Movie review 'Deadpool’
Movie review 'Deadpool’
Cast: Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, Gina Carano, T J Miller, Ed
Skrein, Brianna Hildebrand, Jed Rees
Director: Tim Miller
Director: Tim Miller
Embracing anger, rage and a good
sense of humour, Deadpool is an entertaining movie that does just one thing,
entertain. It does not give you any good advice, nor does it give you a warm
feeling of being safe and protected by the superheroes. Deadpool feels like
it’s parodying the superhero movie genre in the beginning, but soon devolves
into crazy, slapstick and juvenile.
What keeps it going are the adult
humour, muted cuss words and a simple narrative style. Director Tim Miller’s
success at the ratings lies in finding identification among the newer audience,
notably the audience abroad. It has been a while since I saw an English movie
in a packed theatre in New Delhi, but this time it was different. The audience
was not just laughing at the jokes, they were even completing the lines and
there were moments of mass euphoria as if they were in a religious congregation
and suddenly they had to yell, “Hail the Lord.”
The
India release has an immense number of cuts and muted scenes; the censorship in
India cannot just let you have the jokes about phallus, but the anti-climax for
the censors is the fact that the audience is able to complete these jokes
almost in chorus. This new audience has grown up watching American television series
which the censors have virtually no control over. So the audience will love it.
However,
if you are to watch a dubbed version of the film, I am sure you are going to
have the same frustration that the dubbing artists will have had in the
studios. Deadpool, as a comic character, was pretty successful, and that
continues to the movies. It would not be a surprise if it becomes the biggest
grosser in some time.
Deadpool
puts you at ease, first by eliminating the need for you to think, and second by
using a language that is outright slapstick and common. So you are not hearing
sophisticated dialogues, or beautiful constructs, you are just witnessing the
juvenile fantasies only packaged much better. You get to see some cool visuals,
decent special effects and wonderful acrobatics; Deadpool does not even try to
make you believe that there exists a greater cause for the superheroes.
Ryan
Reynolds has a good voice and you get to focus on that when you don’t have to
look at his face, but Ed Skrein is very handsome — if only they didn’t have to
mess each other up, they could have made a pretty good-looking team. But now
that Ajax is dead for good (is he?) one wonders what would be the next thing
that Deadpool or Mr Wade Winston Wilson would do. Of course, you know what’s
coming in the next episode if you have read the comic series, but I haven’t
read them. I would rather wait for the sequel.
Deadpool
is crafted well, it does not evoke those intense emotions in you and thereby
keeps you at a considerable distance, I mean you don’t really want to identify
with a superhero whose mutation transformed him into an unappealing person. But
at the same time, you want to have a sense of humour like him. So for those who
are theoretically inclined, it is a great example of how interestingly the
ideas of distance and identification have been played with. For those of you
who have a taste for blood and flesh oozing out of bullet holes and being
splattered on screen, there are some momentary pleasures.
Ed
Skrein’s character Ajax is a mystery in itself, and the moment where the
innovator genius that is creating these mutated humans becomes the enemy of
Wade Wilson is a loose construct. That moment in time cannot be traced with
exactness, perhaps Deadpool’s narration didn’t care much about it.
The
writer is founder, Lightcube Film Society


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