By rescuing these “failed” heroes, Deadpool & Wolverine stages a rebellion against algorithmic nostalgia. It’s not about winking at the camera and saying, “Remember this?” It’s about saying, “This mattered. This actor gave a performance. This silly movie deserves a final bow.” The Chris Evans gag works not just because it subverts Captain America, but because it gives Johnny Storm a genuinely heroic last stand. The first two Deadpool films are hilarious, but Wade Wilson barely changes. He starts as a merc with a mouth who loves Vanessa, and ends as a merc with a mouth who loves Vanessa. The growth is lateral.
So how do you resurrect Wolverine without desecrating that grave? You don’t. Instead, director Shawn Levy and star Ryan Reynolds introduce a variant —a “worst Wolverine” who let his entire X-Men universe die. This isn’t the hero we remember. He’s a drunk, a failure, a man literally wearing the shame of his past. By decoupling Jackman’s performance from the Logan canon, the film allows us to have our cake and eat it too: we get the claws and the catchphrases, but we also get a broken character who needs Deadpool to remind him what heroism looks like. deadpool. 3
Here’s why this piece—messy, meta, and miraculously heartfelt—actually works. The smartest thing Deadpool & Wolverine does is refuse to ignore time. When we last saw Logan (in 2017’s Logan ), he died a brutal, beautiful death. The film told us superhero stories end in dust and silence. For seven years, that ending stood as an untouchable monument. By rescuing these “failed” heroes, Deadpool & Wolverine
Deadpool & Wolverine is a love letter to the messy, forgotten, pre-MCU era of cape films. And in a landscape of clean, soulless franchise installments, a little mess is exactly what we needed. This silly movie deserves a final bow