Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Henry Cavill Was So Committed To His 'Deadpool & Wolverine' Cameo That It Made Him Physically Ill

Henry Cavill
Cindy Ord/WireImage/GettyImages

The actor, who briefly appeared in the Marvel superhero sequel as a variant of Wolverine, had to smoke a cigar in his scene—and he committed while filming to the point of sickness.

Henry Cavill was in it to win it, but winning came at a queasy cost.

The 41-year-old British actor was one of dozens of surprise cameos in Marvel's Deadpool & Wolverine, playing a variant of Wolverine.


Director Shawn Levy said in a New York Times interview published on August 5 that Cavill, who is no stranger to the superhero franchise having played Superman in the DC Extended Universe, got sick from inhaling cigar smoke all day long filming his short scene in the Deadpool threequel.

Levy was impressed at the actor's level of commitment leaning into his role as Wolverine.

The filmmaker recalled:

"I think we all were, including poor Henry Cavill, who not only had that pumped-up muscular body but kept that cigar lit and in his mouth for the entirety of the shoot day."

Levy added:

“I remember hearing the next day that Henry was sick to his stomach because he had been inhaling cigar smoke for eight hours straight, but never once did he waver.”

People were flabbergasted after checking the math.

What moviegoers may be unaware of is the fact that many scenes, regardless of their short duration in the final cut, can easily take an entire day to shoot based on the number of takes and angles required.

Setting up shots for complicated action sequences in such behemoth productions as Marvel films can also be extremely tedious and can take a long time.

Actors are expected to faithfully duplicate specified actions in every take, which in Cavill's case, included having a lit cigar in his mouth the whole time.

Cavill's scene occurs when Wade Wilson/Deadpool, played by Ryan Reynolds, briefly encounters him while zipping across the multiverse in search of an alternate universe variant of Logan—a.k.a. Wolverine—to restore his deteriorating timeline due to the death of the stabilizing "anchor being" that was Logan.

Cavill's Marvel appearance followed the end of his run playing the Man of Steel in DCEU films from 2013 to 2023 after James Gunn and Peter Safran became the new DC Studios executives.

Levy recalled the moment he learned of the announcement that 31-year-old David Corenswet would play the young Clark Kent in the upcoming Superman reboot by James Gunn.

Levy told the news outlet:

"It was not long after everything went down with DC, and word came that Henry was being replaced as Superman."
"Given that Deadpool is in constant conversation with culture, it felt like a great opportunity to first of all cast Henry Cavill in a part that he would kick ass at, but also to poke fun at that other comic-book-founded movie studio and play with some self-awareness there."

Levy said in a separate interview on the Happy Sad Confused podcast that Cavill was a "trooper" and that "He was fabulous" on set to work with.

Fans weighed in on Cavill's dedication to the small cameo.






Cigar aficionados had some thoughts.


While Cavill didn't explain his method acting where smoking cigars is concerned, he did joke on Instagram:

"To be safe, I shaved the moustache off for this one. Just the mustache."

His facial hair reference was a nod to when Warner Bros. unconvincingly removed the actor's mustache using CGI in select scenes from 2017’s Justice League, which left audiences questioning the unnatural appearance of his invisi-stache.

The exhilarating Deadpool & Wolverine sequence originally had three Wolverine variants, but "Cavillrine" was always part of the original plan, according to Shane Reid, one of the editors of the film.

Reid recalled first working on the less interesting vision for the scene:

“There was mini Wolfie, Patch, and Cavillrine, and the idea originally [was] he walks right into mini Wolfie and leaves, and then he’s into Cavillrine, and that’s kind of it."
"I think Patch was the third one. And I actually started putting that sequence together and I had a couple of different tracks on it at first and it wasn’t very appetizing."
"It was almost like, ‘What is this sequence?’ Like we’re not committing to seeing these Wolverines, but we’re kind of jumping into it.”

The roadblock came during last year's drawn-out writer's strike, followed by the SAG/AFTRA actor's strike.

Reid and fellow editor Dean Zimmerman continued editing and, at one point, pulled Levy and Reynolds—the latter of which also co-produced and co-wrote the script—aside for a convo.

Said Reid:

“Dean and I really went to Shawn and Ryan and went ‘Guys, there’s so much more we can do with this, but like we need at least three more variants to be able to sort of weave this story together and have this fun montage.’”

