<p><span>Director: David Leitch </span></p>.<p><span>Cast: Ryan Reynolds, TJ Miller, Josh Brolin, Morena Baccarin</span></p>.<p><span>Rating: 4/5</span></p>.<p>When Deadpool was first released, it caught the attention of the world for all the right reasons. Built on a paltry budget of $58 million and an R rating, the film went on to become one of the biggest hits of the year, both commercially and critically.</p>.<p>Therefore, it was all but certain that Fox would produce a sequel, and they finally have. Deadpool is back, and he is here to up the ante.</p>.<p>The film starts off on the standard Deadpool note — bad guys dying at the hand of the Merc with a Mouth in various degrees of horrifying and comical, and Wade Wilson getting it on with his girlfriend.</p>.<p>But when unidentified red shir... I mean, bad guys decide to do a house call, it gets personal for Wade (Ryan Reynolds), leaving him with an uncomfortably realistic sense of loss and guilt.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Thanos, or rather Cable (Josh Brolin), a grumpy man arrives from the future with a score to settle and a kid to kill. And it just so happens that Wade has, by way of a series of unfortunate events, been thrown into a prison with the same kid following an altercation.</p>.<p>What follows is a colourful, if somewhat inconsistently paced and relentlessly bloody odyssey, as Wade, Weasel and Dopinder head to LinkedIn to gather a group of super-powered individuals to try and stop Cable.</p>.<p>The film provides Deadpool’s signature humour — crass, unfiltered and laden with cusses — mostly uncensored, except for a few muted words. There is an occasional 'Canada' thrown in for good measure with enough CGI action and plenty of fourth-wall breaking that Deadpool became beloved for.</p>.<p>It’s filled with the same excellent choice of music and character dynamics, deftly balancing the evolving quirks of established characters while introducing new ones almost effortlessly.</p>.<p>However, the film does seem to suffer from the departure of director Tim Miller. While David Leitch is by no means a sub-par director, the film does struggle to keep up with the kind of pace the first Deadpool used to incredible effect. There also seems to be a bit of a disconnect in the presentation of the first and second halves of the film.</p>.<p>But, with the return of Rhese and Wernick as writers, and Ryan Reynolds supplementing them, the writing remains crisp and fresh throughout. I also have an issue with some of the CGI used, particularly in the second act, but like the entire film, I can’t shake the feeling that it was deliberately made that way as a running gag.</p>.<p>Overall, while the first film may have been a radical way of laying the foundation for a new playground, the first half of Deadpool 2 feels like a competent, if safe effort to build on it. The second half, though, is an entirely different beast altogether and manages to construct an incredible playground filled with humour, heart and a message to provide.</p>
<p><span>Director: David Leitch </span></p>.<p><span>Cast: Ryan Reynolds, TJ Miller, Josh Brolin, Morena Baccarin</span></p>.<p><span>Rating: 4/5</span></p>.<p>When Deadpool was first released, it caught the attention of the world for all the right reasons. Built on a paltry budget of $58 million and an R rating, the film went on to become one of the biggest hits of the year, both commercially and critically.</p>.<p>Therefore, it was all but certain that Fox would produce a sequel, and they finally have. Deadpool is back, and he is here to up the ante.</p>.<p>The film starts off on the standard Deadpool note — bad guys dying at the hand of the Merc with a Mouth in various degrees of horrifying and comical, and Wade Wilson getting it on with his girlfriend.</p>.<p>But when unidentified red shir... I mean, bad guys decide to do a house call, it gets personal for Wade (Ryan Reynolds), leaving him with an uncomfortably realistic sense of loss and guilt.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Thanos, or rather Cable (Josh Brolin), a grumpy man arrives from the future with a score to settle and a kid to kill. And it just so happens that Wade has, by way of a series of unfortunate events, been thrown into a prison with the same kid following an altercation.</p>.<p>What follows is a colourful, if somewhat inconsistently paced and relentlessly bloody odyssey, as Wade, Weasel and Dopinder head to LinkedIn to gather a group of super-powered individuals to try and stop Cable.</p>.<p>The film provides Deadpool’s signature humour — crass, unfiltered and laden with cusses — mostly uncensored, except for a few muted words. There is an occasional 'Canada' thrown in for good measure with enough CGI action and plenty of fourth-wall breaking that Deadpool became beloved for.</p>.<p>It’s filled with the same excellent choice of music and character dynamics, deftly balancing the evolving quirks of established characters while introducing new ones almost effortlessly.</p>.<p>However, the film does seem to suffer from the departure of director Tim Miller. While David Leitch is by no means a sub-par director, the film does struggle to keep up with the kind of pace the first Deadpool used to incredible effect. There also seems to be a bit of a disconnect in the presentation of the first and second halves of the film.</p>.<p>But, with the return of Rhese and Wernick as writers, and Ryan Reynolds supplementing them, the writing remains crisp and fresh throughout. I also have an issue with some of the CGI used, particularly in the second act, but like the entire film, I can’t shake the feeling that it was deliberately made that way as a running gag.</p>.<p>Overall, while the first film may have been a radical way of laying the foundation for a new playground, the first half of Deadpool 2 feels like a competent, if safe effort to build on it. The second half, though, is an entirely different beast altogether and manages to construct an incredible playground filled with humour, heart and a message to provide.</p>