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Tag: wolverine

  • The Comic Book Guide to the ‘Wolverine’ Game

    Last night Sony finally re-revealed Insomniac’s highly anticipated next step in the Marvel gaming universe: trading the high-flying webslinging of their Spider-Man games for a gore-soaked soiree into the realm of Marvel’s mutants for Wolverine. While we learned that this is certainly going to be a much more gory take on the studio’s trademark action, we also learned that Wolverine will be including a few familiar faces, factions, and locales from the comics, too.

    Of course you know who Logan is already—and just like Spider-Man before it, Wolverine will be remixing and reimagining comic book lore for its own unique spin on Marvel—but here’s a quick rundown of who’s who from the first trailer, and some important locations we know we’ll be visiting.

    Where: Canada

    © Insomniac Games

    Okay, this one might seem a bit obvious: most people know that Logan himself is from Canada, so it’s not too surprising that we’ll at least spend some of our time in Wolverine up in the chilly north of his homeland (a brief sign seen in the trailer points us more specifically around Squamish, in British Columbia). But what most comics readers may not be familiar with is the fact that the Canadian government has a pretty solid history in Marvel’s comics as being absolutely evil.

    The Canadian government has long had branches to monitor and encourage official superhero activity, like Department H, the monitoring branch that operated the Canadian superteam Alpha Flight, but it’s also been repeatedly shown (especially during John Byrne’s legendary run on Alpha Flight) that Canada’s government is extremely corrupt and often up to no good, leading to its various heroes rebelling against the government’s machinations. There’s also the unfortunate bit that, perhaps more pertinent for Logan, where another shady department within the Canadian government, Department K, surreptitiously revived the Weapon X program after it had been shut down, conducting horrendous experimentation on subjects as it attempted to re-emulate the American government’s own plans to create the perfect supersoldier.

    It was Department K that actually built on Logan’s own prior experimentation to give Wade Wilson Logan’s healing factor, turning him into Deadpool in the process (and getting their revived Weapon X program shut down). But given we know that the premise of Wolverine is going to focus on a confused Logan trying to recover his memories, it won’t be too surprising if going home doesn’t uncover some dark secrets about how he was forged into an adamantium-bonded weapon.

    Who: Omega Red

    Wolverine Game Omega Red
    © Insomniac Games

    Briefly seen tussling with Wolverine in the trailer, Omega Red—aka Arkady Rossovich—is another figure who has a long history with Logan, although for mostly very silly reasons. A Russian mutant serial killer, Rossovich was eventually arrested by Interpol and handed over to the KGB, who promptly tried to fashion him into Russia’s own answer to Captain America. On top of his own mutant abilities—the ability to secrete deadly pheromones known as “Death Spores” that could kill humans almost instantaneously—KGB experimentation gave Omega Red enhanced durability, strength, and reflexes.

    But most importantly, he had two retractable metallic tentacles surgically implanted into his wrists. Made of carbonadium, the Russians’ attempt to create a proxy to adamantium, more malleable but also incredibly toxic. The tentacles slowly poisoned Omega, forcing him to use them in combination with his pheromone abilities to drain the life force of his victims in an attempt to sustain his strength. Told he would require a “Carbonadium Synthesizer,” a device that could remold carbonadium and stabilize the radiation poisoning it caused, Omega Red was eventually put on ice by the Russian government and deemed too dangerous to control, but he was eventually revived by Matsu’o Tsurayaba and the Hand and told to hunt down Wolverine, who allegedly knew where the synthesizer could be found, kicking off a beef Arkady would have with Logan and the X-Men on and off for decades.

    However, it was actually true—while part of the Black Ops CIA-backed squad Team X, Wolverine, Maverick, and Sabretooth’s final mission on the team saw them steal the carbonadium synthesizer while recovering a CIA double agent, Janice Hollenbeck. Hollenbeck died during the mission, and Logan eventually stored the synthesizer in her coffin for a time. Omega Red has had access to the synthesizer here and there over the almost 40 years of comics he’s been around for, but regardless of it, he’ll always have a grudge against Wolverine, and that’s seemingly no different in this game.

    Who: Mystique

    Wolverine Game Mystique
    © Insomniac Games

    The shapeshifting Raven Darkhölme has lived many lives over the course of over a century, and in that time she’s been everything from a mutant terrorist to a government agent to a member of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants and the Hellfire Club and has even occasionally been a member of the X-Men herself. The wife of the precognitive mutant Destiny—aka Irene Adler, whom Raven first met when she was in disguise as the investigator Sherlock Holmes, yes, really—Raven has deep, deep ties to generations of X-Men stories, both as anti-hero and villain, through her connection to her and Destiny’s son Nightcrawler and their adoptive daughter Rogue.

    It’s unsurprising that Mystique is in Wolverine, given that she’s likewise brushed with Logan time and time again in the comics. What little we’ve seen of her in the trailer suggests, however, that this iteration of her may have some ties to the X-Men, given her tactical suit has a black-and-yellow color scheme similar to several iterations of X-Men uniforms over the years, and especially considering we see her battling the same cybernetic foes as Logan (more on them later).

    Where: Madripoor

    Wolverine Game Madripoor
    © Insomniac Games

    A fictional Southeast Asian island nation created in 1985, it’s no surprise that Madripoor will be a key location in Wolverine, given that Logan has long had ties to the area (and Asia in general, given his history with Japan). Madripoor played a major part in Logan’s 1988 solo series, which saw him largely operating away from the X-Men (who were in their “Outback Era,” having relocated to Australia after being believed to have sacrificed themselves in a battle with the being known as the Adversary) and out of costume, going by “Patch.” We see one of Logan’s favorite watering holes in Madripoor’s Lowtown, the Princess Bar, a few times in the trailer.

    Modern incarnations of Madripoor have moved on from the den of piracy it was originally portrayed as—giving the island nation more of a behind-the-scenes criminal underworld element, much like the vision of Madripoor created for the MCU in Falcon and the Winter Soldier—and it appears, from the little we can see, that Wolverine‘s vision for Madripoor is no exception, right down to keeping the divide between the island’s slums in Lowtown and the more glamorous skyscrapers of Hightown.

    Who: The Reavers

    Wolverine Game Reavers
    © Insomniac Games

    Logan slices up a lot—a lot—of people in this debut trailer, and while many of them are spurting gallons of blood thanks to it, some of them are spurting gallons of blood and losing swanky cybernetic limbs along the way. Thanks to the Playstation Blog, we can presume that these cyborg mercenaries are the game’s take on the Reavers.

