Deadpool usually likes to ruffle a few feathers by breaking the odd fourth wall here and there. From mocking Ryan Reynolds himself for starring in Green Lantern (which is fair game, to be honest), to sending up his own film because the production company couldn't afford enough X-Men, to constantly digging at his own much-maligned outing in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, you can always count on the Merc for a good laugh.
Some new fan art gives us a tantalizing glimpse at how Captain Marvel may have reacted to the news of Thanos' finger snap at the end of Avengers: Infinity War.
Just when you thought they'd stopped hiding Venom from us, here's a still of Eddie Brock straight up chillin. In what bares a striking resemblance to Todd McFarlane's approach to the new Spawn reboot, we've seen very little of the symbiote himself in the trailers so far. Sony kept Venom from us completely in the first preview, much to the chagrin of comic book fans everywhere and instead we got a whole lot of Tom Hardy, suggesting the movie should be titled Brock
With Solo: A Star Wars Story limping out of theaters like a misfiring Millennium Falcon, fans bullying The Last Jedi's Kelly Marie Tran off of social media, and everyone finally deciding to stop whining about George Lucas, it looks like Star Wars fans worldwide are set for a period of calmness and stability.
Possibly being the last person in the world to see Avengers: Infinity War, Stan Lee took to Twitter this week and in his inimitable style, reacted to that devastating ending. "Holy smoke! I go out of town for for a few days and when I get back I find out that Thanos has destroyed everything!" said the comic book legend.
Many have postulated that Hawkeye will return in his Ronin guise, provoked by the death of his wife and/or daughter at the hands of Thanos. But could he get his own movie, too?
Whatever you think about the Disney era of Star Wars, it's allowed Mark Hamill to emerge as one of the most wonderful human beings in the galaxy. When he's not making fans' days on Twitter or jumping to the defense of The Last Jedi's Kelly Marie Tran, he's taking time out to give props to his stuntman for his work on The Empire Strikes Back. As well as giving us a tasty little tidbit of trivia in the process.
Regardless of Solo: A Star Wars Story's poor performance at the box office, the contribution it makes to the Star Wars universe is considerable. From teaching us why the Millennium Falcon's navigational drive is so effective (yet kind of mouthy, too), to how A New Hope's Dr. Evazan's macabre medical procedures are used across the galaxy, the movie has plenty to offer.
Director Ron Howard has some different ideas about the fate that may have befallen L3-37 in Solo: A Star Wars Story. Could we see the droid return one day?