Emerging from a second viewing of Deadpool this week, as I aim to deconstruct just what makes this huge hit tick beneath its sex and violence and Adventure Time wrist watch, I began to remember what Steven Spielberg recently predicted.
Because Deadpool is doing its part to reinvigorate superhero films - in part by mocking the most self-serious among them, which serves as a palate cleanser ahead of next month's Batman v Superman - I remain yet more convinced that audience "superhero fatigue" is many years away. One reason is because form and approach can savvily mutate (appropriate for comics) to fit the fickle market. But another key reason goes back to that legendary director, whose Oscar-nominated tale of Cold War intrigue, Bridge of Spies, I watched just the night before.
Spielberg's rationale for why superhero fatigue will set in, he said last year, while promoting Bridge of Spies, was that genres come and go, and that caped-crimefighter films will likewise "go the way of the Western."
On its face, as I've noted before, such dire predictions sound plausible, embedded as they are in a historical context that presumes what's past is prologue. Yet as I study Deadpool's narrative skeleton more closely, I find a new twist in such cinematic forensics: