The Province

Deadpool takes aim at Oscar awards

AWARDS: Cheeky underdog comic-book action movie releases playful video for the Academy’s considerat­ion

- MICHAEL CAVNA

“If by chance this happens, prepare for the world’s most ridiculous reaction video.”

— Ryan Reynolds

Few modern Hollywood ad campaigns have ever maintained a longterm, multi-layered narrative better than Deadpool. And ahead of the Oscar-nomination­s’ announceme­nts on Jan. 24, the machinery is staying brilliantl­y on message.

Recently Deadpool star Ryan Reynolds tweeted out a 30-second “for your considerat­ion” video aimed at the Academy. And right down to its open-ended chaps, the tone is perfectly cheeky.

Yet it’s not just Reynolds’ familiar, smart-alecky comic delivery as charred superhero Deadpool/Wade Wilson that matches the spirit of the film. More important are the precise words that Reynolds utters with a wink in voice-over.

Because soon after he cites “600 lbs. of chimichang­as” as an ingredient in the hit film’s winning recipe, Reynolds gets to the real meat of the matter:

“42 rejection letters from Fox. 1 leaked video. And 783 million fans.” (The film grossed $783 million worldwide.)

With just those three numbers, the entire upstart arc behind the making of Deadpool is sketched. Because Oscar campaigns are a rigorous performanc­e unto themselves — ideally, a deft strategy that blends smiling access with a stump “story” to pitch as part of the multimilli­on-dollar politickin­g — and Deadpool is selling a tale of long-term grit and commitment.

The narrative: Deadpool is the feel-good underdog that defied the doubters and succeeded far beyond all expectatio­ns because — much like the superhero himself — the four main filmmakers refused to let this die.

The stations of the film’s long cross are well-known: It was more than a decade ago that Reynolds, writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick and director Tim Miller began trying to adapt the Marvel character for a feature film. But the project seemed dead in the water after a double dose of misfortune: Reynolds had to play a dreadfully conceived version of the character in director Gavin Hood’s X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) — the “merc with a mouth” was bizarrely rendered mute, lips sewn shut — and then two years later, Reynolds’ Green Lantern bombed at the box office. A future Deadpool solo film appeared to be dead in the water.

But shortly before Lantern tanked, Fox had given Miller a low-six-figure budget to make a Deadpool test reel. Fox had too many concerns to move forward. Then, in the summer of 2014, test footage leaked — and the fanboys ate it up. Interest was stoked, Fox suits were assuaged — and the underdog had a green light. (To this day, the four-man creative team refuses to disclose which of them leaked the test reel; they recently joked that it was Putin.)

From there, Deadpool had to figure out how to market itself with a budget significan­tly smaller than that of most studio superhero films. By necessity, Reynolds and the writers got creative, with a minimal buy of scatologic­al emoji billboards that went viral; with a Halloween trickor-treat video shot on an iPhone; and with a Valentine’s Day ad in which the mutant anti-hero lounges on a bear rug, à la the iconic ‘70s Burt Reynolds’ centrefold in Cosmopolit­an. Throughout it all, hawking while in costume, Reynolds seemed utterly in his element.

“I can channel this guy (Deadpool]) in a way I just can’t seem to channel anything else,” Reynolds told the Hollywood Reporter last fall. “When it comes to Deadpool’s sensibilit­y, and certainly his sense of humour, I feel like we were born on the same end of the spectrum.”

The sustained blitz helped Deadpool become the highest-grossing R-rated film of the year, with the sequel in the works.

And two of the early awards that the film reaped were Grand Clio Key Art Awards — marketing honours bestowed last October for best integrated campaign and best outof-home advertisin­g (for the emoji billboard).

Now, the film’s advertisin­g takes full aim at the Oscars, riding a wave of surprise critical recognitio­n from the Golden Globes (two nomination­s), the Critics’ Choice Awards, the PGA, the WGA and American Cinema Editors.

Reynolds even seems to stay in character when responding to the prospect of an Oscar nod. After The Post recently again asked whether Deadpool could actually be nominated for an Oscar, Reynolds tweeted:

“If by chance this happens, prepare for the world’s most ridiculous reaction video.”

 ?? — 20TH CENTURY FOX FILES ?? Deadpool, starring Ryan Reynolds, took years of effort and clever marketing to get made. Its creators are being equally inventive in the way they are now promoting the film in the hope of receiving recognitio­n from the Academy for an Oscar nomination.
— 20TH CENTURY FOX FILES Deadpool, starring Ryan Reynolds, took years of effort and clever marketing to get made. Its creators are being equally inventive in the way they are now promoting the film in the hope of receiving recognitio­n from the Academy for an Oscar nomination.
 ?? — AP FILES ?? RYAN REYNOLDS
— AP FILES RYAN REYNOLDS

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