USA TODAY International Edition

‘ DEADPOOL’ PRESENTS A MOVIE SUPERHERO UNLIKE ANY OTHER

- Brian Truitt

Even after 25 years, comic book artist Rob Liefeld still can’t home in on a single reason, exactly, why Deadpool, Marvel’s resident “Merc with a Mouth” and Hollywood’s spankin’- new movie star, is so popular among fans.

Instead, there are quite a few. He has a neato red- and- black outfit. He breaks the fourth wall. He does serious damage with guns and katana swords. He lives for chimichang­as and Bea Arthur. And he’s a total wisenheime­r.

“Characters with attitude — we migrate to them all the time,” Liefeld says.

The antihero doesn’t have the mainstream recognitio­n of Captain America or Batman, but that could change with Deadpool ( in theaters Friday), directed by Tim Miller.

He’s a Marvel character but isn’t part of Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe; instead, he’s in Fox’s X- Men movie world.

The R- rated action comedy stars Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson, who turns to some shady figures to cure his cancer and ends up a wisecracki­ng disfigured warrior with an obscenely good healing factor. So Deadpool isn’t exactly a patriotic supersoldi­er like Cap or a muscular thunder god like Thor.

“He’s such a relatable, selfloathi­ng nutcase, and a voice that was so unique in this superhero space,” says Paul Wernick, who cowrote Deadpool with Rhett Reese.

After playing a unmasked, silent version of the character in 2009’ s X- Men Origins: Wolverine, Reynolds, a longtime Deadpool fan, started working with Wernick and Reese on a script that was truer to the motormouth­ed comics persona.

It was a rough road, Reese says. “This movie died so many times. It is much like the character: It rose up off the floor after multiple grievous mortal wounds.”

As much it has been a passion project for the moviemaker­s, Deadpool means more to Liefeld. He introduced the character in 1991 alongside fellow New Mu

tants writer Fabian Nicieza, and the antihero, influenced by both Boba Fett and Spider- Man, was an immediate success.

He launched the mutant superteam X- Force that same year with a first issue featuring Deadpool that sold more than 4 million copies, the second- bestsellin­g comic ever. In his early 20s at the time, he was trying to make his mark in the industry while also caring for his family — his father had undergone six surgeries for cancerous brain tumors since Liefeld was in sixth grade.

“That period of my life, I had to succeed,” says Liefeld, whose

Deadpool: Bad Blood graphic novel is out this year.

Deadpool is one of most recent Marvel characters to connect with comics fans in a major way, says Jermaine Exum, general manager of Acme Comics in Greensboro, N. C. But he isn’t a kid- friendly character, Exum warns. “The Deadpool movie is the Red Ryder BB gun from A

Christmas Story.”

Yet Wernick believes Deadpool can fill a hole in the superhero marketplac­e with sex, four- letter words and extreme violence. “Marvel can’t make these kind of movies. We can and we should.”

Liefeld is all for it. “We’ve had a steady diet of that PG- 13 entertainm­ent,” he says. “It’s the best vanilla you can buy. It’s delicious, but it’s getting kind of same- y. This is mint chip, a new flavor. People are going to be like, ‘ I want more of this!’ ”

 ?? JOE LEDERER
DAVID DOLSEN, MARVEL ?? Wade Wilson ( Reynolds) has a chip on his shoulder and a heart- of- gold girlfriend, Vanessa ( Morena Baccarin).Marvel’s new star ( Ryan Reynolds) doesn’t exactly follow a superhero script in Deadpool.
JOE LEDERER DAVID DOLSEN, MARVEL Wade Wilson ( Reynolds) has a chip on his shoulder and a heart- of- gold girlfriend, Vanessa ( Morena Baccarin).Marvel’s new star ( Ryan Reynolds) doesn’t exactly follow a superhero script in Deadpool.

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