"Deadpool" Shoots and Slices on Cinemas Starting February 10!
Manila, Philippines – the movie “Deadpool” has been rated by the MTRCB
(local censors board) with an R-16 rating due to the movie’s strong violence
and language throughout including sexual content and graphic nudity.
“Deadpool”
director Tim Miller couldn’t agree more as with all other R-ratings from across
the globe. Along with Deadpool fighting in the buff, the film’s torrid scenes
between Wade and Vanessa, and Deadpool’s non-stop and off-color verbal
stylings, all contribute to the film’s R-rating. “I think the R-rating allows us to have a
level of reality that wouldn’t be possible with a PG-13,” says Miller. “I also think it’s an important step in the
expansion of the genre. There’s a type
of film that can only be made with this rating, and that really expands the
boundaries of the stories comic book movies can tell.”
As fandom gets ready for “Deadpool” this
February 2016 opening, the filmmakers remain convinced the time is right for
this unique movie event. “When comic
book movies first appeared, they had to be ‘tentpole’ movies, which had to
appeal to the broadest possible audience,” Miller says. “Deadpool was always meant to be an edgy
film, and the time is right for it. The
genre of superhero and comic book films is wider and it feels like it’s time to
do a film like this, that sort of pushes the boundaries a little further.”
“Deadpool”
started life as Wade Wilson, an elite Special Forces operative turned
mercenary. An expert marksman, swordsman and martial artist, and proficient in
several languages, Wilson was diagnosed with terminal cancer, threatening to
cut his days of being a hired gun short. Approached by a secret experimental
program, Wilson was presented with a choice: take part in their twisted
experiments for a chance to cure his cancer, or bear the pain of imminent
death. But the shadowy facility didn’t exactly cure Wade’s cancer... What they
did was activate dormant mutant genes that imbued Wade with with regenerative
healing powers. In fact, the procedure advanced Wade’s cancer, leaving him
permanently disfigured but incapable of death, the perfect cocktail for an
unhealthy mind. Dubbed “The Merc with a
Mouth”, Deadpool is a pop culture-literate antihero unique amongst comic book
characters in that he can break the fourth wall and flip superhero conventions
on their head.
The character’s
accessibility is defined partly by his twisted sense of humor. “It really draws you in,” Reynolds
notes. “Deadpool has this bright,
optimistic outlook on life, even though his life is pretty shitty. I mean, he’s become horribly disfigured from
the experiments that gave him his powers.
And, he can’t find love and he’s more than a little insane.”
Bringing the
exploits of an unconventional superhero to life sometimes created an equally
unexpected vibe on set. Notes Stan Lee:
“When you see Tim Miller and Ryan Reynolds working together, they are both so
in sync; they see the movie the same way.
It’s though they’re playing a game and each one of them is doing his job
so magnificently. When I did my scene in
DEADPOOL, I didn’t even know I was working.
When it was over, I said, ‘When do we start?’ and Tim said, ‘You’re
finished.’ That’s how effortless he
makes it seem.”
That kind of
playfulness, intermixed with a badass physicality, marks the film’s acrobatic
action sequences. “Deadpool’s always
been more lithe and agile than other characters in the Marvel universe,” says
Liefeld. “Without even thinking about
it, he can drop into a moving car and then take out a small army of tough guys,
all the while cracking wise.”
“Deadpool”
invades cinemas nationwide on February 10 (2D and IMAX screens) from 20th
Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros. Watch the trailer below:
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