The Deadpool Movie: What We Know So Far

Despite featuring Deadpool’s first ever live-action appearance, the 2009 film X-Men Origins: Wolverine didn’t exactly please fans of the deranged Marvel Comics character. In fact, the interpretation is seen by many to be pure blasphemy. Sure, fans appreciated the casting of Ryan Reynolds, but what they didn’t like was that the film stripped away everything about Deadpool that makes him Deadpool: no cancer, no costume, and as a coup de grace, a sewn up mouth.

The good news is that retribution is on the way. After years of being stuck in development hell because of studio executives with no vision for the potential of comic book movies, Deadpool is actually moving forward. 20th Century Fox has officially announced that the movie will be released on February 12, 2016 – and we couldn’t be more excited.

So who is actually making this movie? What will it be about? What will it be rated? We have all this info and more in the latest edition of our What We Know So Far Guides. Let's start with watching the latest red band trailer, shall we?

Now read on and learn everything you want to know about Deadpool!

Deadpool

The Director

Unless you’ve been following the development of Deadpool for years and years like us, there’s a pretty good chance that you have no idea who Tim Miller is. To make a long story short, he is the man who will be making his directorial debut with the Deadpool movie. After rumors of Robert Rodriguez potentially helming the project died down, Miller wound up landing the job back in April 2011. Best known for his work as a VFX artist and the creator of the effects company Blur Studio, Miller doesn’t have many feature credits to his name, but does have a claim to fame as the guy who made the sickeningly awesome title sequence for David Fincher’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (or, as I like to call it, "The James Bond Intro That Took Too Much Heroin.")

Deadpool

Deadpool

When the Deadpool movie was first greenlit, one of the biggest questions that immediately popped up was in regard to the status of Ryan Reynolds’ relationship with the project. Fortunately, the actor officially announced that he was in back in December of 2014. This is definitely a good thing. Not only is Reynolds a superfan of the character, he also played a vital role in the development of the script. If the movie had moved forward without him, it would have been pretty unfair. Everything we’ve seen so far from the actor and his performance suggest that Fox definitely made the right choice bringing him back.

Deadpool

The Script

In early 2010, Zombieland screenwriting duo Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick were just coming down from the high of their first massive Hollywood success when they were given a very special opportunity: the chance to pen the Deadpool spin-off script. Working directly alongside Ryan Reynolds and matching the voice of the character to the actor, they worked to produce a script that was true to the Merc With The Mouth from the comics: he doesn’t stop talking, he constantly breaks the fourth wall, he is nearly indestructible and his cancer-ridden face is typically hidden by a red and black mask. An early draft of the script leaked online in 2010, providing ravening fans all the details they could want about the Deadpool movie, including a structure that goes back in forth and time between the tale of how the character’s origin and how he lives his modern day life.

Deadpool will tell the origin story of its titular character, finding ex-special forces Wade Wilson devastated as he learns that he has cancer in his liver, lungs, prostate and brain. Not quite ready to leave this plane of existence, and devoted to the love of his life, Vanessa, he decides to enlist what he is told is a government program that will turn him into a super soldier. What he doesn’t know, however, is that the actual motivation of the program is to turn him into a super slave. Various painful experiments leave Wilson with an incredible healing factor, but also horrifically scarred and completely psychotic. Putting on a red and black suit and calling himself Deadpool, he becomes a mercenary on the hunt for the man responsible for his tortured existence: Ajax a.k.a. Francis.

Deadpool

Colossus

Given that the character’s rights still belong to 20th Century Fox, Deadpool can easily be slipped into the existing cinematic world of X-Men movies, and feature crossover characters - but there remains a question of how much crossover we will actually see in the movie. The door is seemingly wide open for this kind of thing, and the film will be taking at least partial advantage by featuring Nikolaievitch Rasputin a.k.a. Colossus. In the X-Men franchise, the character has been played by Daniel Cudmore, specifically in X2: X-Men United, X-Men: The Last Stand, and X-Men: Days of Future Past. However, he will not be back to play the character in Deadpool. Instead, Canadian actor Andre Tricoteux did the motion capture work on the movie, and he will be voiced by Stefan Kapicic.

