Tag Archives: ‘Deadpool 2’

At the movies: The top 10 films of 2018

With 2018 in the books, let’s take a look back at my favorite films from last year. As you probably can tell, films with music – but not necessarily musicals – had a huge impact on me this year.

So, here’s the list, and whether you agree or disagree with the picks, I hope you can agree with me that 2018 was a very good year for feature films. Happy New Year – see you at the movies in 2019!

10. “Incredibles 2″/”Ralph Breaks the Internet” (tie) – Pixar and Disney packed a solid one-two punch with these two animated giants that were every bit as good if not better than their predecessors.

9. Black KkKlansman – Spike Lee’s searing look at at true-life African-American detective (John David Washington) who infiltrates the KKK strikes an amazing balance of humor and drama, despite the film’s deathly serious subject matter. John David Washington (the son of Denzel Washington) is a revelation in the lead and Adam Driver is terrific as his undercover partner.

8. “Vice” – Adam McKay’s dazzling look at the adult life of Vice President Dick Cheney escapes the biopic doldrums with inventive storytelling that rivals his brilliant “The Big Short.” Christian Bale amazes once again as he channels Dick Cheney and Amy Adams is looking at her first Oscar (finally!) as his force-of-nature wife and political partner Lynne Cheney.

7. “Deadpool 2” – Writer-star Ryan Reynolds amazingly ups the ante with this outrageously funny sequel to the 2016 blockbuster – and succeeds.

Walt Disney Pictures

6. “Mary Poppins Returns” Emily Blunt makes the impossible possible by stepping into the gargantuan shoes of Julie Andrews and making the iconic character of Mary Poppins her own. Director Rob Marshall also proves once again why he’s the go-to filmmaker when it comes to filming elaborately-staged movie musicals.

5. “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” – Even though the film was a miss financially, the stranger-than-fiction true-life story of serial forger Lee Israel (Melissa McCarthy) was one of the great, previously undiscovered stories of 2018. McCarthy is brilliant in an uncharacteristic dramatic turn, and veteran actor Richard E. Grant is finally getting his due with a memorable role as Lee’s partner-in-crime.

4. “Green Book” – Peter Farrelly, one-half of the Farrelly brothers slapstick comedy writing-directing duo shows his chops for directing drama with this moving story set amid a volatile racial climate in the 1960s. Viggo Mortensen gives a career performance as an ignorant driver of an African-American pianist (Mahershala Ali) on a tour of the Deep South.

'A Star is Born' (photo: Warner Bros)

3. “A Star is Born” – Just when you think you’ve seen it all from Lady Gaga, the singer/songwriter/musician delivers a stunning performance in the third remake about a falling star (co-writer/director Bradley Cooper) and the subsequent rise of his wife’s career. The film also marks the best performance Cooper has ever given, and his direction, like his acting, could very well earn him an Oscar. Also, film’s signature song “Shallow” has become the first sure-thing Oscar since Adele’s “Skyfall.”

2. “Bohemian Rhapsody” – Rami Malek gives a transcending performance singer/songwriter/musician Freddie Mercury in what is easily the year’s best biopic about the rise to stardom of classic rockers Queen. Despite the fact that the messes around with the band’s timeline, there’s no question packs an emotional wallop throughout, capped by Queen’s landmark performance at Live Aid in 1986.

Focus Features

1. “Won’t You Be My Neighbor” – A deeply heartfelt look at the career of Fred Rogers and his PBS show “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood,” Morgan Neville’s documentary takes us back to a time not long ago where positivity and love triumphed over negativity and hate. Despite the proliferation of superhero movies in the marketplace, Fred Rogers shows us what a true-life superhero is. The movie could not has come at a better time in country so deeply divided.

Honorable mentions: “The Mule,” “Hereditary,” “Black Panther,” “Christopher Robin,” “A Quiet Place,” “Chappaquiddick,” “Stan & Ollie,” “Ben is Back,” “Boy Erased,” “Mission: Impossible – Fallout.”

Most overrated movies of 2018: “Roma” and “The Favourite”

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for The KQ92 Morning Show,” “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC), WCCO Radio, WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere.

Copyright 2018 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
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Interview: Director David Leitch talks ‘Deadpool 2’

As the film’s audience and the box office numbers can attest, there’s ample room in the movie marketplace for R-rated superhero adventures like “Deadpool 2,” director David Leitch’s and star Ryan Reynolds’ outrageously entertaining sequel to the 2016 worldwide blockbuster “Deadpool.”

The great thing is, Leitch, as well as Reynolds — who co-wrote the sequel with the original film’s scribes Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick — have proven that there’s much more to the film than Deadpool/Wade Wilson’s trademark wiseass humor that made the original such a blast. The four creatives without question realized that there was a lot of room for the narrative to grow with “Deadpool 2,” which makes the film not only one of the best of the year so far, but arguably better than the brilliant film from two years ago.

One of reasons for that, Leitch believes, is apart from the F-bomb slinging irreverence and vengeful nature of the title character, Deadpool/Wade is a real person who feels pain like the rest of us.

“There’s something about the blue humor and subversive nature of ‘Deadpool’ that, it has to be rated R and it has to be naughty, but it doesn’t mean that it can’t have a heart — a beating heart — and a soul and a moral message,” Leitch said in a phone conversation Wednesday from Los Angeles. “I think that’s what makes it unique. It’s something that you don’t find in anything else, and that’s what makes it such a breath of fresh air.”