    Initially another part of the X-Men’s Outback era period—the X-Men take over the cyborg thieves’ base as their own place of operations in Australia, liberating the mutant teleporter Gateway from the Reavers’ imprisonment in the process—the Reavers were reformed into a more prominent foe of the X-Men under Donald Pierce after he was ousted from the inner circle of the Hellfire Club. Pierce refashions the Reavers into a paramilitary group with the explicit aim of exterminating the X-Men and mutantkind in general, allying themselves with Lady Deathstrike in the process. Although the X-Men escape when Pierce’s Ravagers return to their former Australian enclave, Wolverine returns from Madripoor and finds himself outnumbered, left to be tortured and crucified by the group before eventually being rescued by Jubilee.

    This iteration of the Reavers meets their end a few years later when they are almost entirely wiped out by the Upstarts in their point-scoring game of mutant eradication, but they have appeared in many iterations since and largely continue to harass the X-Men (and Wolverine in particular, at the behest of Lady Deathstrike).

    Who: The Sentinel Program

    Wolverine Game Sentinel
    © Insomniac Games

    Would it be an X-Men game without a Sentinel appearance? Funnily enough, there is a slight connection between the Reavers and the Sentinels in the comics—the Upstarts member Trevor Fitzroy exterminates the Reavers using reprogrammed versions of the anti-mutant giant robots, although whether or not this Sentinel we see in the trailer is connected to Wolverine‘s take on the Reavers remains to be seen.

    But yes, you know the Sentinels by this point: one of contemporary mutantkind’s oldest foes, the X-Men have been battling iteration after iteration of Bolivar Trask’s robotic exterminators since the very beginning. To bring it back to our first point, even the Canadian government built its own Sentinel program at one point, showing that the human dream of using giant purple robots to try and wipe out mutantkind will never truly die. The one glimpsed in the trailer, at least, is very much in the traditional Sentinel mold (not to be confused with the Master Mold, of course), rather than any of the more out-there advanced Sentinels like Nimrod or Bastion’s Prime Sentinels.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    James Whitbrook

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  • Marvel’s Wolverine slices his way onto PS5 in fall 2026

    The rumors of Marvel’s Wolverine showing up during Sony’s September State of Play turned out to be true after all. The trailer was our first decent look (well, first official one, anyway) at the game since it was announced back in 2021. Sony and Insomniac Games revealed a release window too: Marvel’s Wolverine is coming to PS5 in fall 2026.

    A gruff-sounding Liam McIntyre (Spartacus: Vengeance, JD Fenix in Gears of War 4 and Gears 5) is taking on the mantle of Logan here. As creative director Marcus Smith reminded us, Logan is an unreliable narrator with a patchy memory, which should make for an interesting wrinkle as the story plays out.

    Unlike in Insomniac’s Spider-Man games, bad guys aren’t going to be magically webbed to the side of a tall building after you kick them off the roof. Oh, no no. Wolverine rips an enemy apart in fury with his adamantium claws within the first 30 seconds of this trailer. Not long after, he thrusts them upwards through a goon’s skull. We see him slicing off limbs too. Yeah, this isn’t going to be a game for younger kids.

    Wolverine will encounter some familiar faces on his travels, including Mystique and Omega Red. And that’s not to mention a certain giant robot that shows up at the end of the trailer.

    “We aim to deliver the ultimate Wolverine fantasy built on Insomniac staples like fast, fluid, and ferocious combat; exhilarating, action-packed set pieces; robust accessibility features; and a gripping story that taps into the core tenets of one of the most compelling comic book characters of all time,” Insomniac senior community manager Aaron Jason Espinoza wrote on the PlayStation Blog. “We’re breaking new ground with Wolverine, yes, but our penchant for telling stories about heroes overcoming colossal odds is as strong as ever. We’re eager to explore Logan’s story with you and tap into his signature spin on heroism, which is much darker and more brutal than you might expect from Insomniac.”

    Although we’re a year or so away from Marvel’s Wolverine coming to PS5 and PS5 Pro, we won’t have to wait quite that long for more details. Insomniac promises to reveal additional info in spring 2026.

    Kris Holt

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  • Insomniac Games Finally Unveils Its ‘Wolverine’ Game

    Since 2018, Insomniac Games has built out a solid series of Spider-Man games headlined by Peter Parker and Miles Morales. It was only a few years ago the studio revealed it was aiming to give Wolverine the same treatment, but it’s been quiet on the project since then—and that silence was further exacerbated with 2023’s hack.

    But at today’s State of Play event, the studio rolled up with a first true look at the game. Players will take on the role of Logan (voiced by Liam McIntyre) as he travels the globe (with locations including the Canadian wilderness, Tokyo, and Madripoor), fighting the Reavers and crossing paths with some familiar faces like Omega Red and Mystique. Where the Spider-Man games have emphasized those characters’ agility, Insomniac’s take on Logan is all about his brute strength and animal instincts, not to mention those sharp claws of his. And boy, are things gonna get bloody.

    Following the trailer, Insomniac talked up the Wolverine game in a behind-the scenes video you can see below. Creative director Marcus Smith teased the title will deal with the memory problems that’ve defined the character. He’ll be something of an “unreliable narrator” throughout the adventure and this version of the X-hero will “stay true to [the character’s] experience” while still containing a distinct Insomniac spin.

    Marvel’s Wolverine hits the PlayStation 5 in fall 2026. Insomniac plans to show more on the action-adventure title in the spring.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

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  • Comics artist inspires kids with his Marvel-ous work

    >> NOT ALL HEROES WEAR CAPES. SOME HAVE A PENCIL, TALENT AND A CREATIVE APPROACH TO GET KIDS EXCITED ABOUT MATH. GULF COAST NEWS BRIT SHOWS US HOW IT ALL ADDS UP IN TONIGHT’S STORY TO SHARE. >> AND THEY KNOW WHO THIS GUY IS GOING TO >> INSIDE THE DIMENSIONS OF A HERO IN THE MAKING JERRY TO CARE LIGHTS THE PAGE WITH PASSION. YOU PUT SO MUCH WORK INTO IT. YOU’RE SO GOOD AT IT. NOW THAT IT’S IN ITS COMES TO. SO NATURALLY, IT IS JUST FUND. THAT’S THE POINT YOU WANT TO GET PUT THROUGH MARVEL’S UNIVERSE AND CHANCES ARE YOU’LL MARVEL AT HIS WORK. EXCELLENT FOR WOLVERINE PUNISHER CONE IN NICK FURY, AGENT SHIELD HAWKEYE DEAD POOL. >> EVEN TIME, CAMEOS OF DR. STRANGE IRONMAN. >> WHO ELSE? >> BELIEVE IT OR NOT, HIS DRAWINGS WEREN’T ALWAYS COVER WORD THE THIS BUT BUT I DON’T MEAN TO BUT THIS IS GARBAGE. BUT AFTER 4 YEARS OF STUBBORN, PERSISTENCE AND SKETCHES, HE WAS OFFERED TO DRAW ON X MEN ANNUAL SERIES. AND I SAID THE >> SHE COULD YOU GIVE ME A FANTASTIC 4 INSTEAD AND I’M THE GUY GOES, LISTEN, I’LL GIVE IT TO SOMEBODY ELSE. YOU KNOW, AND I SAID TAKE IT. YOU WITH MORE THAN 10 SUCCESSFUL MARVEL COMICS UNDER HIS BELT, HIS FAVORITE AUDIENCE ISN’T AT COMICON ANYMORE. YOU CAN DROP YOU IN THE CYLINDER FROM PRETTY MUCH YOU KNOW, BELIEVE THAT A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE, YOU CAN IMAGINE YOU CAN DRAW ANYTHING. HIS WORKSHOPS IN SCHOOLS AND PUBLIC LIBRARIES ACROSS AMERICAN MIX. MARVEL WITH MATT. THEY THINK SUPERHEROES A COOL LITTLE THING. MATHIS TO COOL. SO WHEN YOU COMBINE THOSE 2 THAT KIND OF ALL OF A SUDDEN MATHIS KIND OF COOL, WHICH IS WHAT THE MATH TEACHER WANTS FOR THEM. >> WHILE JERRY LOVES DRAWING MUSCLES LIKE THE NEXT COMIC. HIS WORK IS ABOUT STRENGTHENING CONFIDENCE. YOU KNOW SOMETHING TO BE AWARE TO JUST SET YOURSELF APART RIGHT FROM SUPERHEROES TO STUDENTS. HE’S TEACHING NEXT GENERATION THEIR OWN KIND OF SUPERPOWER THAT CAN DO. YOU CAN LOOK REALLY GOOD. AND SO I KN

