Deadpool is one of the greatest comedies of all time, and we need to explore every single thing about it. Just so we can squeeze as many laughs as possible.
Deadpool is one of the greatest comedies of all time, and we need to explore every single thing about it. Just so we can squeeze as many laughs as possible.
Deadpool Writer Paul Wernick had this to say about having Wolverine:
"Hugh’s seen the movie and loved the movie we’ve heard. Obviously, he and Ryan are very close friends, and who knows what happens in the future? We would love to bring Hugh and Wolverine into 'Deadpool's' universe, at least for a brief moment. That would be a dream come true."
Apparently, Fox wouldn't pony up any money for writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick to be on set, so Ryan Reynolds paid for them out of his own pocket.
How nice of him.
There's one off-hand line in that movie about Liam Neeson's character from Taken being a terrible parent, and it's no surprise that the writers think that as well.
According to the writers, they've wanted to address Deadpool's pansexual nature in the future, if given the opportunity.
Maybe they'll have Cable and Deadpool hook up! The shippers will be going wild if they do...
Ajax in the comics has three henchmen in the comics: Wyre, Garrison Kane, and Sluggo.
Because of budgetary restraints, they had to merge these three villains into one: Angel Dust, a girl who could kick butt with her fists.
There's a joke where Deadpool quips about how they couldn't afford better X-Men, and that is totally true.
Apparently, this movie had such a low budget all they could get was Colossus and Negasonic Teenage Warhead
During one action sequence, Deadpool asks himself if he had left the stove on.
The writers have answered that no, and even if he did his roommate Blind Al would have turned it off.
At least in the comics. In the movie, they add some blood to his in order to activate his mutant gene.
There are some fan theories that this blood, like the comics, is like Wolverine's.
Fans might think that the final battle takes place on top of a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier, and they might be right.
Director Tim Miller says it may be a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier. Or it could be an A.I.M helicarrier.
Apparently, there's one scene that didn't make it into the movie where our titular hero heads over to Mexico and kills an evil cancer doctor south of the border.
I wish we could have seen that.
This line was not only taken from X-Men Origins: Wolveriene, but it has been taken from places all over time.
It is said to have originated around the time of the Vietnam war on a T-Shirt.
As you may or may not know, Tim Miller wasn't directing the sequel. That's because he and Ryan Reynolds disagreed on how to make the sequel.
Miller wanted a big budget, Reynolds wanted to remain small. Guess who won out?
Apparently, there was supposed to be this huge gunfight in Act 3 that the producers just... just didn't have money for.
So that's the reason that Deadpool forgot his guns.
According to writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, both the big-time filmmakers did this:
“They read the script each of them at two independent key moments during the script's development. And each one of them was kind enough to go to 20th Century Fox and essentially throw in their good word just saying 'Hey, what are you guys doing with Deadpool? You should be making this!'"