I love it, I love taking the piss out of people, I love people taking the piss out of me.
“There’s no greater shout-out in the world. Short of an actual cameo in Deadpool 2, Liefeld says the joke at his expense is an all-timer for him. Please share me your thoughts,’” Liefeld explains. “Ryan calls me and says, ‘Rob, we have this joke, I wanna run it by you. Liefeld also says Ryan Reynolds himself called him to pitch him the joke. “Love it!” Liefeld tells Inverse when I asked him about the feet joke. In between autograph signings at his Manhattan pop-up a week prior to the release of Deadpool 2, written by Rhett Rheese and Paul Wernick, Liefeld gushes that his billion-dollar creation dragged his artistry in front of millions. In Deadpool 2, when Domino (Zazzie Beetz) stylish shows off her mutant powers of luck, Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) yaps over the fact that it’s not a real superpower, nor very “cinematic.” That’s when Deadpool pokes fun at the power, joking that it’s some crackpot idea come up by a guy who “can’t draw feet.” Deadpool 2 referenced Liefeld’s inability to draw feet, and he isn’t living it down. It’s a running joke originating from the fact that Liefeld, recognized for his distinct, high-energy style, has found clever ways to hide feet or otherwise avoid drawing them in the majority of his covers for books like New Mutants, X-Force, and his creator-owned Youngblood at Image Comics. but didn't really start trying to draw comics until about ten years ago.
DEADPOOL DRAWING HOW TO
For two decades, comic readers have agreed on one thing: Rob Liefeld doesn’t know how to draw feet. I started drawing at an early age, the typical stick figure versions of.