    Sketching the outlines of a hero in the making, Jerry DeCaire lights the page with passion.”You put so much work into it that you’re so good at it now,” said DeCaire. “And it comes so naturally that it’s just fun, that’s the point you want to get to.”Flip through Marvel’s comics universe, and chances are, you’ll marvel at his work.X-Men, Thor, Wolverine, Dr. Strange, Iron Man — these are just a few comics he’s worked on.Believe it or not, his drawings weren’t always cover-worthy.”He says, ‘Hey buddy, I don’t mean to break your heart, but this is garbage,’” said DeCaire, describing what his mentor, comics legend John Buscema, told him when he was starting out.But four years of stubborn persistence and sketches later, he got an offer to draw an X-Men annual series.Now, with more than 10 successful Marvel comics under his belt, his favorite audience isn’t at Comic-Con anymore.”If you can draw a cube and a cylinder from pretty much any angle you can imagine or perspective you can imagine, you can draw anything,” said DeCaire.His workshops in schools and public libraries across America mix Marvel with math.”They think superheroes are cool. They don’t think math is too cool. So, all of a sudden, math is cool — which is what the teacher wants,” said Jerry.While DeCaire loves drawing muscles like the next comics artist, his work is about strengthening confidence.”Sometimes just being weird and setting yourself apart, right?” said DeCaire.

    Sketching the outlines of a hero in the making, Jerry DeCaire lights the page with passion.

    “You put so much work into it that you’re so good at it now,” said DeCaire. “And it comes so naturally that it’s just fun, that’s the point you want to get to.”

    Flip through Marvel’s comics universe, and chances are, you’ll marvel at his work.

    X-Men, Thor, Wolverine, Dr. Strange, Iron Man — these are just a few comics he’s worked on.

    Believe it or not, his drawings weren’t always cover-worthy.

    “He says, ‘Hey buddy, I don’t mean to break your heart, but this is garbage,’” said DeCaire, describing what his mentor, comics legend John Buscema, told him when he was starting out.

    But four years of stubborn persistence and sketches later, he got an offer to draw an X-Men annual series.

    Now, with more than 10 successful Marvel comics under his belt, his favorite audience isn’t at Comic-Con anymore.

    “If you can draw a cube and a cylinder from pretty much any angle you can imagine or perspective you can imagine, you can draw anything,” said DeCaire.

    His workshops in schools and public libraries across America mix Marvel with math.

    “They think superheroes are cool. They don’t think math is too cool. So, all of a sudden, math is cool — which is what the teacher wants,” said Jerry.

    While DeCaire loves drawing muscles like the next comics artist, his work is about strengthening confidence.

    “Sometimes just being weird and setting yourself apart, right?” said DeCaire.

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  • Ranking all the Wolverine variants in ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’

    Ranking all the Wolverine variants in ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’

    What’s a more impossible challenge than killing Wolverine? Completing this list. Wolverine was easily the best part of Deadpool & Wolverine, and the character is also responsible for one of the greatest superhero movies ever made: Logan. These variants are all good, but who is best?

    9. Weapon Omega

    (Marvel)

    Who’s Weapon Omega? He’s the one-armed Wolverine that instantly murdered Deadpool. While all the Wolverines are short-fused and violent (one especially short) Weapon Omega isn’t really Wolverine. Rather, he isn’t really Logan. Weapon Omega appears in the Age of Apocalypse storyline, where a post-apocalyptic world has transformed Logan into someone completely unrecognizable. While we still love him and he’s totally badass, he’s not quite the Logan we know and love.

    8. Crucified Wolverine

    Wolverine crucified on a giant X in "The Uncanny X-Men"
    (Marvel)

    Crucified Wolverine wins big points for one thing: commitment to the bit. Deadpool finds this Wolverine variant crucified on a giant X while surrounded by a sea of bones. Wait a minute, Wolverine has a healing factor, right? Couldn’t he just rip his way off that X and heal up? Yes, he could. But he doesn’t. Why not? Because he chooses not to. Obviously, this Wolverine has an understanding of the theatrical and the dramatic. He’s not coming down because he looks arresting up there. All style, no substance. But style is never to be underestimated.

    7. Patch

    Wolverine in "Deadpool * Wolverine" as Patch sitting at a card table
    (Marvel)

    Patch is the sharply dressed undercover identity Wolverine uses when going… undercover. While he’s absolutely serving James Bond vibes, he doesn’t rank higher on this list because his disguise is… questionable. I mean, really Logan? Slicked back hair and an eyepatch do not a disguise make. Yes, you look amazing. But I can tell it’s you. Who wouldn’t recognize that face?

    6. Short King Wolverine

    Who doesn’t love a short king? This diminutive Wolverine isn’t some Mutliversal fluke, but actually a callout to the original Wolverine character. Before Hugh Jackman came along, Wolverine wasn’t exactly statuesque. He’s supposed to look like… well… a wolverine. Small. Ugly. Mean. Not to be messed with. The original Wolverine stood not at a Hugh Jackman 6’2″, but at a bite-sized 5’3″. Don’t be fooled. He might be a foot shorter than Hugh, but he’s got twice the rage.

