Film Review: Deadpool

Our resident film reviewer is writer Harry Casey-Woodward who will be sharing his opinions on things he has watched…

Deadpool, dir Tim Miller, 3/5

As I’m not a fan of superhero movies, I feel we are saturated with them at the moment. Not only is every conceivable Marvel and DC character being dredged up for adaptation but we are going through an era of multi-superhero films. Franchises like The Avengers are teaming superheroes up and pitting them against each other, criss-crossing story lines in a vast blockbuster market consuming web.

deaddd

We’ve got Captain America: Civil War, Suicide Squad and Batman vs Superman all coming out this year, and even superhero sequels for next year are being hyped up. It’s like Marvel and DC are in a furious race to get as many characters and storylines up on screen as possible and I’m getting sick of it. I feel like more than ever we need an antihero.
Cue Deadpool. I haven’t read the original comics but I have seen one panel where he shoots dead someone just for admitting they like the Star Wars prequels. After seeing his movie, to me this is a good summary of both the character and the film. There’s humour, violence and more pop culture references than you can shake a stick at. And more violence.

In short, Deadpool could be the first adult Marvel film. I don’t mean that in an erotic sense (although there are fair dollops of nudity) but it’s the only movie about a Marvel character I can think of that doesn’t hold back with the jokes, the swearing or the explicit violence. Often it combines all of these, especially in scenes where Deadpool gleefully dispatches henchmen in a variety of comically gruesome ways.
So yes the film is crude and savage but it’s also smart. It’s refreshing to watch a superhero cracking self-aware jokes not just at the idea of being a superhero but at other superhero movies. Many of these jokes are aimed at Hugh Jackman, which I relished after having to watch him in so many bad X-Men sequels. There were even stabs at Ryan Reynolds, the actor playing Deadpool, so try and get your head around a character making fun of the actor playing him. As for Reynolds’ performance, I think it’s the best I’ve seen out of him. He’s clearly in his element playing a wisecracking anti hero and having immense fun with it.
dddd
I expected the jokes and the violence. What I didn’t expect were the moments of seriousness underneath. The plot boils down to an ex-special forces man named Wade meeting the woman of his dreams (Morena Baccarin), getting cancer and taking up the offer from a shifty man in a suit of a cure that also gives him the ability to heal from everything else. Unfortunately it also leaves him with all over body scarring, destroying his fine looks. So he straps on some weapons and a costume, becomes Deadpool and rampages after the British sociopathic scientist named Ajax (Ed Skrein) who performed the process and ruined his life. Not only does he want revenge but he also wants the damage reversed so he can have the confidence to face his girlfriend again. As he tells us in the film, this is both a romance and a horror story. You feel sorry for Deadpool as well as laugh along with him. The scenes where he’s struggling with cancer and his relationship are quite touching, even with jokes.

deeeee
Overall, what we get is a film that joyfully slaps all the clichés of its genre in the face while still taking its story and characters seriously. It’s kind of relaxing to watch a superhero movie that shrugs off the overbearing moral code that oppresses other such films and instead gives us a guy who likes killing people and cracking jokes, which you can kind of understand. Judging by the film’s box office success, this is what people have wanted. It’s fun, it’s different, it’s outrageous and it comes with a pumpin’ soundtrack. Plus we finally get a comic book character who sees the hilarity in wearing a skin-tight latex costume.

Corazón Loco

Asenet Ramirez founder of Corazón Loco, creates sugar skull figurines in Barcelona, she paints each unique pieced by hand. We chatted to her to find out where she gets her inspiration from as well as her love of tattoos…

3 web

When did you first start making the skulls?  I started to make skulls after my first trip to Mexico. A year after my holiday I moved to Oaxaca in Mexico.

What inspires you? I love the people of Mexico, the colours, and the culture. This environment is the source of my inspiration. I’d say I’m an artisan, all of my work is related to Mexican folk culture. I’m naturally curious about different ways of life and I love tattoos. I’m also inspired by the work of people I admire. While I’m working on a skull I’m think about the next one,no two are alike!

_DSC9940-2

Where can we buy them?  People can purchase a skull by contacting me on Instagram, Facebook, or by email (corazon.loco.la@gmail.com). I also have stands at tattoo conventions or come and find me at  LTW Tattoo Studio in Barcelona. I make different size skulls, headbands, dolls, altars, tote bags and t-shirts .

