In the epic origin story THE LEGEND OF HERCULES, Kellan Lutz stars as the mythical Greek hero – the son of Zeus, a half-god, half-man blessed with extraordinary strength. Recently, WAMG sat down with Lutz in a roundtable discussion about the film, keeping in shape, and yes kids… he does mention TWILIGHT. Check it out below.
Betrayed by his stepfather, the
King, and exiled and sold into slavery because of a forbidden love,
Hercules must use his formidable powers to fight his way back to his
rightful kingdom. Through harrowing battles and gladiator-arena death
matches, Hercules embarks on a legendary odyssey to overthrow the King
and restore peace to the land.
Are you losing your voice from talking so much?
KL: No.
I did four days – 2 full days of the movie that you guys saw – of ADR,
because we’re on horses, leading a fight in the rain, so the sound
quality wasn’t good. So, I had to re-do the whole movie, and then, of
course, the battle screams – you’re just, like, gone.
So, let me just remind you that after IMMORTALS I told you that you would be resurrected, and be immortal again.
KL: And look, here I am as another god.
See, I told you.
KL: I want to do a sequel to that movie, though. I loved working with that cast.
You
go from one god, to being another god, and you’re an Expendable in
between. Have you been able to distinguish all of the scars and injuries
yet on your body?
KL: I
do. I do. They are my tattoos. I have no tattoos. I view my scars as my
memories. I’m not a journalist, but my body tells a story. As people
ask “Where is that from?”, there is a good story with it. So, yes. I can
distinguish my scars from what project.
KL: Uh…
[Laughs] You had to go there. [Laughs] Riding a horse, you get a lot of
chaffing, which I learned, and it’s not quite fun when you’re wearing a
skirt, and you don’t have jeans on. So, I have, on my ass, two lines of
scars [laughs] that I had to put a lot of bio-oil on to heal as fast as
I could. So, there’s my most iconic scars.
Could you talk about… you have a really nice body – [laughs]
KL: Stop it… [laughs] I thought you were going to say boobs there for a second. “Your boobs are very nice!”
You work out a lot, so what was going through your mind, to push yourself, when you were working out for this film?
KL: Thank
you. I live an active lifestyle. I really enjoy being outdoors, and I’d
rather play basketball, or snowboard… I have fun in the gym. I get
creative. I compete against myself. Whenever it feels like work… I call
it “funning out”, not “working out”,as soon as it feels like work – I
don’t like working. That’s why I choose these projects that are fun to
me – that my heart’s invested in.
Preparing for the role of Hercules, I
always felt like… Look, as a little kid I had middle child syndrome. I
grew up on a lot of land, with a lot of farm animals, and I had a lot of
alone time. I was able to use my imagination, and create the world of
Tarzan, of He-Man, of Hercules, of Ninja Turtles. I was playing by
myself, and a lot of times my mom would come out and see the animals
with paint on them, [laughs] or things tied to them, or with crazy
spikes on them, like dinosaurs… and I’d always light fires, and I’d
always be the hero who blew the fires out. It was a lonely time that I
filled up with my fantasy world.
Hercules was always that original
hero for me, and now that I’m an actor – I never had the dream to be an
actor – I found this passion that I get to re-live, and fulfill this
childhood dream of bringing this character to the big screen. I was very
well prepared for it, because of my education, and my knowledge of
greek mythology. I had already studied a lot of it, because I enjoyed
it. I really loved ‘The Iliad’ and ‘The Odyssey’. I had read those
before they were mandatory in school. That fantasy world was just
amazing to me because they’re all myths, and much like the story of
Hercules, it’s one of the tales. There’s a plethora of tales that you
could bring to life about Hercules. That’s why every story can, and
should be different about Hercules. There’s no right or wrong answer.
That’s why if people are going to judge it, be like ”What? What? Do you
know the truth behind Hercules? Because there is none!”. It’s telephone.
It’s everyone’s hearsay. That’s the beauty of it. We can make it our
own. That’s what we did with ours, and in the preparation that I had,
and I built my own backstory, and built my own character development,
and relationships that we shared. With preparing to ride the horse, and
the sword fighting, I had Liam McIntyre, as was my brother in arms, who
played Spartacus. I love that show. To work with him, he could have
been… I knew he was a good guy because Renny had great discernment with
who to cast. Everyone that I worked with on this film was family.
Really, from day one it was very easy going. We all had the same motive,
to make the best movie possible, and it was amazing. I’m proud of
everyone’s hard work. But Liam, being the fighter that he is – I came to
him as humbly as I could, and I was like “Look. I don’t have time to
really learn. Will you help me?” and he was like “Yeah brother!”. You
know, he’s Australian, and he’s all happy… “Come here!”. We would just
battle each other, and then he taught me in the Miramont Place to just
draw eight lines, and then just stand there in front of it like and act
like I’m the bad guy. He’s like “You get the head shot. You’d get the
head shot. You’d get the body shot”… just to make it fluid. The funny
thing, also, is that he taught me what to do with my other hand. So, as
you’re stabbing people, as you’re killing people, you don’t think about
this other hand. Most of the time it looks like spirit fingers [Kellan
demonstrates and the room laughs]. You’re killing someone and you’re
like “Ahhhh!” [Wiggles fingers behind himself]. It’s not a good look,
cause you watch the playback, and you’re like “What do I do?”, so we
would break off – we had a little piece of metal that we would hold in
our hands like that [shows us a clenched fist, as if holding on to
something], cause it’s kind of hard to remember to hold your hand like
that, because it happens, and your body just naturally swings, and your
hand turns up… but if you are holding on to something that no one else
can see, then you get these strong strikes. That was a really great
secret. He really helped make me Hercules, but to answer your question I
was very well prepared. I didn’t feel any pressure. I was living my
childhood dream. I fully embraced it.
