before- it turns out he played the most obnoxiously annoying member of the cast of Cloverfield, an oaf handling a camera through that monster film. Leslie Uggams plays the part of Blind Al, also a transfer from the comics, an elderly blind woman who ends up having the exasperating mercenary as a roommate. The X-Man Colossus turns up as well; previously played by Daniel Cudmore, this time it’s a performance of several actors taking on voice, motion capture, and facial expression. Colossus is pretty much bland no matter who plays him, but putting the character opposite Deadpool makes him a good foil and subject for Wade’s snarkiness. The X-trainee with him is played by Brianna Hildebrand, taking on the name Negasonic Teenage Warhead (proof that X-students have no business choosing their own codenames). The character is rooted in the comics as well, and the actress gives the mutant the right kind of attitude.


Gina Carano has a background in mixed martial arts before moving into film. Her take on Angel Dust is very different from the comics- the character has gained powers through experimentation, and she’s a good deal crankier than her comics counterpart. She brings the physicality to the role that the film requires. Ed Skrein, who’s spent time on that whole Game Of Thrones series (spoiler: in the end, everyone’s going to die) has the primary antagonist role of Ajax to play. As required, he plays the scenery chewing sociopath well, and as expected given who he’s up against, he tends to get irritated quickly and often.


Morena Baccarin first came to my attention as a cast regular in Firefly (it’s a crime that the show only lasted a season), and these days she’s a regular on the comics adaptation series Gotham. She’s likeable and sympathetic as Vanessa, a character who’s quite different in the comics. The actress has good chemistry with Reynolds, and where the film takes her, the reactions that she has make sense, particularly how she feels about revelations that play out.


Ryan Reynolds has a ball playing Deadpool, to the point where it’s impossible to imagine anyone else playing the character. He conveys the sheer sense of anarchic lunacy and snark that’s so central to the character, a mix of self loathing glossed over with sarcasm. His performance is subversive, hilarious, and self-aware; with his tendency to break the Fourth Wall, Reynolds plays Wade rather like an updated Ferris Bueller- albeit one with a hideous face, lack of moral center, and fondness for weapons. It’s a delight to watch him in action or to listen to him speak, and you can tell that the actor is enjoying himself thoroughly throughout the film.


Deadpool is a blast, blowing the lid off the conventions of the superhero film in a big way, providing plenty of laughs and thumbing the nose in many ways. It’s thoroughly entertaining, with lots of nods towards the genre (one will have to see it more times to catch all of them). I look forward to more of the Merc With A Mouth- and it seems that movie going audiences agree.