He continued:

“And so Shawn and Ryan, being the amazing creative partners that they are, trusted Dean and I.”
“We had a storyboard artist find us like 10 more Wolverines. We were like, ‘If we’re going to do it now, let’s go deep cut. Like if you’re playing one dude in the audience who knows that one insert on that comic, let’s do that.’ "
"And we ended up finding Old Man Logan, the crucifixion with the X was just a really cool image, and the John Byrne brown and tan, which brought out the Hulk, which we were able to do."
"So we built that with storyboards and then Ryan would record dialogue, saying like, ‘That’s going to need coconut oil’ et cetera, and we wove that together and felt good about it. ”

While the creative ideas had all been fleshed out, bringing them to life would be an entirely different process, but the strike allowed the team to reassess the production schedule moving forward.

“When we went back into production, we were able to get rid of a few things we were going to shoot that we felt like we didn’t need anymore because we’d exhausted the dailies,” said Reid, adding:

“And so we were able to fold that into production and not expand it, but get us three more to work with. And then you get that sequence.”

The final result was an exciting montage set to the tune of Huey Lewis and the News' iconic song, "The Power of Love," also selected by Reid.

“It was just in my playlist and it felt like a perfect fit as far as, you know, time travel and bringing something back that was just inherently nostalgic for everybody. But also just funny and out of left field," said Reid.

Deadpool & Wolverine is full of Easter eggs and dozens of other fun Hollywood cameos, given the flexibility of the film's reliance on the multiverse.

Much to the delight of surprised MCU fans, some actors revisited their superhero characters, including Chris Evans reprising a familiar Marvel character—but not one you'd expect, Jennifer Garner as Elektra—a role she was last seen playing in the superhero's titular movie in 2005, and Wesley Snipes, who broke two Guinness World Records with the longest career as a live-action Marvel character playing Blade.

More from Entertainment/celebrities

Screenshots of "Barbie Dream Fest"
u/hellhotelshow/Reddit

'Barbie Dream Fest' Event Goes Viral After Attendees Compare It To Disastrous Willy Wonka Experience And Fyre Fest

Few debacles have debacled quite so hard as the infamous 2017 Fyre Fest and the tragic Willy Wonka Experience in Glasgow in 2024. The "sad Oompa Loompa" alone is legendary at this point.

But those two notorious messes might have new competition: The so-called Barbie Dream Fest.

Keep ReadingShow less
Savannah Guthrie
NBC News

Savannah Guthrie's Brother Leaves Fans Stunned With His Reaction To Her Fear That She Caused Their Mom's Disappearance

On the Thursday, March 26, broadcast of the Today show, Hoda Kotb interviewed host Savannah Guthrie about her 84-year-old mother, Nancy Guthrie, who disappeared from her home in Tucson, Arizona, in the early hours of February 1, 2026.

Nancy Guthrie was last seen on the night of January 31. Surveillance footage then showed a masked individual disconnecting her home security camera around 1:47 am.

Keep ReadingShow less
Men from TMZ video; Ted Cruz in airport
TMZ; MEGA/GC/Getty Images

TMZ Is Actually Being Praised After Asking People To Send Them Photos Of Lawmakers On Vacation

TMZ has for years generated controversy and attracted derision for its story gathering tactics, but it's actually earning a little bit of goodwill after asking people to submit photos of members of Congress on vacation during Easter break as the partial government shutdown reaches historic lengths.

Last week, President Donald Trump announced that he would deploy ICE agents to U.S. airports amid a partial government shutdown that has caused exceptionally long delays at TSA lines nationwide.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Charles Barkley; Donald Trump
CBS; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Charles Barkley Sounds Off On Trump's Immigration Crackdown 'Disgrace' During March Madness Rant

Former NBA star turned sports analyst Charles Barkley condemned President Donald Trump's "disgrace" of an immigration crackdown in remarks on CBS on Sunday, lamenting the fates "amazing immigrants" who have been terrorized by the federal government.

Barkley pivoted to discussing immigration after CBS ran a feature on University of Connecticut star Alex Karaban, whose parents are immigrants from Eastern Europe.

Keep ReadingShow less
Gavin Newsom; Donald Trump
Steve Jennings/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Gavin Newsom Rips Trump After Report Reveals Massive Amount Taxpayers Have Spent For Trump To Go Golfing

President Donald Trump's trips to his golf courses have cost taxpayers a fortune in his second term, prompting California Governor Gavin Newsom to criticize him for the massive tab in a post on X.

Trump’s golf outings have cost taxpayers at least $101.2 million in travel and security expenses since he returned to office. That total is about two-thirds of what his golf trips cost during his entire first term and puts him on pace to spend roughly $300 million by the end of his second term.

Keep ReadingShow less