Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Legends that live

For the ageing star, violence serves as a pathway to desire. Fighting is very much a love language in Deadpool & Wolverine, and desire is everything in the series Barzakh

- Deepanjana Pal (To reach Deepanjana Pal with feedback, write to @dpanjana on Instagram)

At a mid-week morning show of Deadpool & Wolverine, the theatre is almost full. In the queue for 3D glasses is a young man on the phone. “I’m at an important family event, but I’ll be available after lunch,” he says. His companion teases, “Family event?” He replies, “I’m here to pay my respect to Deadpool-da and Wolverine kaku.”

This distant relative of Deadpool and Wolverine must have contribute­d to the cheer that filled the room when Hugh Jackman finally lost his shirt in the film’s predictabl­e climax. Deadpool & Wolverine is more of a mediocre comedy special by Ryan Reynolds than a film, but the bar is low for superhero movies these days, and it doesn’t feel surprising that a trash-talking motormouth who presents himself as a truthtelle­r is popular.

Wait for it to arrive on streaming, however, and you’ll miss what makes it fun: the experience of watching with fans. Even if one hasn’t followed the saga of the Fox and Disney deal, the jokes Reynolds cracks at its expense land because of the surroundin­g laughter. And when Wolverine stands shirtless, one will add to whatever noise the audience is making.

Culturally speaking, there’s a skittishne­ss we feel about depicting older men as desirable. This is possibly why we’re now seeing so many films in which heroes establish their desirabili­ty through feats of physical strength, as opposed to romantic dedication (which usually works best for a younger man). Both flash their bodies, and for the same reason — to entice the viewer — but the mood is starkly different. These days, desire is often sublimated so that it can appear disguised in violence.

Just think of how audiences erupted at the sight of a wrinkled Shah Rukh Khan in Jawan (2023), his action sequences choreograp­hed to showcase him at his enticing best.

When the silver foxes aren’t ready to retire, and can command a larger fanbase than younger heroes, action movies seem the safest option. (Deadpool teases Wolverine that he’ll be doing these movies until he’s 90, but chances are Reynolds will be too, especially given that Deadpool is a masked hero.)

Fighting is very much a love language in Deadpool & Wolverine. Expect the wisecracki­ng hero to fall back on comedy to protect tender sensibilit­ies from erotic and homoerotic possibilit­ies. No, that moment of tingliness was just a build-up to a punchline, not a tricky attempt to hold a mirror up to your longings. Phew!

A rare recent work that leans comfortabl­y into desire for the male body is Asim Abbasi’s Barzakh, starring Fawad Khan and Sanam Saeed. The six-episode series quickly unravels, but it begins with a gorgeous sequence in which cinematogr­apher Mo Azmi and actor Khushhal Khan perform the extraordin­ary feat of making the thin moustache seem impossibly sensual.

Desire is a dangerous, forbidden thing in Barzakh, but Abbasi and Azmi celebrate it through beautiful, fragmentar­y moments, such as the shot that shows Fawad applying kohl around his eyes.

Maybe it’s the vulnerabil­ity inherent in desire that makes audiences feel more comfortabl­e with heroes who lash out than with those who sit with their longings. Still, in the midst of so much that is bland and messy, Wolverine and Deadpool do offer a rare thing: pleasure.

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 ?? ?? A still from Deadpool & Wolverine.
A still from Deadpool & Wolverine.

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