The grieving Thor sequence in the MCU movie nearly took up a larger portion of the film than it could have otherwise appeared due to one unutilized Deadpool & Wolverine proposal. Although Deadpool & Wolverine’s success seems all but guaranteed now that it has joined the group of MCU films that have earned over $1 billion at the box office, behind-the-scenes explanations of how the plot was developed reveal that things weren’t always as simple as they may have seemed to some. This is especially true with regard to the plot of Deadpool 3. The popularity of the film is largely due to Hugh Jackman’s comeback in a way that manages to solidify his reputation and provide justification for his return after Logan, particularly given that the Deadpool & Wolverine conclusion raises the prospect of his new version of Wolverine making an appearance in the near future. Nevertheless, Deadpool & Wolverine’s creative team has been transparent about the number of other concepts that were considered before deciding to include Logan and Wade Wilson as co-stars in the MCU timeline. As it happens, one of those concepts nearly made Thor the main attraction instead.
In order to provide interested fans a deeper look inside the process of creating its films and television series, the MCU has produced a number of Assembled documentaries over the years. Fortunately, Deadpool’s latest foray into the MCU also earned him the documentary treatment, allowing viewers to see the finer points of every component of the film that could otherwise have been kept secret from everyone save the production team. The documentary Assembled: The Making Of Deadpool & Wolverine provides a wealth of information on the development and production process that ultimately resulted in the MCU film, including the numerous difficulties and obstacles the crew encountered. The publication recounts the concepts that preceded Deadpool & Wolverine for the third Deadpool feature, even if it naturally focuses a lot on how the film’s actual plot came to be and how some of its greatest sequences were made. Executive Producer Wendy Jacobson says in this segment of Assembled: The Making Of Deadpool & Wolverine, “I was looking at material the other day while going over my notes. We came up with some wild ideas. We once discussed doing a frame-by-frame re-make of Thor 2 with Deadpool until the halfway mark, after which it would move on to another location. This adds a significant different context for the final release’s Thor: The Dark World allusion, even if it’s by no means the only more bizarre notion that was revealed to have been explored for Deadpool 3.
The “crying Thor” sequence in the finished movie is unique on several levels since it was known that the process of making Deadpool & Wolverine finally involved at least some time spent debating the possibility of replicating Thor 2 frame-for-frame. Early in the narrative, a bewildered Wade, who is frantically trying to figure out what was going on, keeps bringing up the scene, which is based on an actual scene from Thor: The Dark World in which the God of Thunder is holding a seemingly dying Loki and substitutes Ryan Reynolds’ Deadpool for Loki. When viewed out of context, Deadpool’s worries about meeting Thor and why Thor was crying while holding his possibly dying body are just more of the movie’s recurring jokes, similar to Deadpool’s animosity toward Nicepool or Wade and Logan’s use of the phrase “an educated wish” during the episode. Even though it wasn’t the concept that ultimately became the multiverse-traveling story’s main emphasis, the scene also appears to allude to a full-length film concept that was at least considered for Deadpool 3 after Assembled: The Making Of Deadpool & Wolverine. In a similar vein, this appears to be a means of sustaining the desire to link the tales of Deadpool and Thor, giving the release that introduced the Merc With a Mouth into the MCU a more concrete connection to the main world. The fact that Wade meets Happy Hogan instead of any of the other main superheroes in the franchise and that Deadpool and Wolverine spend a lot of time working on the edges of the main on-screen Marvel universe—through ideas like The Void and the Time Variance Authority—helps to hint at the possibility that Wade will eventually be able to work with characters like Chris Hemsworth’s hero.
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