King #adoptdontshop’s review published on Letterboxd:
Best watched in IMax.
Matching the exhilarating standard - or perhaps even surprising - of it predecessors, Deadpool returns to a charged sequel, this time with a Wolverine version it tow. Deadpool & Wolverine is absurdly irresistible and superbly exciting, thanks in part to a fantastic direction by Shawn Levy. The action is abundant, the fight choreography is A+, the script is gripping and the movie itself is well-paced. Even non-fans are gonna laugh with the mostly effective humor; even in its weakest, the jokes will still amuse. And the music - perfection! All the songs should get credit for hyping up scenes, especially the Bye Bye Bye and Like A Prayer sequences.
Maybe because he also contributed as a writer, but this was Ryan Reynold’s best performance in the trilogy. He was spitting fire and zesty all movie long, a type of stamina actors display when they’re enjoying at full speed. Meanwhile, Hugh Jackman presents another killer performance as Logan. He unsurprisingly contributed the heart and emotional core of Deadpool & Wolverine to extremes. Fans are blessed when he finally fully donned the iconic yellow and black ensemble of Wolverine. People were clapping in the cinema you’d think it was someone’s graduation. Emma Corrin is a revelation as Cassandra Nova while bringing in Jennifer Garner and Wesley Snipes is nice and a worthy tribute to nostalgic superhero films of the past two decades.
Maybe it was recency bias or having to pay ($13) for a nice cinematic experience which catapults this gushing review, but Deadpool & Wolverine is a bright beacon of hope for the embattled studio whose latest outputs are onslaughts of failures.