Ryan Reynolds Reveals Secrets Behind ‘Deadpool’, and Why ‘The Green Lantern’ was a Failure
Ryan Reynolds’ career is about to make a comeback. After several big-budge bombs like The Green Lantern and R.I.P.D., the 38-year old actor has several new movies on the way. His latest production Mississippi Grind was a major hit during the Sundance Film Festival, and he has a new comedy called The Voices coming out on Friday. But, the biggest movie for Reynolds’ is the upcoming X-Men spinoff, Deadpool.
During an interview with Yahoo! Movies, the actor revealed why The Green Lantern was such a failure and provides some interesting acting advice for aspiring actors. Ultimately, Ryan Reynolds explains that you should make sure you read the script for a movie before you agree to doing a role.
When we shot Green Lantern, nobody auditioning for the role of Green Lantern was given the opportunity to read the script, because the script didn’t exist. I’m not complaining about it — it was an opportunity of a lifetime, and if I were to go back and retrace my steps, I would probably do everything the exact same way. But script, that’s what’s different on this one.
Reynolds also revealed that leaking the Deadpool script and footage actually put pressure on the movie studios to make the X-Men spinoff.
Comic-book fans wanted a Deadpool spinoff for years, but it seemed like it was a dead proposition. How did the project suddenly get on the fast track to production?
Leaked test footage. Exclusively the leaked test footage, 100 percent.Who leaked it?
I would have, if I had known it would have caused that! Honestly, we all thought Tim Miller, the director, had leaked it. But I have since investigated that enough, in quiet moments when he was beyond the point of being penalized by anybody, and he said that he really didn’t do it. The initial [leak] came from Fox they think — someone recorded the footage on their iPhone and then released it. And then once that happened, somebody hacked into Blurred Studios and got the original footage in high-res and put it online.So when you saw it online were you nervous? Excited?
I was excited, because you can look back at an email chain from all of us, the core group involved in Deadpool, saying “We should leak this, f—-,” like three years ago. Saying, “Hey, if this thing is going to stagnate, one of us should just say ‘Whoops, I slipped it online by accident.’” And nobody seemed to want to nut up and do that, myself included. Someone did it for us, years later, when we all completely assumed it was dead in the water.Now, we get to make the movie. We don’t get to make it with the budget of most superhero movies, but we get to make it the way we want to make it, so that’s even more exciting than having a catered lunch.
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