Ryan Reynolds returns as Deadpool after six years for a very belated threequel, and brings Hugh Jackman back with him as a (not the) Wolverine.

Fourth Wall, Prepare To Meet Your Maker!
Because Disney bought 20th Century Fox, [Monoplies are tight!] Deadpool and the X-Men have been subsumed into the imploding MCU. Which means Deadpool can hop thru variant universes seeking a suitable Logan to help save his timeline from TVA ‘pruning’. Mr Paradox (Matthew Macfadyen) is the TVA suit who reveals Wolverine’s noble sacrifice in Logan has doomed his timeline by removing its anchor being. But you can’t simply swap Logan for Logan, and so both Deadpool and this aggrieved Logan variant find themselves banished to The Void. A patently Mad Max hellscape, ruled over by Cassandra Nova (Emma Corrin). The bickering duo must learn to trust each other and work together to escape and stop Paradox. And they might just do it with the help of fellow outcasts: Elektra (Jennifer Garner), Blade (Wesley Snipes), Gambit (Channing Tatum), X-23 (Dafne Keen).
This has some problems. [Tell them about the villains!] Mr Paradox is just irritating. Macfadyen is assigned one note, and lacks only a monocle and villainous moustache to twirl in hitting it. Cassandra is farcically overpowered. Her introduction belongs on The Boys, [Disgusting! Excessive!] and means that she is simply allowing our heroes to live – for the remainder of the film. Which is a bit daft as a plot device. The TVA and a smoke monster that seems to have wandered in from LOST via Loki are unwelcome reminders that we are in the MCU now. [Which means homework!] I’ve seen every Deadpool and Wolverine movie, but that’s still not enough to be prepared for a movie called Deadpool & Wolverine. A quiet scene between Logan and X-23 reminds you what gets lost in Disney’s house style of endless undercutting quips.
There is a lot to enjoy though, especially Tatum and Snipes delivering very self-aware lines. [Maybe Deadpool is actually Marvel Neo? There is no fourth wall…] The unlikely return of Jackman is a pleasure, especially an awesome sequence when Wolverine finally goes full comic-book. There are great cameos, even if misleading credits fudge cameo and supporting player. But with all this gathering of the former Fox stable, enjoyable as it is, Deadpool feels alienated from his own universe: what about Colossus? Negasonic Teenage Warhead? Dopinder? Cable?? Domino?? Morena Baccarin hasn’t got decent screen time in 8 YEARS (!) but her Vanessa is still meant to be what drives Wade in extremis. Director Shawn Levy makes an unexpectedly assured step up to R-rated material, but this is Reynolds’ show. Even down to the closing threnody for the Fox Marvel Universe. [Stop Crying!]
Reynolds and Jackman shine in this belated reunion, but the fact that it’s a salute to the departed Fox Marvel Universe is quite telling. An end, not a beginning.
3/5














