Ryan Reynolds over Deadpool 2

RDJ134 18 mei 2018 om 22:34 uur

De reden waarom ik vandaag even afk was en het nieuws wat later is. Kwam omdat ik met een vriendin van me naar Deadpool 2 ben geweest, en het is niet zo tof als het eerste deel, maar zeker heel erg vermakelijk te noemen en een aanrader. Sterker als je hem gaat kijken blijf even zitten met de aftiteling, want de scenes die volgen zijn briljant. Ryan Reynolds had een interview met de website Collider over zijn rol in Deadpool 2 en meer. Hier van kan je hier onder een klein stukje lezen.


You introduce Cable in the film. You joke about his complicated backstory in the movie. Can you talk about finding Cable's voice, and how much you wanted to reveal about the character in this film?

REYNOLDS
: We felt like Deadpool 2 was an introduction to Cable really, more than exploring the pantheon of complicated and complex backstories that exist out there for him. And even going forward, I think we're gonna kinda find a lane and stick to it. But I'm excited about the prospect of exploring Cable more. There's something interesting about the techno virus, and the idea that he's in some instances a dead man walking. So there's a lot to do there. But we love that character. And finding his voice on this particular film was pretty easy 'cause Josh [Brolin] was the first guy that we wanted for the role, but then he wasn't available. So as soon as our production schedule pushed back a few months, then somebody, I think it was Dave Leitch, had the wise idea to say, "hey, maybe we should ask Brolin again, maybe he's available now." And lo and behold he was.

Josh Brolin is fantastic in the role. But I have to give huge props to David, because he did such a great job with the action. How did David elevate what was on the page?

REYNOLDS
: Dave elevated everything across the board. You need to sort of put him in this fiction hold kind of place with it, he was really largely responsible for the action. Of course he was responsible for the action, but he was wonderful at kind of walking the tight rope of tone. Which is always a difficult thing to walk, very difficult for everyone really. And it's something you have to be mindful of at every moment, every scene in the movie. So, he was great at seeing the macro, not just the micro. He was the guy that, I don't even think there was an action director anymore, I think of him a little more as a fantastic director. I mean he so understood the heart and the emotion of the story, and would always steer us back there when we would wander into the abyss of Deadpool's sort of insane, meta world. So, I can very easily almost go to far with it. And Dave was great about saying, hey let's get this stuff that's he's pushing things too far, but let's also grab the stuff that keeps the character grounded, and keeps us rooting for him, and keeps us sort of understanding his pain.

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