    5. Wolverine vs. The Hulk Wolverine

    Cover art for "Wolverine vs. The Hulk"
    (Marvel)

    Wolverine vs. The Hulk Wolverine earns big points because he’s from one of the best Wolverine stories ever told. Wolverine battles the Hulk. Who wouldn’t want to see that? His brown John Byrne-inspired costume is a strong fashion statement. Smokey. Woodsy. Totally stylish. You just know that guy smells like oak trees, gun oil, and aftershave. They need to make a deodorant inspired by this Wolverine. Surely it would fly off the shelves.

    4. Old Man Logan

    An elderly Wolverine grimaces from "Old Man Logan"
    (Marvel)

    When it comes to raw aura, few other Wolverines can compete with Old Man Logan. In case you couldn’t tell, he’s the old-looking dude sitting on the porch with a shotgun in his lap. Big aura points there. Old Man Logan comes from an X-Men storyline set in an alternate universe where all of the superheroes were wiped out by supervillains. Only Logan is left, his body finally catching up with him. This Wolverine is too tired to get up and claw Deadpool to death. That’s why he has the shottie equipped. It’s economical.

    3. The Cavillrine

    There’s only one man who could replace Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, and they found him. Henry Cavill is easily the most obvious choice. Who else could compete with ol’ Hugh in terms of brute strength and general rugged sex appeal? While the Cavillrine only had a few minutes of screen time, he left quite an impression on fans. They’re thirsty for more.

    2. Logan

    A bloody Wolverine runs towards a foe in "Wolverine"
    (Marvel)

    While he may have been reduced to a bag of adamantium-plated bones in Deadpool & Wolverine, this Wolverine is responsible for one of the most impactful superhero movies of the 21st Century. What makes Logan so great? It’s a self-contained story. Unlike Deadpool & Wolverine, you don’t need to have watched a glut of Marvel content in order to understand the story. You literally just need to know the basic story of Logan, and the movie takes it from there. You’re not gonna miss out on any plot points because you didn’t watch season one episode six of a Marvel TV series or a Marvel movie from 10+ years ago. It’s a raw, brutal, and beautiful movie that doesn’t require any further explanation. Unlike Deadpool & Wolverine, Logan is a film that doesn’t need to gas itself up on endless cameos, repeated sword-in-testicles gags, and script that a twelve-year-old still learning to cuss could have come up with. Yes, Deadpool & Wolverine did exactly what it said it would do when they dug up Logan’s bones: It ruined this Logan’s legacy. But at least we still have our memories of him, right? Even if his actual bones are now impaled into the corpses of some time guys who were just trying to do their jobs.

    1. ’00s Wolverine

    Wolverine looks serious in the original "X-Men" movie
    (Marvel)

    While this version of Wolverine only appears in the heartstring-tugging nostalgia bomb that was Deadpool & Wolverine’s post-credits sequence, it’s easy to see why this Wolverine reigns as king of the variants. He’s the one that started it all! This Wolverine was responsible for turning the X-Men into some of the most popular Marvel characters of all time. And look how adorable young Hugh Jackman is! So nervous to be on set for the first time! So unaware that he’s in the process of making history. He didn’t realize at the time, but Wolverine would soon become one of the actor’s most iconic roles. Like Deadpool said, Hugh could keep churning out Wolverine stories until he’s 90 years old and we’d all come back to watch them. After all, he was easily the best part of Deadpool & Wolverine, and arguably the strongest character in the film. Certainly the only one with any shred of pathos. Fingers crossed we get to see a 90-year-old Hugh as Old Man Logan someday.


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    Jack Doyle

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  • R-rated cosplayers celebrating ‘Deadpool and Wolverine’ (25 Photos)

    R-rated cosplayers celebrating ‘Deadpool and Wolverine’ (25 Photos)

    And just like that it’s official! Just before the 4th weekend of its theatrical run, Deadpool & Wolverine is now the highest grossing R-rated film of all time. The previous record was held by Todd Phillips’ Joker which pulled in $1,078,751,311.

    Deadpool and Wolfie have already grossed $1,085,529,057 and they aren’t hitting the brakes just yet.

    In celebration, we wanted to showcase some die hard fans and sexy cosplayers. Maximum effort!

    Zach

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  • ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Instant Reactions With ‘The Midnight Boys’ and ‘The Big Picture’

    ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Instant Reactions With ‘The Midnight Boys’ and ‘The Big Picture’

    The Midnight Boys are here to talk all things Deadpool & Wolverine, the summer’s most anticipated alliance in the comic book world, so they decided to make an alliance of their own! Joining them on the pod today are Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins from The Big Pic (07:14), and together they discuss comic book lore, Wolverine’s wardrobe changes, and Van’s vitamin supplements.

    Hosts: Van Lathan, Charles Holmes, and Jomi Adeniran
    Guests: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins
    Producers: Aleya Zenieris and Jonathan Kermah
    Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Van Lathan

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  • Our Best Look Yet at Deadpool & Wolverine’s Supervillain, and a Familiar Friend

    Our Best Look Yet at Deadpool & Wolverine’s Supervillain, and a Familiar Friend

    Marvel Studios recently released new photos from Deadpool & Wolverine and while they’re not groundbreaking, each is our best look yet at characters on opposite sides of the spectrum. On the one side, there’s Cassandra Nova, the evil, likely main villain in the film played by The Crown’s Emma Corrin. Then there’s Peter, one of Wade’s best friends played by Rob Delaney.

    That’s one of the new images above, featuring Wade (Ryan Reynolds) and Peter at work together. It’s from a scene early in the film that screened at CinemaCon 2024 and you can read all about it here. Basically, Wade and Peter are car salesman and while Peter wants Wade to go back to being Deadpool, Wade does not. This is before the birthday party you see in the trailers.

    Then here’s another photo of Peter that looks more like it’s from Superstore than a superhero film but hey, he’s great so we like it.

    Image: Marvel Studios

    Finally, here’s the new image of Cassandra Nova, the character we all expect to be the big bad of the film. Either way, she’s certainly one of the main villains, considering the trailers have shown here with a team of B-level X-Men characters, in a gigantic Ant-Man helmet, and her powers completely baffling Wolverine (Hugh Jackman). But here we get a bit more of her stare, a bit more of her fashion, and a bit more of her lair. She looks very calm, very confident, and very much like Professor X, whom she’s related to in the comics but…is she here?

    Image for article titled Our Best Look Yet at Deadpool & Wolverine's Supervillain, and a Familiar Friend

    Image: Marvel Studios

    Just a brief tease of Deadpool & Wolverine, which is coming very, very soon. Starring tars Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman, Emma Corrin, Morena Baccarin, Rob Delaney, Leslie Uggams, Karan Soni, and Matthew Macfadyen, it opens July 26.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Germain Lussier

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    Hugh Jackman didn’t realize wolverines were real animals and mistakenly studied wolves while…

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  • Yes, That Morph Moment in X-Men ’97’s Finale Meant Exactly What You Thought It Did

    Yes, That Morph Moment in X-Men ’97’s Finale Meant Exactly What You Thought It Did

    This week’s season finale of X-Men ‘97 brought an emotional, explosive climax to mutantkind’s battle against Bastion and the Prime Sentinels—and the X-Men love nothing more for their soap operatic drama than a big emotional twist while everything’s going bonkers. The finale delivered on that front… although as with a lot of the X-Men’s problems, we’re going to have to wait and see how it pans out.