Now playing in theaters nationwide, “Deadpool 2” finds the mutant affectionately known as the “Merc with a Mouth” on a mission to save a young and rebellious mutant, Russell (Julian Dennison) from the crosshairs of Nathan Summers/Cable (Josh Brolin), a time-traveling cyborg who comes back from the future to eliminate him. Deadpool isn’t about to go it against Cable alone, though, recruiting fellow mutants like Domino (Zazie Beetz) and a handful of others to form the X-Force — leading to, as a result one of the film’s many unexpected but laugh-out-loud hilarious scenes.

Photo: Fox

Despite the enormous success of the first “Deadpool” film, it became immediately clear from the very beginning that Leitch, Reynolds and company weren’t going to rest on their laurels and coast on the waves for the sequel. It became apparent, in fact, from the opening scenes of “Deadpool 2,” where Deadpool suffers an unspeakable tragedy, that the film was willing to not only break the mold of its predecessor; it was going to have to obliterate it to move the story forward.

“It wasn’t a matter of ‘Can we go there?’  We had to go there,” Leitch said. “We wanted to access the character’s humanity and keep the stakes insular and about Deadpool. It wasn’t about global stakes and world-ending consequences. He’s a relatable, flawed human like all of us. There’s a wish-fulfillment part that of him when he says all the raunchy stuff that we wish we could say and there’s the bumbling nature about his political correctness, but at the end of the day, his heart is huge. If you play into that emotion and people love him, they’ll go on the journey with him and all his wisecracks and irreverence. Without that, he’s just a grating asshole.”

Even though the next film for Deadpool/Wade is “X-Force,” fans will be excited to know that there’s more of “Deadpool 2” on the way, either in the form of an extended theatrical cut or in all likelihood, as part of the home video release of the film. Leitch said there’s an additional 12 minutes of the film fans will see, which is a significant amount of footage that will be interspersed throughout the original cut.

“In terms of the additional footage, I feel the movie speaks to you in postproduction and the movie that we presented theatrically is the best version of the film. I really do believe that,” Leitch said. “There’s a pace to making a film and a pace to the storytelling and you want the audience to be constantly falling forward, and getting their dose of drama and narrative and subverting it with a laugh. You find a rhythm and with this movie we did and I’m really proud of it.”

However, when the success of movie allows a director the opportunity to add back in footage they toiled so hard to get in the first place, it hard not to go for it.

“As a filmmaker, there’s a cathartic process where you have all these things you worked so hard to get during production that you have to let go,” said Leitch, who is currently in pre-production on his next film, the “Fast and the Furious” spinoff “Hobbs and Shaw.” “You feel like, ‘Man, we shot 15 hours that day! We’re going to cut that scene? We can’t cut that scene!’ and then you have to cut it for the scene for the betterment of the movie and that’s part of the process.”

Photo: Fox

Still, Leitch said, it will be fun to show the additional footage for fans who would love to have more material. And while Leitch realizes it’s a tricky proposition to add footage back into a film, he assures fans that it won’t alter the story that fans are loving now.

“I don’t think it changes the narrative, but it changes the flow of the film maybe a little bit,” Leitch said. “If you’re already a fan of the theatrical cut, you’re going to love this one. There are some more jokes, there are a couple additional scenes and a little more action, but it’s not exhaustive in any way. It’s actually in the spirit of everything else that’s going on. There were just some jokes that we loved as a creative team that we wanted to share with audiences as we move forward.”

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for The KQ92 Morning Show,” “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC), WCCO Radio, WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere.

Copyright 2018 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
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Movie review: ‘Deadpool 2’ laugh-out-loud stroke of brilliance

“Deadpool 2” (R)

Twice as crazy, twice as funny and overall twice as entertaining as the insanely entertaining first film, Deadpool 2 is double the fun of the original 2016 blockbuster — and 20 times more daring than any superhero movie out there. Even with the monstrous weight of expectations on his shoulders, Ryan Reynolds has unleashed the beast of Rob Liefeld’s eccentric Marvel comic book character and not only does he smash those expectations, he’s created what is easily one of the best movies of 2018.

“Deadpool 2” begins with Reynolds’ Deadpool/Wade Wilson skewering Hugh Jackman’s Logan/Wolverine, his far more serious, R-rated counterpart in Twentieth Century Fox’s decidedly more graphic Marvel movie universe. Jackman and Logan are merely the first targets, however, of Deadpool’s offbeat, take-no-prisoners humor, as he savages all-things pop culture and topical during his latest superhero mission – to save a young and rebellious mutant, Russell (Julian Dennison) from the crosshairs of Nathan Summers/Cable (Josh Brolin), a time-traveling mutant who comes back from the future, hell-bent on eliminating him.


AUDIO: Listen to Tim’s review of “Deadpool 2” on “The KQ Morning Show” with Tom Barnard (segment begins 1:30 in).

Loaded with one-liners, political incorrectness and self-aware humor, Deadpool is laugh-out-loud hilarious throughout, as Reynolds injects his quick wit into almost every turn. The great thing is, Reynolds realizes he’s a team player, allowing for returning characters like Blind Al (Leslie Uggams), Weasel (T.J. Miller), Colossus (voice of Stefan Kapicic) and Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Breanna Hildebrand), as well as new characters Cable and the lucky mutant Domino (Zazie Beetz) time to shine. It’s a perfect marriage of madness made complete by the return of Morena Baccarin as Wade’s true love Vanessa, whose presence looms over the film even though her role is of the smaller, supporting variety this time around.

Naturally, the film has a couple of end credits sequences, so anxious moviegoers are urged to sit patiently as the scenes unfold. The last end credits scene, which obviously won’t be revealed here so not to spoil the fun, may in fact be the best stinger ever to grace a superhero movie. Yes, it’s that brilliant, as is the entire movie to precede it.

Lammometer: 9.5 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for The KQ92 Morning Show,” “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC), WCCO Radio, WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere.

Copyright 2018 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
Click book cover for info on how to buy!