Film review: Deadpool

 

Well… he’s finally made to the big screen – one of the most politically incorrect superheroes ever created. I don’t think there’s much point explaining Deadpool’s background: you either know him or you don’t.

deadpool.jpg

What? Okay, here’s the short version: a former special forces operative suffering from terminal cancer agrees to undergo an experimental procedure to make it a bit less terminal. It works, after a fashion, granting him healing abilities hijacked from Wolverine and amped to a level where he can regenerate missing body parts.

Now, you’d think that being granted a second chance at life would make him a little more grateful. Unfortunately, the experiment leaves our anti-hero horribly disfigured, so no, there’s not a lot of gratitude, but an awful lot of sour grapes.

Deadpool is one of Marvel Comics’ surprise success stories. He has no moral compass, so it’s a happy accident that he seems to end up fighting on the right side.

And the film itself is brilliant; possibly my favourite comic flick of all time. It’s like National Lampoon decided to make a superhero movie. The plot is simple and workable, and along the way the movie pokes fun at itself and the whole genre with the occasional play to the camera (easy to overdo this sort of thing; Deadpool sails close, but just manages to keep it this side of tedious). The fight sequences are excellently staged and the action scenes are tightly directed and a little gory in places. But this is Deadpool; we weren’t expecting anything less from a man who’ll dismember himself while he’s drunk.

And woven through the mayhem, you’ll actually find a little bit of a love story; just enough to make you root for him anyway.

But best of all, it is very very funny; laugh-out-loud funny in fact. This film has been hyped for months and I’m glad that I wasn’t disappointed. I bought another ticket on my way out, so I’ve got no choice but to give it ten out of ten.

 

Film review: The Danish Girl

the danish girlThe talented Eddie Redmayne is cast as Einer Wegener, the successful Danish landscape artist who was one of the first to undergo gender reassignment surgery. Set in 1926, the film charts his pioneering (is that the right word?) journey to becoming Lili Elbe.

What makes this film extraordinary is its depiction of the changing relationship between Einer/Lili and his wife, Gerda. In fact, the film is not so much about Einer’s self-discovery as much as Gerda’s sacrifice. She loved Einer so much that she would have done anything to see him fulfilled, even if that meant helping him become someone who would not love her back… well, not in the same way at least.

The Danish Girl is a great movie: understated and beautifully shot. It treats the subject of transgenderism with a delicate sensitivity and without attempting to make judgments on Einer, and more importantly, Gerda who chose to stay with Lili. It lays out the story and leaves you without a sense of who is right, who is wrong, or even if there is a right and wrong. Should she have stayed with him; should he have stayed with her. I left with the sense that perhaps Lili should have set her free, just as Gerda had done for Einer.

Anyway, the acting is superb, from both Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander. The script washed over me without leaving much of an impression, but I think this is a good thing: this is a movie that is very much the sum of its parts, and I think having any one particular element stand out would have made it unbalanced. It was clearly a labour of love for everyone involved and it showed.

Excellent. Nine out of ten.