This
is the most diverse, physically, that you’ve done in terms of the
disciplines, with the battle sequences and the horse riding. How much
did you work with your stunt coordinator, with Raleigh (?) in terms of
training for the individual disciplines?
KL: God,
that man… he’s like Indiana Jones. He’s our main stunt coordinator, and
just such a great lad. You can either have a stunt coordinator who
knows his stuff, but doesn’t know how to work with actors, much like
directors, and I was blessed on this movie because Renny is such a
visually stunning director who knows how to work with actors. Raleigh is
the same way. He’s done James Bond. He’s done all of these amazing
movies. He did ALEXANDER and was telling me stories about him riding a
horse, and he lost control of the horse and had to bail, and flew right
into a tree, and how he’s like “Brother, I’ve never been more scared!”.
He, bless his heart, the rigorous hours that I had to learn how to ride a
horse, as fast as I did within the scenes… He made me feel like an
allstar! Towards the end of the movie, he was like “I don’t know how you
did it!”. He really built me up. I think that’s all it takes,
especially for, like, any father to son… It’s like if a kid falls, you
don’t go “Oh…blah, blah blah”, you don’t react, you go “It’s all right.
Get back up”. He waits for you, to see if you are being emotional.
Raleigh was just very encouraging. I get in my head a lot, because I’m a
perfectionist, and if I’m told to correct five different things at
once, then I can’t do it. But, if he encourages me… and a lot of times
I’m working out, and my body gets stiff, so I’ll do this [pretends to
ride a horse in a stiff fashion], and you really have to be loose to
grind the horse [laughs as he demonstrates], grind – shag the horse…
Raleigh just really encouraged me, and built me up by telling me “Good
job”, and making sure I was loose. Mentally, I knew that if I could
correct that one thing, then I could correct the next thing. He really
knew how to speak to me, and to actors, and the stunts that he built…
Hats off to him, because I’ll push myself, and I wanted one more take
with the horse, in that scene where we’re fighting the guys on the
horse, and he was like “No. We’re cutting it. The horse is done.” and
Ari got bucked off, and he was like “No. The horse is past his due time.
It’s bed time for him.” He’s verry wise, and of course producers are
like “Just one more?” and Raleigh’s like “No. There’s too many people
around… for the safety.” It only takes that one mishap.
How many of the stunts did you actually get to do yourself? Or did you have a stuntman do them for you?
KL: Yeah.
I had a stuntman named Danko that looked like me, and had the most
boring time on the set because I did everything. There were a few times
when, due to my rigorous schedule I had my horse rider, and Danko, who
was my fight double – I was working double units, 6 day weeks – whenever
I couldn’t work they would step in, because I was in every single shot,
which I loved. A big difference from TWILIGHT days where I wanted more,
but script wise, this was all I was doing. I love working, I love being
on set, and time goes by the fastest when you’re on set. It’s when
you’re sitting in your trailer, like on TWILIGHT, when you kind of loose
your brain sometimes. I did ninety nine percent of the stunts. I wanted
to make sure that I would, and the producers loved that I would… but
there were times when Danko would fill in when we had to catch up on a
shot, or my horse rider. There were moments when those horses – they
were finicky, and I’m such an animal lover, I didn’t want to smack them
with my sword, and get them in line. They’re beautiful animals, so he’d
get on there and do the rehearsals and get them ingrained with what they
needed to do.
Considering
you said that this was never a dream, but here you are. You’re leading
this film. Not just any old character, but Hercules, and presumably
you’ve gotten to see some of the film. What is it like for you watching,
like “That’s me playing this character”?
KL: I’ve
never felt such a sense of accomplishment. I’m so proud of the work
that I did, and for me, for the inner child that’s always in all of us,
you know, we should still stay youthful. I’m just… I’m proud. I’m just
really proud, especially because I’m drawn to this script, and what we
have. I’m a man of faith, and to be a part of a script that I got
teary-eyed reading, especially the part where Hercules is being
crucified, and reaches out for the strength of his father for strength. I
was just so connected to this movie. There’s a lot of biblical
references, that… I just felt it. I’m very proud of the hard work that
everyone put into it. Of course I want it to do well. I want it to allow
me to do the sequel, but that won’t deter the personal feeling that I
have for all of my hard work, and that’s all I can do. I give myself,
and that’s how I sleep good at night. I sleep great!
Via Gossip_Dance, wearemoviegeeks
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