Deadpool

Negasonic Teenage Warhead

Even if you’re a huge comic book nerd, there’s a pretty good chance that you haven’t heard of Negasonic Teenage Warhead. The character was introduced during Grant Morrison’s fantastic "New X-Men" run, and was killed just a few panels after her first line of dialogue. She is a goth-styled precognitive mutant, and in Deadpool she will be played by up-and-coming actress Brianna Hildebrand. At this point, not much is known about her larger role in the film, but she is introduced as a student who is being trained by Colossus to become a member of the X-Men. Why she ends up staying with the Merc With The Mouth is unclear at this point, and it appears that the live-screen adaptation of the character is changing her power set (she can seemingly collect energy and use it to pack a punch), but she’s certainly one of the most intriguing members of the cast.

Deadpool

Weasel

T.J. Miller has been earning quite a bit of acclaim thanks to his voice performance in the Oscar-winning Big Hero 6 and his recurring role on the HBO series Silicon Valley, but he will be making his live-action comic book movie debut playing Weasel in Deadpool. In the comics, Weasel is known as one of the few people who can actually tolerate spending time around Wade Wilson – but it helps that the mercenary pays him a lot of money for tech and arms for use during missions. Since his introduction, the character has been established as a slacker nerd – which we know that T.J. Miller can play to perfection. Trailers suggest that the two men will have the same kind of love/hate relationship in the movie.

Deadpool

Vanessa

Morena Baccarin will be playing the female lead in Deadpool, and while the exact identity of the role was kept a secret for a while, she eventually revealed that she will be playing Vanessa - a.k.a. Wade Wilson’s first great love. She is a hooker that Wilson winds up falling deeply in love with, but they see their relationship tested when it’s revealed that he has cancer in his liver, lungs, prostate and brain. He joins the secret superhero program so that he can get better and be with her, but obviously things going seriously wrong there prevent that from going smoothly. The Firefly and Homeland star beat out a number of talented actresses for the highly sought-after part, including Taylor Schilling, Crystal Reed, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Sarah Greene, and Jessica De Rouw. Exactly what her role in Deadpool will be beyond the origin story isn’t quite clear, but trailers have suggested that she winds up getting kidnapped by Ajax. Speaking of the villain…

Deadpool

Ajax

Deadpool obviously needs a big bad antagonist in order to really shine a light on the "hero" part of the titular character’s anti-hero persona – and taking on that job is Transporter Refueled star Ed Skrien. In the movie, he will be playing the Merc With The Mouth’s first true enemy. We first meet the character while he is working for the aforementioned secret superhero program, and he is the one who puts Wade Wilson through all kinds of hell, torture and experimentation. He’s the reason why Deadpool winds up hideously scarred and totally insane, so you can probably understand why there is a bit of bad blood between them. In the comics Ajax winds up betting a powerful suit of armor that allows him to better compete with Deadpool, but it’s unclear if that will make it from the page to the screen.

Deadpool

Angel Dust

Angel Dust has been confirmed to be one of the new mutants introduced in Deadpool, and while we haven’t had the chance to see much of her in footage just yet, we expect that she will ultimately have an extremely action-heavy part. How do we know this? Because she will be played by MMA fighter and Haywire star Gina Carano. In the comics, Angel Dust is a member of the Morlocks - which is a clan of mutants that literally lives underground. Her mutant ability allows her to have complete control of the adrenaline produced in her body, and when she has enough juices going she can have practically superhuman strength (just think about the mother who can lift a car to save her baby). From what we’ve seen and heard from Carano, it doesn’t seem like the Morlocks aspect of the character will be part of the live-action adaptation, and instead she will be working alongside Ajax in the torture and transformation of Wade Wilson into Deadpool. We also know that she doesn’t really have a ton of respect for the X-Men and their ilk, given that she has no problem punching Colossus’ lights out.

