Is deadpool and wolverine gay

Deadpool & Wolverine spoilers follow.

Ahead of Wade Wilson's restore to the big screen, various promos suggested that Deadpool & Wolverine was going to save the MCU, that the Merc with a Mouth is in fact "Marvel Jesus".

All the data suggests that this might actually rotate out to be accurate, financially speaking, but Wade also embodies Jesus in a surprisingly chaste, nigh-on celibate way, despite what the marketing might own you believe.

Based off the posters alone, you might assume that Deadpool and Wolverine are in evidence extremely gay for each other. Or at least, Deadpool is extremely same-sex attracted for Wolverine.

The very first poster put the pair's masks together in a broken heart necklace with the caption "Come together", followed by another where Deadpool caressed Wolverine's claws in a riff on material from 2017's Logan.

Then there's the Wolverine popcorn bucket which Deadpool also caressed in a promo where hot liquid butter oozed and drizzled all over the giant opening where his mouth should be.

It was giving OnlyFans in Marvel form – a "Multiverse of Man-Juice", if you will – but there's a problem.

Both Wade and

Deadpool & Wolverine's 'constant gay jokes' leaves Marvel fans completely divided

The internet has been left divided over the 'constant gay jokes' in Deadpool & Wolverine - with some people branding them as 'relentless and annoying' and others coming to the Marvel film's defense.

Deadpool & Wolverine slap theaters on Friday, and the superhero movie raked in a whopping $211 million at the box office in its first weekend.

But viewers seemed divided over the flick on social media, particularly with the amount of quips that Ryan Reynold's character Deadpool made about wanting to get intimate with Hugh Jackman's character Wolverine.

Immediately, X, formerly Twitter, became flooded with posts about the topic, and some people slammed the continued gags regarding Deadpool and Wolverine's sexualities.

'POV: you're watching Deadpool & Wolverine and they construct another unfunny male lover joke,' one person wrote alongside a GIF that showed someone looking unamused in a show theater. 

The internet is divided over the 'constant gay jokes' in Deadpool & Wolverine - with some people branding them as 'relentless and annoying' and others coming to the film's defense

The

While we were told this night would never come, Hugh Jackman is sticking on his utmost spandex and suiting up (supposedly) one last time to act the iconic character of Logan/ Wolverine. Ryan Reynolds' foul-mouthed Merc with a Mouth joins forces with arguably the most notable member of Charles Xavier’s gifted youngsters, as Deadpool & Wolverine hopes to claw its way to the top of the box office for this X-rated (well, R-rated) X-Men movie.

Disney has gone hard on marketing Deadpool & Wolverine as the ultimate bromance, but for some, the constant jokes that the pair are “gay” for each other have fallen flat.

As the typically vocal minority claims that “woke” Disney is ruining these testosterone-pumped heroes, it seems they’ve forgotten that the clawed Canadian and DP hooking up on the silver screen wouldn’t be that unusual at all. In fact, both “bros” have a rich and colourful LGBTQ+ history on the pages of Marvel comics.

Deadpool’s sexuality is fairly well-known, with co-creator Fabian Nicieza never being shy about Deadpool's pansexuality. In 2015. Nicieza said he’s tired of being “dogged” by these questions for years but reiterated.

“It is a bit tiring

Guardian Writer Thinks Deadpool & Wolverine Isn’t Gay Enough

When you saw Deadpool & Wolverine this weekend (if you did, but based on the money this movie made, it’s a fair assumption that you did), did you wish it had more same-sex attracted stuff in it? Yeah, I didn’t think so, but a writer for the British newspaper The Guardian did. This fellow has a whole article about why the titular heroes should possess been decidedly queer, or pansexual, or whichever flavor they’re supposed to fit into. He’s specifically mad about Deadpool, who is pansexual in the comics according to co-creator Fabien Nicieza, constantly being portrayed as too straight, with the gay elements acting as jokes instead of thoughtful introspective drama. It’s about as ridiculous as you believe it is, replete with accusations of kids on the playground being homophobic and the declaration that gay viewers will not be able to look themselves in anyone on the screen because the characters aren’t homosexual. (It also claims that Madonna’s “Like a Prayer,” which was featured heavily in the trailers, is a gay tune. Is that right? I’m always behind on these things.)

And, whatever; there are always articles lik