By Huw Fullerton

Published: Sunday, 27 March 2022 at 12:00 am


Welcome to the Gunn show.

After a tricky period in late 2018/early 2019, writer and director James Gunn (55) is in a bit of a purple patch. Shortly after making The Suicide Squad for Warner Bros in 2021, his spin-off series Peacemaker (written on a whim in lockdown) has broken records for streaming service HBO Max, and is set to be followed by more DC TV projects.

Meanwhile, he’s shooting a long-awaited return for Marvel heroes The Guardians of the Galaxy in the form of a Star Wars-style Holiday Special, with work on Volume Three (the conclusion of the trilogy he started in 2014) set to continue soon after. Add other writing and producing gigs including Coyote vs Acme, Thor: Love and Thunder and the I Am Groot animated series, and Gunn’s dance card is looking pretty full.

“I’m busy, frankly. A little more busy than I wish I was,” Gunn tells RadioTimes.com over Zoom in a break from Guardians filming. “Things are insane right now.”

So he’s happy to take some time away to talk about Peacemaker, which finally makes its UK TV debut over two months after it started in the States. Suffice to say, Gunn wasn’t thrilled with the delay, noting that he’d been “frustrated” by various legal issues that stopped the show from being shown simultaneously around the world.

“That unfortunately didn’t work out, and it’s nobody’s real fault. There’s a bunch of legal weirdness with all this stuff,” he says. “But I’m just really happy that at least it’s there right now.”

And in any case, Peacemaker is worth the wait. Starring John Cena as the titular antihero, prepared to murder anyone for the vague goal of “peace at any cost,” the adult-themed series is an engaging, funny and surprisingly emotional production. It easily answers any doubters who might have wondered why of all the colourful characters in The Suicide Squad, the antagonistic Peacemaker was the one Gunn wanted to spend more time with.

“John Cena and I had talked so much about the character: how he felt; what his emotional reality was,” Gunn tells us. “He’s this awkward guy who just can’t let friendship in, and is always insecure. And yet he’s so boisterous, and he brags about himself so much.

“There isn’t a bragger that isn’t insecure, because the reason to be a bragger is to convince yourself and other people that you’re worth a sh** when you’re not, when you don’t feel you are.

“So I just thought there was a lot of depth to the character that we didn’t get to see. There’s a lot of story to who he is, and where he came from, that we didn’t get to see in The Suicide Squad. We saw a lot more of [Idris Elba’s] Bloodsport and [Daniela Melchior’s] Ratcatcher. I just felt he had the most gold to mine, at least at this point in time.”

In the series, Peacemaker is forced to confront his traumatic childhood (thanks to his father, played by a venom-spitting Robert Patrick) and work with a team to take down an alien invasion, opening himself up to help in a way he’s not used to. And clearly, Gunn’s instincts were right – the series has struck a chord with fans, with the finale setting a record for single-day HBO Max viewing figures after increasing its viewership every week.

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James Gunn and John Cena as Peacemaker
Getty Images / Kevin Winter

In other words, it seems like Peacemaker has been something of a word-of-mouth hit, surprising everyone (including Gunn) with the level of interest in it – especially considering the film it sprang from only raised mediocre returns at the box office last year.

“I’m totally blown away. Blown away,” Gunn says. “Because to me, I just wrote this thing during COVID that was the most creatively free I’ve been since I was a child, if not ever. And then people have really grasped onto it. That’s an incredibly moving thing as a creator, to see that happening.

“I love in television that you can really get into the nuances of the relationships with the characters in a way that you can’t with a film. It’d be very, very difficult to have a relationship like Peacemaker has with Harcourt or Economos, for example, because they’re very nuanced relationships.

“And to be able to tell that story, and get into the weeds with that, and investigate that, is something you can do with television, whereas plot is king in a movie. You have to keep moving, moving, moving, moving, moving.”

He adds: “One of the other reasons I wanted to do Peacemaker was because we had to cut so much of John’s funny stuff in the movie, simply because it’s not the nature of a movie. So, yeah, I love that part of television. I’m really drawn to it, and it excites me more than films in a lot of ways right now.”

Given Peacemaker’s success a quick second season commission wasn’t a big surprise, with Gunn promising “tonnes” of new ideas and “secrets to come” – just as soon as he gets around to it. Because unfortunately for Peacemaker fans, Gunn is becoming a bit of a victim of his own success, booked up to his eyeballs and with little free time in the foreseeable future.

At time of writing he’s deep into production on the Guardians Holiday special, where he’s entertained fans with a running Twitter commentary on the strange Rick & Morty merchandise someone has planted on the set.

Day 21 (we’ve been shooting the Holiday special the last few days). Kirkland Mr. Meeseeks is here. No new clues about the perpetrator. #rickandmorty #gotgvol3 pic.twitter.com/0Fp6hrkQo6

— James Gunn (@JamesGunn) March 16, 2022