    As the battle on Asteroid M rages around the X-Men in “Tolerance Is Extinction, Part 3” and the team attempts to stop the station from plummeting into Earth in a cataclysmic event, a brief moment cuts to the X-Men’s blackbird jet as Morph watches over a sedated Wolverine, grievously wounded the episode prior when Magneto used his powers to tear the adamantium from Logan’s skeleton. Ouch. In his regenerative slumber, Logan keeps calling out for Jean Grey—but it’s Morph who’s at his side. Realizing they might not get another chance, with the base crashing down around them, Morph mutters to themselves “she can’t say it, but I can…” as they shapeshift into Jean, and use her form to add “I love you, Logan. Stay with me.”

    To be fair, Morph has not been a subtle person about their feelings for Logan throughout this season—we’ve seen them spending a lot of time together, and Morph has constantly had a flirtatious vibe with Logan, from thinking he was eagerly following him into the showers in “Fire Made Flesh” (tricked by a supernatural vision of their desires, happens to the best of us) or bringing a six pack of beer and shifting into Logan’s archnemesis Sabretooth for some late night grappling. But just in case you’ve not been picking up what they’ve been putting down—it’s not exactly clear if Logan has been, either—former showrunner Beau DeMayo took to social media in the wake of the finale that yes, that wasn’t Morph trying to reassure Logan as Jean, that was Morph mustering their courage to reveal their own feelings to Logan.

    It would make Morph the first explicitly romantically queer character on X-Men ‘97 so far, but as for how it’s going to pan out for them, things might not be so rosy. In the replies to DeMayo’s post confirming the intent behind Morph’s confession, the former showrunner acknowledged that Morph was potentially chasing after a straight man, and that never goes well for queer people. And that’s even before you get to the hot mess of confessing your feelings for someone while wearing the face of the person they have feelings for already. Hoo boy, Morph, you truly are a member of the X-Men with dramatic timing like that! It’s also something that Morph’s voice actor JP Karliak doesn’t necessarily want for the character, either.

    “As somebody who’s consumed a ton of queer media over the years–what coded things we had in the ’90s—I think there have been so many stories told about the queer person that’s pining over the straight best friend. Meh!” the actor told Polygon this week about potentially setting Morph up for catching feelings that will go unrequited. “It’s kind of meh to me! I think it’s so much more interesting that they love each other like they’re Frodo and Samwise, and that’s great. It doesn’t need to be more than that. And they can support each other. It makes Morph razzing Wolverine by turning into Jean Grey so much less about like, ‘Oh, I’m jealous, so I’m gonna, like, razz you about your girlfriend who I hate,’ and more about, ‘Hey, buddy, I think this is harmful for you, and I just want to point this out, that maybe you need to move on.’”

    Whatever DeMayo and X-Men ‘97‘s creative team has planned for Morph and Logan’s relationship remains to be seen—before DeMayo exited the series, his work had already been completed on season two. But suffice to say, poor Morph is going to be in for a hell of a time between being flung through time, watching the aftermath of the person they’ve caught feelings for get half their skeleton ripped out of their body, and y’know, the whole surviving yet another threat of eradicating their entire kind and the rest of the planet along with them. Business as usual for the X-Men.


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  • X-Men ’97’s Morph actor wants him to find love — just not with Wolverine

    X-Men ’97’s Morph actor wants him to find love — just not with Wolverine

    Voice performance has become isolating work over the years — these days, for an actor like JP Karliak, a day “on set” is completed from a home studio, and notes come in over Zoom calls. But the goals are the same: find the perfect sound to match a character, and relentlessly chase the perfect take. Karliak has done voice work across the animation and video game spectrum, and is no stranger to IP demands. He’s been in everything from The Boss Baby: Back in Business to Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League, where he played Batman’s nemesis, Joker. Taking over the role of Morph in Marvel Animation’s X-Men ’97, voiced in the original series by actor Ron Rubin, put him under high pressure from nostalgic fans. Still, alone in the room, he found it: his own pure voice.

    “My natural speaking voice doesn’t sound all that different from Ron’s original portrayal,” Karliak tells Polygon, “[and Morph] has a new look, he’s changing. And all these characters are going through all of this plot. For me, it was just sort of like, Why don’t we just sit him in this grounded space, and not slap a character voice on top of it?

    Along with giving Morph a character redesign, the X-Men ’97 writers evolved them into the animated property’s first non-binary character. Karliak, who identifies as genderqueer, was pleased at the change. In the 1990s, using he/they pronouns was less commonplace, but having Rogue make a point of properly addressing Morph in 1997 fits right into the show’s approach to doing whatever feels emotionally right, continuity and era be damned.

    “We didn’t fly around and shoot lightning out of our fingers [in 1997 either], so whatever!” Karliak says. “I think the representation is still incredible. And I don’t think it takes away anything from who Morph is. Morph is on a gender journey that will unfold as time passes and he goes through the eras of terminology that we’ve lived through already.”

    Image: Marvel Animation

    With such a stacked cast, the show doesn’t give Morph a ton of airtime, but their history in the series is deeply felt and considered in each line-reading. X-Men ’97 remains in continuity with X-Men: The Animated Series, which saw Sentinels kill Morph in the first episode, only to have Mister Sinister resurrect the shapeshifter as a brainwashed X-adversary. When his friends rescue him, he disappears from the show again to deal with that trauma.

    Morph returns in X-Men ’97 as a goofy but troubled soul finding a place in the world. Karliak says that even if Morph has three lines in an episode, he found himself running through every variation — pure fury, wisecracking, bawling his eyes out, near-deadpan — with voice director Meredith Layne (Castlevania), to give the director and writers what they need to connect the past with present. “As the comic relief of the show, I think he’s burying a lot of things,” Karliak says. “Having him say less was actually the smarter way to go for somebody who’s internalizing a lot.”

    Along with voiceover work, Karliak runs the LGBTQIA+ nonprofit Queer Vox, which strives to train aspiring queer VO artists and educate the industry about working with queer talent. He says one quirk of current Hollywood casting is that the group often encounters auditions asking for “non-binary voices,” which he finds funny, despite the attempt at allyship. “It’s like, What does that mean? There’s a lot of conflation of ‘non-binary means androgynous,’ which is not the case,” he says.

    And what makes Morph enjoyable for Karliak to bring to life isn’t how the character fits a specific identity slot — it’s how his identity fits into the day-to-day drama at the X-mansion, and the greater global drama of X-Men ’97.

