If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.
Deadpool is joining the TVA in Deadpool and Wolverine, but don't forget: Wade Wilson is a variant
For an organization that seeks to prevent timeline disturbances, the Time Variance Authority seems pretty cool with a guy who owes his existence to one
Popverse's top stories of the day
- Dune: Prophecy creators promise to bring the "complexity" and "grand scale" of Frank Herbert's books and Denis Villeneuve's movies to TV
- Marvel's TV head says there's "absolutely" a future for Jon Bernthal's Punisher after his Daredevil: Born Again appearance
- Meet the Grim Reaper of The Walking Dead TV show cast, and what goes into killing someone off in the show
As of this writing, we're just a couple days away from the release of Deadpool and Wolverine, the film that will see Wade Wilson joining not just the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but the Time Variance Authority, the temporal law enforcement agency first introduced in the Loki series on Disney+. While this is an exciting development, there's a little incongruity that it seems the TVA has forgotten about: Wade Wilson represents the very thing they seek to quash.
Some context: the TVA has been a lot of things to the MCU, but on paper, their responsibility is to police the timeline, seeking out and correcting points in history when it diverges. According to the trailers, Deadpool will somehow be valuable in their efforts to do so in the upcoming film, but what everyone seems to be forgetting is that Deadpool owes his (current) existence to a divergent timeline. Allow us to explain.
Deadpools of Future Past
The very first time that Ryan Reynolds appeared on screen as Wade Wilson was in 2009's X-Men Origins: Wolverine. Through no fault of Reynolds's, the characterization was widely hated by fans for many reasons - his patchwork backstory, Cronenbergian appearance, and serious departure from source material (they took the mouth off the Merc with a Mouth!) all factored into the bad taste the movie left comic readers with. Seven years later, Reynolds would return to the big screen as a far more comic-accurate (and blessedly less edgelord) version of the character, one that so much beloved by comic-book-movie audiences that the first version seemed like a far-off nightmare.
Besides a probably non-canon joke in the mid-credits scene of Deadpool 2, we've never gotten an on-screen explanation as to how Reynolds's character went from lipless lowlife to hooded hearthrob. However, as we've touched on in our explanation of the Fox X-Men movie timeline, most credit Deadpool's change to the timewarping shenanigans in 2014's Days of Future Past - in which Wolverine sends his consciousness back in time and splits the Fox X-Men movies into two divergent timelines... exactly the kind of thing that the TVA would try to prevent.
But here's the thing - as many questions as the Deadpool and Wolverine trailers bring up, they also seem to provide at least a partial answer as to why the TVA is cozying up to a variant. Namely, that they've got a common enemy.
Alioth on the Line
At about the 1:51 mark in the official Deadpool and Wolverine trailer, fans get a glimpse of a familiar face. Literally, like, it's just a face, because the rest of it is a glowing purple lightning cloud. This atrocity of an altocumulus (some cloud humor for you there) is not just a CGI mystery, but a force that the TVA has faced before. It is Alioth, an entity that exists outside time and has the power to wipe out entire timelines.
Now, we don't know what Deadpool's bringing to the table that could possibly factor into a war waged against a creature of this magnitude (Katanas? One-liners? The power of friendship?). But if there's one thing we're fairly certain of, it's this - whatever's Wade Wilson has going for him in this movie, it's something the TVA needs. And as we've seen before in the case of Loki: when the TVA needs something, they're willing to broaden their definition of an ideal employee.
Deadpool and Wolverine hits theaters July 26.
Consider this a meta post-credits scene for Marvel fans - the four key articles you need to read next to continue the thrills:
Follow Popverse for upcoming event coverage and news
Find out how we conduct our review by reading our review policy
Let Popverse be your tour guide through the wilderness of pop culture
Sign in and let us help you find your new favorite thing.
Comments
Want to join the discussion? Please activate your account first.
Visit Reedpop ID if you need to resend the confirmation email.