_DSC9900

When did you get your first tattoo and what was it? I get my first tattoo in Bugs Tattoo London 26 years ago, It was and ace of spades with two skulls. I look at my tattoo and remember being in the moment and the joy I felt.  I love everyone of my tattoos, and the memory of all of them.

Do you have any future plans to get tattooed? There’s always a tattoo in progress…

4web

Pictures were taken by Pol Vila and make up by Andrea Alvarez

Caitlin McCormack: String Sculptures

Philadelphia artist Caitlin McCormack creates beautifully delicate sculptures out of string which are inspired by fossils and animal skeletons. On her website she describes how she makes these art works:

The act of stiffening intricately crocheted cotton string with glue produces material that is structurally similar to delicate bone tissue. The string implemented in this process can be viewed as the basic cellular unit of fabrication, and by utilizing media and practices inherited from my deceased relatives, I aim to generate emblems of my diminishing bloodline, embodied by each organism’s skeletal remains.

caiiitiitt

 

Follow her on Instagram for more enchanting art work

Interview with Holly Marie

Holly Marie is a 20-year-old Disney fanatic tea sipping tattooist who works out of Creative Body Art in Coventry, and creates kawaii bright cute tattoos. We chatted to Holly about her love for Disney, video games and  her tattoo collection… 

holly

 

How long have you been tattooing?  I have been tattooing professionally from Creative Body Art Tattoo Studio for a year this coming April! I am so pleased with my progress over the past year, but it is still just the beginning for where my work will go.

What drew you to the tattoo world?  My first interest in tattoos was way before I can remember, I have always been very into art and appreciated body modification from a young age. I used to watch the beautiful Kat Von D, when I was 13, and tattooing and collecting a large amount of tattoos became my ultimate dream; not one that I ever thought I would get the chance to fulfil though!

cake

What did you do before? 
Before I was a tattoo artist I had a couple of retail jobs whilst studying art at college and even considered training to be a dental assistant after receiving my art qualifications but I learnt quickly that I did not suit that career. Luckily I was in the right place at the right time and slowly made my way into the industry in 2013 through a two year apprenticeship which consisted of daily tasks, such as making coffee and sterilizing equipment for artists that I was learning from.

What do you like to draw and tattoo? My most preferred style to tattoo/design is bright and beautiful coloured pieces with bold lines! It still blows me away when people see my designs on social media and ask to have them transformed into tattoos but in general I just adore tattooing all of the fabulous quirky bright ideas that people trust in me to put on their skin. I genuinely find it hard to sleep from excitement if I know I am making (for example, some of my biggest passions) a Disney, Harry Potter or Pokémon tattoo the next day! But following that, I put heart into every tattoo that I do; no matter the size or design. From the smallest dainty infinity symbol to a half sleeve of tribal if it means something to the customer then creating it personally for them means everything to me.

Not just the artistic side of the job makes it the best job in the world though; talking and laughing with my clients is wonderful, I adore hearing the stories from every walk of life and I live to see the smile when they get that first look at their finished piece!

squirtle

What inspires you? I am inspired to work hard and put everything into what I do by my tattoo family at Creative Body Art, Joanne Leslie, Mia Joyce, Dave Boyle and our talented piercer/receptionist Jessica McGuinness. We are all so different style wise but we bounce off each other and encourage each other daily. When I am trying to inspire myself to create new designs my usual set up is a cup of tea, snuggled in pyjamas with a Disney film running in the background, pens and pencils at the ready with my noble steeds (Chihuahuas) by my side!

Are there any artists you admire, do they influence your work? I admire, respect and follow as many tattoo artists from around the globe as I can but would have to say our lovely local artists at Grizzly’s and Hales St are definitely ones that I will have to mention. They warmly welcomed me into this industry and I hope to see them for more tattoos/conventions with our team at Creative Body Art in the future!

hollh

Can you tell us about your own tattoos? I collect a lot of bright and wonderful tattoos that I adore spread across my back, legs and arms! Mostly Disney, Alice in Wonderland and nature themed in a variety of styles and colours, although one exception is a black and grey portrait of my late grandad that I cherish dearly on my arm. I plan on growing my own tattoo collection as I develop more as a tattooist.