    “He’s a superhero who’s got some trauma, he’s got friends, he’s showing up, he’s doing the thing,” Karliak says. “He probably would like to have a significant other at some point — you know, hint, hint, nudge, nudge — and there’s all of that stuff happening. But there’s never a very special Jesse Spano episode of, like, This is the non-binary episode. Because we don’t need it.”

    Many fans have wondered whether Morph’s friendship with Wolverine could blossom into something more romantic in future seasons of X-Men ’97. But Karliak hopes it doesn’t, as much as he wants his character to find love.

    “As somebody who’s consumed a ton of queer media over the years — what coded things we had in the ’90s — I think there have been so many stories told about the queer person that’s pining over the straight best friend. Meh!” he says. “It’s kind of meh to me! I think it’s so much more interesting that they love each other like they’re Frodo and Samwise, and that’s great. It doesn’t need to be more than that. And they can support each other. It makes Morph razzing Wolverine by turning into Jean Grey so much less about like, Oh, I’m jealous, so I’m gonna, like, razz you about your girlfriend who I hate, and more about, Hey, buddy, I think this is harmful for you, and I just want to point this out, that maybe you need to move on.”

    Karliak lauds the X-Men ’97 writers room for breaking from obvious stereotypes and traditions to do its own thing. And the work is standing up to all kinds of scrutiny. When the news broke that Karliak would voice Morph as a non-binary character, the usual corners of the internet erupted with vitriol and found their way into his mentions. But now, with the season wrapped up, he’s hearing little pushback.

    “There are properties, movies, IPs that have tried to do queer representation and done it more as checking a box, and it was received badly when it was announced, and continued to be received badly when the thing bombed,” he says. “And I think what’s great about this is that it’s done authentically, not only from the portrayal, but from the writing, like Beau [DeMayo], but also Charley [Feldman] and all of the other writers. There is a queer pedigree that’s going into this to make this right. So the people that shouted about it before it came out — once everybody saw it, and it’s just so universally lauded, it really silenced everything. You can’t argue with excellence.”

    Matt Patches

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  • X-Men ’97’s New Costumes Go Back to the ’80s

    X-Men ’97’s New Costumes Go Back to the ’80s

    Image: Disney+

    The wait is almost over. X-Men ‘97‘s three-part finale continues tomorrow when “Tolerance Is Extinction, Pt. 2” drops on Disney+.

    Marvel’s animated series has continued the tales of the X-Men from the ‘90s cartoon, adding in timely relevance with great aplomb. Here’s a short tease of the next installment, featuring a fashion shake-up as well as more hints about the story, which finds humanity needing to trust in the X-Men once more. As tends to be the case, they may be the best hope the world has to survive.

    Marvel Animation’s X-Men ‘97 | Official Clip ‘Trust In The X-Men’ | Disney+

    To avoid early anxiety about what is actually going to happen in the next episode, let’s just geek out for a moment about the costumes here. We see Jean reach for her mask without her Dolly Parton-sized wig, Wolverine grab his red-tinged gloves, Storm put on her crown, and Cyclops don his visor. We see you, Marvel: using the old costumes for the main team from the 1980s Uncanny X-Men era. It’s just really cool to see the show pay homage to the comics and iconography in this way.

    Image for article titled X-Men '97's New Costumes Go Back to the '80s

    Image: Disney+

    “Tolerence Is Extinction, Pt. 2,” the second piece of X-Men ‘97‘s three-part finale, starts streaming May 8 only on Disney+.


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    Sabina Graves

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  • Grant Morrison’s Manifesto for the X-Men Is a Fascinating Read

    Grant Morrison’s Manifesto for the X-Men Is a Fascinating Read

    The X-Men find themselves, perhaps almost always, on the precipice of great change. But right now they really do feel like they’re on the edge of something new again. In the comics, after years rejuvenated by the Krakoan Age, they’re ready to rise from the ashes of tragedy once more. On the big screen, we’re ready to bid farewell to the Fox X-Men era in Deadpool & Wolverine this summer. And on TV, mutantkind rides high with X-Men ‘97‘s re-imagining of an animated classic.

    If anything, there are so many parallels in 2024 to the turn of the 21st century, when Grant Morrison was preparing to take on writing a new generation of X-Men comics with what would eventually become New X-Men in the summer of 2001. Alongside Frank Quitely and other artists, New X-Men boldly redefined what the X-Men’s stories were about for the modern age, emboldened further by the cultural moment the X-Men found themselves in. While the ‘90s were very good to the X-Men in terms of comics sales for the most part—and of course you had ancillary support in wider culture from the explosions of things like X-Men: The Animated Series and the iconic Jim Lee trading cards—mutantkind hit the mainstream even harder with the release of the first X-Men movie in 2000.

    The herald of a new age of superhero moviemaking, X-Men was, in Morrison’s eyes, equally a shot in the arm and warning alike of what had to change in the comics, so they could try and match the audience the movie had enraptured all over again. “Let’s aim for the big audiences. Let’s push books we can be proud of on every level. Books that kids will dig for their sheer gee-whizz, kinetic strut, which college kids will buy for the rebel irony and adults will love for the distraction, just like the movies and the TV shows—just like when Stan [Lee] was doin’ it!!!” Morrison wrote in their pitch bible for New X-Men—which has floated around online for a few years now, but becomes especially potent reading in the crossroads Marvel’s mutants find themselves in in 2024, as a comics reset looms and a future in Marvel’s vaunted cinematic universe looms. “I believe we have a rare opportunity to bust some self-imposed barriers and run screaming through the streets if we just cut loose a little and do work aimed at the mainstream, media-literate audience of kids, teenagers, and adults with disposable income.”

    In this part pitch bible—including some early descriptions of story arcs and characters that would go on to appear in the book, like “Charlie X,” an early identity for Cassandra Nova—part manifesto, Morrison charismatically weaves an argument for a truly 21st century vision of the X-Men, galvanized by the embrace of the franchise’s core concepts and characters in the movie. “To make the X-Men feel fresh once more, we need to take a closer, harsher look at what’s not working in this book and the comics field in general,” they write in part. “The recent X-Men stuff has been written in an old-fashioned, over-dense style for one, and we need to update, streamline, and demystify the storytelling techniques considerably to appeal to modern sensibilities.”

    Image: Frank Quitely, Tim Townsend, Hi-Fi, and Saida/Marvel Comics

    It’s full of Morrison’s thoughts on what they thought worked and was worth revisiting in X-Menpointing to Chris Claremont and John Byrne’s legendary run on Giant Sized and eventually Uncanny X-Men in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s as a touchstone (“they had the freedom to create new material, reconceptualize the old stuff which still worked and ignoring the outmoded elements which had sapped the original series of its vitality”)—and what had to be left behind in the ‘90s. “In the last decade or so, the tendency at Marvel has been intensely conservative; comics like X-Men have gone from freewheeling, overdriven pop to cautious, dodgy retro,” Morrison argued. “…The comic has turned inwards and gone septic like a toenail… X-Men, for all it was still Marvel’s bestseller, had become a watchword for undiluted geekery before the movie gave us another electroshock jolt.”

