It’s a miracle that Ryan Reynolds’ pitch-perfect portrayal of the character, a sharp script, and inventive direction, it became one of the most popular superhero films in recent memory. Here are 10 Superhero Comedies To Watch If You Like Deadpool.

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Shazam!

Shazam Movie Worried Face

As far removed from the gloomy tone of other DCEU movies as possible, Shazam! emerged earlier this year as a delightful surprise. Having been underserved by Marvel for years, Zachary Levi shines as a superhero controlled by a teenager. David F. Sandberg, the man behind the terrifying horror movie Lights Out, unexpectedly turned out to be the perfect choice for this superpowered pastiche of Big. With Shazam! and Joker, DC seems to be experimenting with wildly outlandish ideas and new styles of comic book movies, knocking it out of the park every time. Hopefully that winning streak will continue.

Spider-Man: Homecoming

Tom Holland in Spider-Man: Homecoming

Instead leaning into the heavy emotional side of Peter Parker (grieving nephew, economically disadvantaged working-class hero etc.), Jon Watts’ initial Spider-Man MCU solo movie, Spider-Man: Homecoming, plays like a John Hughes-era high school comedy, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

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Spider-Man: Homecoming has more sight gags than set pieces, which was a refreshing change of pace for the MCU. Spidey’s MCU outings don’t have the depth of the Sam Raimi-helmed trilogy, but the character is as relatable as ever and Tom Holland captures the spirit of both Peter Parker and Spider-Man better than Tobey Maguire or Andrew Garfield ever did.

Super

An image of the Crimson Bolt (Rainn Wilson) looking sad in Super

Before he turned an obscure Marvel title about a talking tree and a gun-toting raccoon into an internationally beloved franchise, James Gunn directed this intimate pitch-black comedy about the reality of superheroes. Gunn reasons that if an ordinary guy actually did start putting on a colorful costume and beating up criminals, he wouldn’t be celebrated. When a gangster kidnaps his wife, mild-mannered Frank Darbo (Rainn Wilson, a.k.a. Dwight from The Office) dons a red suit and starts beating up criminals with a wrench under the name “the Crimson Bolt.” Naturally, society views him as a violent psychopath. He recruits the always-excellent Ellen Page as his sidekick, Boltie.

Ant-Man

Ant-Man

The MCU had never done a full-on comedy before the comedic chops to carry a different kind of MCU solo movie. Outside of the emotional finale, there isn’t a single scene in Ant-Man that isn’t played for laughs. Even the character development is undercut with a punchline. But when Paul Rudd’s delivering that punchline, you don’t mind.

The Incredibles

Mrs. Incredible stretches in Incredibles 2

As with most of Pixar’s movies, The Incredibles has lovable characters (and real care for them), laugh-out-loud moments, and a lot of heart. Brad Bird conceived the movie as the story of a regular family that happens to have superpowers, and it’s set in a Watchmen-like world where superheroes have been around for years, but they’ve been declared illegal, so the family is in hiding. The Incredibles is both a loving homage and biting critique of its genre. It got a belated sequel last year, but while it was far from terrible, it failed to capture the unmistakable magic of the original film.

Kick-Ass

Hit-Girl (Chloe Moretz) fights Frank D'Amico (Mark Strong) in Kick-Ass (2010)

Adapted from the brilliant Mark Millar comic of the same name, Matthew Vaughn’s his C-bomb-dropping 13-year-old daughter, Hit-Girl. Kick-Ass is the Scream of superhero movies — it works well as both a superhero movie and as a deconstruction of superhero movies set in a world where the characters are aware of superhero comics.

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

Spider-Verse's Different Spider-Men

At its core, the beautifully animated Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is the story of Miles Morales learning to accept himself as the new Spider-Man. In his universe, Peter Parker has been killed and there’s a Spidey-shaped hole in New York’s public consciousness that, having been bitten by a radioactive spider and given superpowers, he feels the need to fill. He has to become worthy of taking Spider-Man’s place. And that provides the film with an emotional heartbeat. But there’s also a lot of metacommentary on the Spider-Man mythology, as a twentysomething Peter has released a Christmas album and other equally tacky merchandise in Miles’ world.

Guardians of the Galaxy

An image of the Guardians of the Galaxy in an elevator during the prison break.

James Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy, the greatest defense against older filmmakers’ concerns that Marvel movies are “not cinema,” was the first overtly comedic movie in the MCU, and it ended up changing the franchise forever. Guardians can claim almost as much influence on the style and tone of the MCU as Joss Whedon’s The Avengers.

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The film is about a group of intergalactic assassins and thieves who are called “a bunch of A-holes” in an early scene, and have to learn to work together to save the galaxy from a hitherto-unheard-of cosmic threat. With hilarious yet sweet performances from a well-matched ensemble and an awesome late ‘60s/early ‘70s soundtrack, Guardians of the Galaxy is a fantastic movie.

The LEGO Batman Movie

The LEGO Batman Movie

Will Arnett’s hilarious, growling satire of the Dark Knight, as seen in The LEGO Movie, was quickly given his own movie, The LEGO Batman Movie, when Warner Bros. realized how popular he was. Director Chris McKay designed this movie, from the ground up, to be a deconstruction of the entire Batman mythos, including past film adaptations. Buried underneath all the metacommentary and franchise-crossing intellectual properties, there’s actually a quintessential Batman story being told in The LEGO Batman Movie, in which a grieving Bruce Wayne learns to let people in again, eventually finding a new family in Robin, Batgirl, and Alfred.

Thor: Ragnarok

Chris Hemsworth as Thor and Tom Hiddleston as Loki in Thor Ragnarok

Although it was his favorite movie in the MCU so far.

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