Deadpool

Blind Al

We spent months wondering if the Deadpool movie would feature the character Blind Al – a key figure in early Deadpool comics – and it wasn’t until after filming had wrapped that we learned that she will indeed play a role in the movie, played by actress Leslie Uggams. Al is a blind woman who lives in a house in San Francisco, and her association with the eponymous mercenary is not by choice. After all, she is technically his hostage while he takes up residence in her home. That on the table, Wade actually does have some affection for Al, and while the two of them are constantly sparring, a part of her actually does care about him too.

Deadpool

The Rating

Given that Deadpool is an amoral, psychotic mercenary, he could find a pretty comfortable home in an "R-rating." After all, if you are swinging around twin katanas and firing semi-automatic weapons and not seeing any blood, something is very wrong. This is a viewpoint that has been shared by X-Men franchise producer Lauren Schuler Donner (who told me back in 2011, "If we make the movie it needs to be a rated R film"), but has been a point of controversy since the film got the greenlight. Rumors suggested that the reason the project moved forward was because the filmmakers found a way to make it PG-13, but it turns out those reports were false. It was confirmed via an April Fools Prank in 2015 that the film will have an R-rating (and the film fully embraces it).

Deadpool

The Test Footage

Back in 2012, when the creative team behind Deadpool was still trying to convince the studio to let them move forward, an idea was hatched. Director Tim Miller and actor Ryan Reynolds got together, took a portion of the existing Deadpool script, and put together some test footage created in motion capture. It apparently didn’t really move the approval needle when it was shown to executives back then, but that story completely changed when the clip found its way online in July 2014. Fans went absolutely nuts for the video, and it’s believed by many – including Rob Liefeld - that the leak was largely responsible for the film getting the green light at Fox. Said the comic book writer/artist,

"I absolutely believe that the leaked footage served as one of those signature moments when fandom united across all social media platforms and made their voices heard. Can you imagine if the masses had disapproved of the footage? In this ruthless take down culture ... it could have been ugly. Fortunately for all involved, it broke on the overwhelmingly positive side. It was a tidal wave of unbridled enthusiasm."

It’s that old Hollywood chestnut: if you want something done, all you really need to do is ask for it 10 billion times, create some test footage, and then find some way to expose it to a bunch of hungry fans.

Deadpool

Connection To X-Men Origins: Wolverine

X-Men Origins: Wolverine wound up having a very important impact when it came to stirring up fan fervor for a real Deadpool spin-off movie. Unfortunately, it was because comic book fans were royally pissed off about how the character was presented in that film. Obviously the Deadpool movie does still have some connection to X-Men Origins: Wolverine thanks to Ryan Reynolds’ involvement - but instead of being a part of continuity it is more being reduced to just a punchline. Yes, the new film will actually be taking pot shots at its predecessor. It has been reported that an early draft of the script included a joke involving a X-Men Origins: Wolverine Deadpool action figure, and that there are multiple references to Hugh Jackman. This all fits absolutely perfectly with DP’s habit of breaking the fourth wall. That being said, completely ignoring the continuity of X-Men Origins: Wolverine makes some degree of sense given that the franchise continuity has almost entirely reset thanks to X-Men: Days of Future Past.

Eric Eisenberg
Assistant Managing Editor

Eric Eisenberg is the Assistant Managing Editor at CinemaBlend. After graduating Boston University and earning a bachelor’s degree in journalism, he took a part-time job as a staff writer for CinemaBlend, and after six months was offered the opportunity to move to Los Angeles and take on a newly created West Coast Editor position. Over a decade later, he's continuing to advance his interests and expertise. In addition to conducting filmmaker interviews and contributing to the news and feature content of the site, Eric also oversees the Movie Reviews section, writes the the weekend box office report (published Sundays), and is the site's resident Stephen King expert. He has two King-related columns.