In the opening of Once Upon a Deadpool, we find the mercenary known as Deadpool in fine form, narrating his own twisted tale. He frames the story as a bedtime read-aloud to Fred Savage, adopting the trope of “grandpa telling a story” in homage to The Princess Bride. This conceit instantly sets a tone of playful irreverence: Deadpool is telling the story of Deadpool 2 but with a PG-13 twist, cutting down gore and language and adding new footage. The result is a meta remix of the original that both pokes fun at itself and attempts to broaden its audience.
The core narrative remains that of Deadpool trying to undo a tragic event from his past by teaming up with Cable, engaging in high-stakes antics and emotional revelations. What Once Upon a Deadpool adds is the framing device and some fresh scenes (featuring Fred Savage) that highlight the absurdity of the merc with a mouth retelling his own story in a kinder, gentler format — while still being cheekily subversive. In this way the film balances the original’s brutality with a tongue-in-cheek softer outer layer.

Visually and thematically, the film plays with contrast: the violence and swagger of Deadpool’s world clashing with the cosy storytelling setup. The bed-time story framing helps underscore a tension between the childhood mythic tone (princesses, giants, quests) and the adult world of vengeance, regret and redemption. Scenes of mayhem, high-octane action and dark humour are present, yet the PG-13 restructure means some edge is softened — creating an interesting hybrid of “grown-up comic book chaos” and “family friendly holiday viewing”.
The character development is notable despite the comedic packaging. Deadpool’s journey here is less about simply cracking wise or blowing things up and more about confronting loss and the cost of being a hero (or anti-hero). His relationship with these other characters, especially the daughter figure from Deadpool 2, gains a new dimension when filtered through this revised version. The film thus qualifies as both a remix and a reinterpretation: it asks whether the dude who jokes his way through mayhem can also find something like peace.

In the end, Once Upon a Deadpool offers a unique viewing experience: part re-cut of existing story, part meta commentary, and part holiday-themed oddity. It reminds us that even the loudest, most chaotic heroes can benefit from a gentle framing device — that the story can be told differently and still resonate. While purists may prefer the raw original, this version invites a broader audience and offers enough wink-and-nod self-awareness to be entertaining in its own right.





