USA TODAY US Edition

Ryan Reynolds, the perfect Pikachu

He embodies the “adorable pocket monster.”

- Carly Mallenbaum

Need a handsome hero with irreverent charm and a dry sense of humor? Ryan Reynolds is very obviously your guy.

Need to cast a tiny yellow monster who doesn’t typically speak English? Yeah, Reynolds is a fit for that, too. At least that’s how the filmmakers behind “Pokemon: Detective Pikachu” (in theaters Friday) felt when they were seeking the voice of their titular character. Reynolds plays Pikachu, one of the many colorful Pokemon in the human/ monster town of Ryme City, who teams up with human friend Tim (Justice Smith) to unlock the mystery of the disappeara­nce of Tim’s dad, Pikachu’s private-eye partner.

On its surface, casting Reynolds seems a strange decision. In practice, it’s even more bizarre because Reynolds, as Pikachu, is really just riffing and acting like himself. The actor was encouraged to improvise in the role.

And, no, Reynolds, 42, didn’t study the behaviors of big-eared critters and/ or the facial expression­s of anime characters with red cheeks and electric tails to play the part.

“I don’t know if you’ve taken a gander at my resume. I’m never that prepared,” Reynolds jokes. “(Pikachu) is an adorable, mythical pocket monster. It’s not like I’m going to lose 180 pounds” to play him.

So Reynolds, as is, embodies the cuter-than-a-kitten Pikachu. And that’s exactly how director Rob Letterman wanted it.

Letterman approached Reynolds to be his film’s star after auditionin­g the actor without Reynolds knowing it: He animated Pikachu to a clip of Reynolds’ audio from 2011 comedy “The ChangeUp” to find out what it would be like to pair the impossibly adorable Pikachu with the actor’s signature warm-yetsarcast­ic voice.

“We had to get a big personalit­y out of an adorable character,” the director says. It was obvious to him upon seeing the animated clip that Reynolds was the perfect man for the job.

The result on screen is hilarious, especially when the big-eyed Pikachu – who before this movie and its companion video game only cooed the word “Pika” over and over again – utters lines like, “I push people away and hate them for leaving” (a Reynolds ad-lib). Or, when Pikachu invites Tim to sleep at his apartment, mock-demures: “I never do this. I’m not that kind of Pokemon.”

“Detective Pikachu really is Ryan,” says Letterman, just with expressive, foxlike ears and a teensy brown nose.

And it’s not just the voice that’s Reynolds’ – it’s the facial expression­s, too. The actor wore a motion-capture facial rig for the first time for “Detective Pikachu,” and performed the movie’s entire script on a recording room stage with cameras capturing “micro-facial expression­s,” Reynolds says.

“They scale (my face) down and put it on a character who’s much more rotund and small and round,” says Reynolds, who says seeing himself projected onto Pikachu is truly bizarre. “I notice (the resemblanc­e) more than other people.”

But the actor’s kids are beginning to catch on: “My older daughter has said about Pikachu, ‘You sound exactly like that guy.’” (Reynolds and wife Blake Lively revealed on the “Pikachu” premiere carpet that they’re expecting a third baby.)

His daughters, James, 4, and Inez, 2, associate their father more with his redsuited, knife-fighting superhero character Deadpool, because they visited Dad on that set more. For “Pikachu,” Reynolds was on set for only about a week.

When Reynolds wasn’t there, his costar Smith acted opposite a tennis ball or puppet. Letterman combined Reynolds’ human-size movements and facial capture with a computer-generated Pikachu, and edited them into scenes with Smith.

There was plenty to work with. “I threw everything up against the wall,” says Reynolds about his alternate lines of dialogue. “There was some stuff in there where I went a little blue. I forget what, exactly, and it doesn’t even matter because it’s unprintabl­e. There’s probably a gag reel somewhere that would take down the entire industry, or certainly the studio.”

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ??
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? If you look closely, you can see Ryan Reynolds’ micro-facial expression­s on Detective Pikachu.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES If you look closely, you can see Ryan Reynolds’ micro-facial expression­s on Detective Pikachu.
 ?? KEITH TSUJI/GETTY IMAGES ?? Reynolds is lending his sense of humor and charm to a Pokemon character who doesn’t usually speak English.
KEITH TSUJI/GETTY IMAGES Reynolds is lending his sense of humor and charm to a Pokemon character who doesn’t usually speak English.

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