close
close

How to watch Deadpool & Wolverine online streaming

How to watch Deadpool & Wolverine online streaming

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

If you have kids at home, you’ll want to throw in the parental controls. “Deadpool & Wolverine” is making its way to streaming after a stunning box office success this summer.

The R-rated Marvel sequel, starring Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman, will be available to rent or purchase on digital platforms like Prime Video and Apple TV+ on October 1. It will be released on Blu-ray/DVD in 4K on October 22.

The digital and physical versions will feature dozens of bonus features, including “Finding Madonna: Making the Oner,” in which director Shawn Levy and Reynolds dissect a historic scene; “Practical Approach: Celebrating the Art of Ray Chan,” a tribute to the longtime Marvel collaborator; “Loose Ends: The Legacy Heroes,” in which the cast and crew discuss the film’s many astonishing cameos; and, of course, a hilarious gag reel.

The Prime Video digital version will also feature exclusive features, including Deadpool artwork, pros and cons, and fact-checking. Meanwhile, the 4K UHD Blu-ray will be released in a domestic SKU and a special limited edition SteelBook®, with exclusive artwork and packaging. Fans will see a red and yellow SteelBook with two versions to choose from – one featuring Deadpool and the other Wolverine.

The highly anticipated Marvel sequel crossed $1 billion at the global box office this summer, surpassing 2019’s wildly successful “Joker.” It’s notable because it introduces comic book characters previously licensed by 20th Century Fox into Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe. Ticket sales for the film were stratospheric, as die-hard fans wanted to see the film as early as possible to avoid the plot twists, major episodes AND watch Jackman’s gruff mutant Logan come out of retirement.

In his review of the film: Diversity Film critic Peter DeBruge describes it as “a rude farewell to Fox’s X-Men films”, writing that it “tests Disney’s standards while also giving superhero fans closure to nearly a quarter-century of mixed-quality Marvel fare produced across town.”