Deadpool Bunny’s voice is pure Ryan Reynolds—no surprise there! It’s hilarious how he commits to the bit, even for a minor role. The self-referential humor is spot-on, and it’s those little touches that make the character so iconic. I can’t imagine anyone else pulling it off with the same mix of chaos and charm.
Deadpool Bunny’s voice in the movie is such a fun little easter egg! It’s actually Ryan Reynolds himself, which totally fits the meta humor of the whole franchise. I love how he leans into the absurdity—like, of course Deadpool would voice his own toy version. It’s the kind of fourth-wall-breaking detail that makes these movies stand out.
Honestly, I wouldn’t have expected anyone else to do it. Reynolds has this knack for balancing sarcasm and sincerity in a way that’s just perfect for the character, even when it’s a tiny plastic bunny. Makes me wonder if they improvised some of those lines on the spot—it feels that spontaneous!
Ryan Reynolds voicing Deadpool Bunny cracked me up when I first noticed it. It’s such a small detail, but it adds so much to the scene. The way he delivers those lines with the same Deadpool energy, even as a toy, is brilliant.
I rewatched that part a few times just to catch all the jokes—some are quick, almost throwaway, but they’re gold. It’s like the filmmakers knew fans would geek out over stuff like this. Makes you appreciate how much thought goes into even the silliest moments in these movies.
2026-04-18 16:15:21
1
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Bite Me, Daddy Wolf: Devil's Pet
Josephine Mbanefo
9.3
15.4K
His cum dripped down my chin, mingling with my tears, a stark reminder of his dominance, his control.
*****
I came to ruin my ex.
I never meant to kneel for his father.
I came back to ruin Caleb Vane. I had a plan that was cold, sharp, and merciless.
But then I met Malric Vane.
The man doesn’t flirt. He commands.
One glance and my legs trembled. One word and I was on my knees.
He’s the Lycan every wolf fears.
The man no one touches.
And now I wake up in his bed,
spread wide, bite-marked, and dripping for more.
He says I wasn’t born…I was made.
Made to obey.
Made to please him.
And the worst part?
He’s right.
Because every time he calls me good girl, I forget my revenge.
I just want to be ruined all over again.
Chloe wakes up after a year long coma to find her alpha mate sleeping with a woman in her very room. After running away, her plan for revenge begins. One year later, when she is ready to finally reject and release herself and her former mate from the constant pain of their betrayals, it is in the act of her final revenge that she finds her second-chance mate. Her partner starring with her in her last film is not only her second chance mate, but they both soon find that his twin brother is too
The Seventh book in the Havermouth Pack Series, The Pack's Emissary! Aislen is discovering that her allies all have their own agendas. Can she win the war, when everyone is out for their own gain? And who is the mystery enemy emissary? When her enemies are also her allies, who can she trust? The war between supernatural and human has been waged on land, between the Van Helsings and the werewolf packs, but the flooded river that began it all has brought a new player to the battlefield, and the Mer do not fight by land-rules.
Instead of drifting into the afterlife, Tyre is caught up in a magical time loop just after his death, he subsists in a plane between void and life. He must team up with other Deviants like himself as they journey through time preventing the inevitable event called;The Doomsday.
DEATH GETS A LOVE LIFE.
"I accept," I say all at once and then lower my eyes shyly. "If you think my human body can serve as a substitute for her and fill your hunger, I'm willing to take that chance."
The feeling that I recognize in his eyes is one of shock and even fear, as though he hadn't expected at all that I'd agree.
"Let's do it," I whisper across the gap between us.
****
When metalhead Janet Buenviaje dies in a diving accident, she falls into an underworld prison where the only way out is through an eccentric reaper named Septimus Rex. As monarch of Soul City, Septimus Rex leads an army of supernatural Ravens tasked with the deportation of overstaying souls from the mortal realm.
But the fates smile on Janet because the head reaper has problems of his own. He has fallen in love with a mortal girl; an abhorrent sign of weakness that, if discovered by the Ravens, will start a power struggle in Hell. With Janet's help, Septimus must now attempt to confess his feelings to the girl of his dreams so he can go back to being devoid of human sentiment.
Janet is reincarnated as a Wampus Cat reaper and hatches an escape plan to the surface world. But she finds that things in the underworld are not what they seem and Septimus's problems run deeper, somehow even linked to her own mysterious past.
Barbara Neil Aryan never planned to become a killer. But after discovering her boyfriend’s betrayal with her best friend, a thirst for vengeance and a mental illness leaves her with no choice. Desperate to escape incarceration, she stumbles into the dark underworld, where she is promised a chance to reinvent herself and clear her name, but Barbie gets sucked further into the underworld, where she is reborn as the “Black Widow,” an assassin with an unmatchable kill record and a deadly reputation. Even though it is not the life she imagined for herself, she embraces it, until her broken world shatters once again when she’s assigned an impossible target: Xavier Knight. He’s cunning, he’s lethal...and something she never expected—a werewolf. But those creatures aren’t real, right? Xavier is everything Barbara despises—arrogant, magnetic, and maddeningly charming, but as he draws her into his world, Barbara discovers more than just a target. For the first time in her life, she’s faced with a man who might actually mend her fractured heart and restore her hope in men. Now, Barbara stands on the edge of two paths: abandoning her deadly past or embracing an unknown future in Xavier’s arms. But when vengeance is all you know, can you really surrender to love?
Deadpool Bunny is this hilarious mashup of Deadpool’s signature chaotic energy and an adorable bunny aesthetic—imagine a fluffy white rabbit with Deadpool’s iconic red and black suit, complete with the mask’s expressive white eyes and that cheeky grin. The ears are usually depicted as poking through the mask or replaced with tiny red and black bunny ears. Sometimes artists give it tiny katanas or a mini chimichanga for extra absurdity. It’s the kind of design that makes you snort-laugh because it shouldn’t work, but it totally does.
I love how fan art leans into the absurdity—some versions make it hyper-cute, like a Sanrio character gone rogue, while others amp up the Merc-with-a-Mouth vibe, adding scars or battle damage to the fur. There’s even merch out there with Deadpool Bunny holding a carrot like it’s a weapon. It’s a perfect example of how fandom can take something edgy and soften it without losing the essence. Every time I see a new interpretation, it feels like a love letter to both Deadpool’s irreverence and the internet’s obsession with cute animals in ridiculous scenarios.
The moment I heard Hugh Jackman was suiting up as Wolverine again for 'Deadpool & Wolverine', I nearly lost my mind. This guy is Logan for an entire generation—those claws, that gruff voice, the way he chews scenery like it’s adamantium-coated beef jerky. Jackman’s been playing the role since 2000’s 'X-Men', and even after his emotional send-off in 'Logan', he couldn’t resist teaming up with Ryan Reynolds’ Deadpool for what’s basically a multiversal playground. The chemistry between them in the trailers alone is golden—Reynolds’ chaos energy bouncing off Jackman’s world-weary mutant is everything I didn’t know I needed.
What’s wild is how Jackman’s return twists the timeline. 'Logan' was such a perfect ending, but this feels like a victory lap where the rules don’t matter. The yellow suit’s back, the fourth-wall breaks are cranked to 11, and honestly? I’m here for it. Superhero fatigue’s real, but seeing these two revel in the absurdity might just be the antidote.