Green Lantern was a flop and the X-Men spin-off Deadpool looked dead in the
water – that is until fans saw test footage of the actor as the wisecracking
crimefighter, and decided that the red mask fits
Ryan Reynolds Green
Lantern
Supremely ill-conceived … Ryan
Reynolds in the 2011 flop Green Lantern. Photograph: Warner Bros Pictures/DC
There was a moment around four years ago when it looked like Ryan Reynolds
might emerge from rom-com purgatory and find a place for himself as a
wisecracking superhero, alongside the likes of Robert Downey Jr. Reynolds had
won acclaim for the unorthodox 2010 indie thriller Buried, in which he was
mesmerising as a civilian truck driver who is kidnapped and buried alive by
Iraqi insurgents with only a torch and a mobile phone for company. Coupled with
a positively received cameo as the superhero Deadpool in the otherwise
disappointing X-Men Origins: Wolverine, the Canadian actor was boasting some
serious buzz.
Then along came Green Lantern, a supremely ill-conceived 2011 superhero epic
about the space-roaming DC comics crimefighter. Reynolds wasn’t terrible in it
by any means, but the film suffered from hamfisted characterisation, lazy
screenwriting and shonky CGI. With its star suddenly far from flavour of the
month, 20th Century Fox’s proposed Deadpool X-Men spin-off entered studio
purgatory.
The leaked Deadpool test footage
Now the movie seems to be back on, after leaked test footage of Reynolds as
the masked antihero caused a huge stir online earlier this year. Variety
reported yesterday that a deal is being closed for the movie to enter
production, while the film’s star posted an image of Deadpool’s distinctive
mask, depicted in a collage of spent bullets and cartridge cases. The caption?
“Uh ... It’s Chimichanga Time”, a reference to the character’s penchant for
deep-fried burritos.
Might Deadpool mark a turn in Reynolds’s fortunes? That will depend on
whether Fox holds its nerve and delivers a film that lives up to the edgy verve
of the test footage, which drew exactly the kind of fanboy gasps you might
expect from a superhero movie featuring foul language, extreme violence and a
protagonist with obvious mental-health issues. Like Kick-Ass in 2010, Deadpool
looks like a fresh take on the formula, as opposed to the Tony Stark-lite in
space template used byGreen Lantern. The fact that it’s impossible to recognise
Reynolds’s boyish features in the footage, coupled with the freaky lack of a
mouth hole in Deadpool’s mask, makes the vision all the more
irresistible.
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This also ought to be a movie that sidesteps many of the usual credibility
issues that superhero movies have. Green Lantern, with its
cosmic-space-alien-police-force premise, was always going to be a hard sell; but
unlike, say, Batman, Deadpool’s penchant for throwing himself into situations
promising almost certain death seems believable. Firstly, he boasts the
superhero ability to regenerate after almost any injury, and secondly, he really
is completely crazy.
The fear, of course, is that Fox will realise that this unorthodox confection
really is at best a $100m movie, with a loyal hardcore fanbase but little
potential for big-figure box-office returns and zero chance of getting a release
in fiercely censorial China. Then begins the slow process of retooling the
character and movie for a PG-13 US audience, a process that the little known
first-time director Tim Miller would be powerless to resist.
But for now, let’s assume that the Deadpool who arrives in February 2016 is
the one we’ve already seen furiously freewheeling across the screen like a nutty
whirling dervish. It might just be the start of a Rey-naissance – and you can’t
even really see the guy acting.
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