    To Morrison, the movie represented so much of what they wanted to bring to New X-Men’s cultural and aesthetic presence. Beyond a feeling of contemporary cool that had defined the Claremont era of the franchise, mutant stories that still reflected these heroes less inwardly as superheroes, but people of the modern world, it was also important to them that X-Men felt less like a superhero comic, and more like a sci-fi epic, something that resonates in New X-Men’s eventual approach to things like the Sentinels or its grasp on the Shi’ar Empire, but also how it divided mutant culture as something distinct from humanity, on both a societal and evolutionary level. Above all though? Morrison adored the ideas behind those movie suits.

    “The movie had it almost right: I think we should go for hardcore bike style exo-rubber uniforms, maybe military pants and wrestling style boots… the look’s brutalist and military and I think the X-Men should reflect that to stay on the cutting edge of cool,” Morrison writes, before adding that not everything the movie did design wise quite worked for them. “I’d like to see some yellow in paneling or detailing on the costumes—if only to avoid the dull black leather look of every film superhero—but it should be pop art dayglo yellow, the kind cyclists and bikers wear to be seen… X-Men is a soap opera about super-people in the same way that Dallas was a soap about oil people. The oil only provided window-dressing and an excuse to look great.”

    In hindsight, Morrison’s bold bet paid off. While not every aspect of their run on New X-Men escaped controversy, the book endures as one of the definitive 21st century X-Men texts, an influence that is still felt in the comics today—and elsewhere, in things like Deadpool & Wolverine’s use of Cassandra Nova, or X-Men ‘97‘s examination of the Genoshan genocide. As the X-Men once again find themselves thrust towards the potential of a mainstream embrace arguably not seen since the early aughts, Morrison’s words resonate—and perhaps make for a fine set of watchwords as we see where Marvel Studios and Marvel Comics alike take mutantkind’s evolution next.


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    James Whitbrook

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  • Kevin Feige Told Hugh Jackman Not to Come Back as Wolverine

    Kevin Feige Told Hugh Jackman Not to Come Back as Wolverine

    Screenshot: Marvel

    Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine has defined the Fox era of X-Men movies. His storied tenure from the 2000 film all the way up to Logan gave us perhaps one of the most definitive live-action superhero performances of our lifetime. That makes the temptation of his return in Deadpool & Wolverine so potent—but for Marvel Studios’ head honcho, it was almost a curse.

    “I said, ‘Let me give you a piece of advice, Hugh. Don’t come back’,” Feige recently told Empire about advising Jackman on a potential return to the character he’d stunningly bid farewell to in 2017’s Logan. “‘You had the greatest ending in history with Logan. That’s not something we should undo.’” But Feige’s advice actually pushed Jackman to really consider what he’d want out of a return.

    “I was about an hour into the drive,” Jackman said of his headspace after initial pitches. “And that question came into my head: ‘What do I want to do?’ And as soon as I asked the question, I wanted to do Deadpool & Wolverine. I just knew it. I drove for another hour. Couldn’t stop thinking about it. And I got out of the car, called Ryan [Reynolds], and said, ‘Ryan, if you’ll have me, I’m in.’”

    What Jackman wanted to do was not actually return to the same character we saw perish in Logan, but offer a new take on Wolverine that, while drawing on his presence in the history of the Fox X-Men saga and its myriad permutations, also did something new with the character. Even if that ‘new’ was something as simple as finally letting Jackman put on the yellow spandex Logan and Cyclops had joked about way back in the first X-Men film. “We almost [had the suit on] in The Wolverine,” Jackman added. “But from the moment I put it on here, I was like, ‘How did we never do this?’ It looked so right, it felt so right. I was like, ‘That’s him.’ There are different sides of Wolverine we haven’t seen before in the movies. It was exciting for me.”

    Hopefully we’ll see many more sides of Logan beyond just a costume change when Deadpool & Wolverine hits theaters July 26.


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    James Whitbrook

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  • ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Trailer, ‘Shogun’ Finale, and ‘X-Men ’97’

    ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Trailer, ‘Shogun’ Finale, and ‘X-Men ’97’

    Marvel Studios

    The Midnight Boys also chat about the festivities from Van’s birthday party

    The Midnight Boys are back to give you another jam-packed episode. First, they take a look at the latest Deadpool & Wolverine trailer (11:45). Then, they talk about the beautiful finale of Shogun (26:33) as well as the latest episode of X-Men ’97 (67:06). All before finally talking about some of the goings-on that happened at Van’s birthday party (82:03).

    Hosts: Charles Holmes, Van Lathan, Jomi Adeniran, and Steve Ahlman
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Charles Holmes

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  • We’ve Seen About 10 Minutes of Deadpool & Wolverine

    We’ve Seen About 10 Minutes of Deadpool & Wolverine

    There’s exactly one Marvel Studios movie coming to theaters this year, but it’s one of the biggest to date. Deadpool & Wolverine is scheduled for release on July 26 and it won’t only be the first MCU film for Ryan Reynolds’ wisecracking killer, but also the MCU debut of Wolverine, played by Hugh Jackman.

    That alone already has fans excited and the number of people who watched the first trailer proved it again. Continuing the fun, Disney debuted new footage at CinemaCon 2024, and here’s what happened.

    Wade Wilson grabs a staple gun, uses it to put on his wig, and says “Now let’s sell some certified pre-owned vehicles, motherfucker.” Smash cut to Wade in the back seat of a car with a family on a test drive. They ask him some questions but he keeps cursing and mentions he doesn’t have kids because he doesn’t have much vaginal sex. He’s bad at this.

    Peter (Rob Delaney) apparently works there too and they talk in the locker room about how Wade may be a bad salesperson, but he can always go back to being a superhero. Wade explains that he’s done for good. This is the life he wants and if you “aim for the middle, you’ll never miss.” Peter shows him that he keeps an old Deadpool suit in his locker anyway.

    Wade and Peter ride bikes home from work and Wade notices someone taking photos of them. The conversation continues about wanting to be superheroes again and Peter asks Wade if he’s just sad because it’s his birthday. He also mentions a very interesting piercing he’s just gotten.

    Yes, it’s Wade’s birthday. He goes into his apartment and it’s a surprise party. There are all his friends from the first two movies: Negasonic, Colossus, Dopinder, Blind Al, and others. Wade goes around the room and catches up with everyone. One highlight of this is Wade and Al going back and forth with a ton of insults. She asks him if he wants to do some cocaine and he says that’s the one thing Kevin Feige said was off the table. She rattles off a bunch of different fake names and he says Feige knows them all. Finally she says, “Do you want to build a snowman?” To which he says, yes but I can’t.

    Vanessa is also there and they are no longer together. She’s seeing someone from work though, and Wade is happy for her, though he’s not seeing anyone.

    The group sings “Happy Birthday” and then Wade gives a heartfelt speech about how much he loves everyone in this room. He says that despite some tough years, he’s truly happy now because of them. He then goes on to blow out the candles… and the second he does, there’s a knock at the door.

    You’ve seen some of this in the trailer. It’s the TVA. Wade assumes they’re a group of men who are there to have sex with him and he gets very dirty about what he wants them to do with all his holes. They then get fed up, knock him out, and put him through one of those TVA doors.

    In the TVA, Mr. Paradox (Matthew McFayden) tells Wade that a) he soiled himself, and b) what the TVA does. “That’s a shit ton of exposition for a threequel,” Wade says. Mr. Paradox tells him he knows that Wade has been abusive of the timeline previously, with Cable’s time travel device, but that’s not why he’s there.

    Apparently Wade has been chosen for a higher purpose. One that’s even unclear to the TVA. He needs to save the sacred timeline from a grisly fate at some point in the future. The two guys joke that it needs to be “Avenged.” That they’re going to “Marvel” at how “Cinematic” is. Wade says he wants it all, cameos, variants, the works.

    They turn to the screen and on it is Steve Rogers as Captain America. Wade knows him and salutes the screen. “You’re no longer lost,” Mr. Paradox says, “You can now be a hero.” At this point, Wade notices a screen where Thor is holding a dying Deadpool and crying. “Why is Thor crying?” he asks. Wade isn’t supposed to see that though; that’s something that happens in the distant future.

    Wade is all in and says he will return and help. He then turns to the camera, runs toward it, grabs it, shakes it and says “Suck it Fox! I’m going to Disneyland!” He also fellates the boom microphone a bit.

    “Oh, there’s one more thing I need,” Wade says. It’s a costume. A TVA tailor makes him a brand new upgraded Deadpool costume, which comes together in a quick series of fast edits… which include more than a few of the tailor grabbing Wade’s crotch.

    Wade loves the new costume, even if he has to tell them the tailor is a predator. He also mentions that his samurai swords are made out of adamantium. He jokes around that one of the TVA employees is eyeing him up and his underwear is getting tighter. The employee picks up the phone to call HR.

    That leads into a montage of action scenes largely from the first trailer. Dog Pool running in slow motion. Lots of shooting. Wade in the back seat of a bloody car. And then, finally, we see him and Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine sitting together in a car.

    “What’s with the suit?” Wade asks. “Do the X-Men make you wear it?” He comments he looks like he fights crime for the Los Angeles Rams, but Wolverine isn’t having it. “I’m just trying to bond a bit,” he says.

    Directed by Shawn Levy, Deadpool & Wolverine stars Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman. It opens July 26.

    Update: the headline on the original post was updated to more accurately describe the length of the footage.


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    Germain Lussier

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  • We Love This Deadpool and Wolverine Art, But It’s Not Deadpool & Wolverine Art

    We Love This Deadpool and Wolverine Art, But It’s Not Deadpool & Wolverine Art

    A crop of new art by Doaly.
    Image: Marvel/Doaly

    Are you excited for Deadpool & Wolverine? Us too. The highly anticipated third Deadpool movie starring Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman is coming this summer and could potentially blow the roof off the Marvel Cinematic Universe with its hard R-rating and multiversal connections.

    So that’s Deadpool & Wolverine, the movie, in theaters July 26. There’s also Deadpool and Wolverine, the Marvel Comics characters, and they feature prominently on this gorgeous officially licensed art by Doaly that’s now on sale at MoorArtGallery.com.

    Image for article titled We Love This Deadpool and Wolverine Art, But It’s Not Deadpool & Wolverine Art

    Image: Marvel/Doaly

    This piece is actually called Deadpool vs. Wolverine, which is a smart way to distinguish it from the movie. But also, it’s not a coincidence that it’s being released around the same time, and Deadpool himself would approve of the crossover. Plus, in the piece, we get the cheeky twist of it being Deadpool saying Wolverine’s trademark sound. So is it Deadpool who has the claws or Wolverine? It’s art, whatever you say goes.

    So no, this isn’t a Deadpool & Wolverine poster. But it’s a Deadpool and Wolverine poster. Which is kind of the same. Same characters, different syntax. The piece is a 16 x 24 inch giclée with an embossed seal that comes with an artist-signed certificate of authenticity. It’s a limited edition of $250 and costs about $70. Get all the details over at MoorArtGallery.com.


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    Germain Lussier

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  • Deadpool Set Pics Reveal Another Mutant, Plus the MCU's Newest Good Girl

    Deadpool Set Pics Reveal Another Mutant, Plus the MCU's Newest Good Girl

    (20th Century Studios)

    Deadpool 3 has resumed filming, and set photos are coming out! The latest batch of pictures shows the long-awaited Dogpool, along with another mutant joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

    Note: these photos reveal possible spoilers for Deadpool 3. Some photos going around X (formerly Twitter) contain a MASSIVE spoiler that I’m not posting here, so peruse social media at your own risk.

    The post Deadpool Set Pics Reveal Another Mutant, Plus the MCU’s Newest Good Girl appeared first on The Mary Sue.

    Julia Glassman

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  • 16 Marvel-Themed Gifts That Will Make You the Hero of the Holiday Season

    16 Marvel-Themed Gifts That Will Make You the Hero of the Holiday Season

    As POPSUGAR editors, we independently select and write about stuff we love and think you’ll like too. If you buy a product we have recommended, we may receive affiliate commission, which in turn supports our work.

    If you know someone who loves “The Avengers” as much as “Ms. Marvel” but aren’t quite sure about what kind of gift to get them for that special occasion — whether you’re looking for a unique birthday gift or are just getting a headstart on your holiday shopping — we know finding that perfect gift can be a struggle. The Marvel Cinematic Universe continues to expand each year, so it can be difficult to nail down that ideal product that’ll truly wow them, and it’s only going to get harder as Marvel’s wondrous, fictional world continues to expand.

    There’s just so much merch available already, plus items like jewelry, comic books, action figures, and clothing. To help you on your hunt for the best gifts for Marvel fans, we’ve compiled the hottest Marvel-themed products on the market all in one place. Whether you’re looking for something for a Spider-Man, Moon Knight, or She-Hulk fan, you won’t have to worry because we’ve likely got some ideas for you right here. Best of all, they’re available to shop at a wide range of prices, too. So without further ado, here are all the best Marvel-themed gifts that are sure to make any die-hard fan giddy with excitement.

    — Additional reporting by Kyley Warren

    Michele Mendez

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