ON GUARD! THE GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY
IN SINGAPORE
By Jedd Jong for F*** Magazine
11/7/14
Photos by Tedd and Jedd Jong
Here in Singapore, we’re hooked on a feeling and high
on believing after director James Gunn and stars Zoe Saldana and Dave Bautista
journeyed from the furthest reaches of the cosmos to our sunny shores. The Guardians of the Galaxy Southeast
Asia press conference was held on Thursday, 10 July at the Marina Bay Sands
convention centre. Before that, we were treated to a tantalising 17 minute
preview of the film in IMAX 3D. The sequence showcased the titular team after
they had just been formed and flung into a space prison called The Kyln. Packed
with humour, action and attitude, it was an exciting way to whet the appetite
for what Marvel Studios head honcho Kevin Feige has called “the riskiest movie
I have made since Iron Man.”
The titular team consists of a thief, an assassin,
two thugs and a blade-wielding psycho. “I’m going to be arrested for inviting
such company to peaceful Singapore,” host Glenn Ong remarked. Gunn, Saldana and
Bautista took to the stage at the press conference to the strains of Blue Swede’s
Hooked on a Feeling, one of the songs on Star-Lord’s “awesome mix tape”.
Right off the bat, director Gunn took charge, opening
with “look how pretty Zoe Saldana looks…and look how pretty Dave Bautista looks
too!” The director, known for his background in edgy, low-budget cult horror
flicks, let his eccentric side show when he commented that Marc Quinn’s giant
baby sculpture, residing in the Gardens by the Bay, as his “favourite thing
I’ve ever seen in [his] entire life”. When asked about the humorous tone of the
film, Gunn said “I think that really Guardians
of the Galaxy is about characters. I think that these characters are in and
of themselves funny, so it wasn’t so much a matter of me trying to pack in the
comedy, it was just letting these characters and these actors here fully
express themselves so that the humour was able to come out in a natural way.”
When Ong reminded all present not to broach personal
questions, Gunn sportingly leapt in with “You can ask personal questions of me – ask
about my personal life, my love life, my cat, I’m an open book, ask away! I’ll
give you all the gory details,” to uproarious laughter.
Turning to pro wrestler-turned-actor Dave Bautista,
Ong jokingly said to the 1.98 m tall man, “thank you so much for increasing the
average height of people in Singapore, for this week at least”.
Bautista said he still finds his fame and recognition
“weird”. “I don’t know man, I think inside I feel like such a normal guy and also
somewhat of an introvert too,” he said softly.
“Yes, he’s very shy,” co-star Saldana confirmed.
Commenting on playing a physical brute, Bautista
observed “that’s always been the easy part for me. I’m a physical guy, working
out is kind of my thing, it’s my release and my therapy, so physically it
wasn’t as tough as it was as just stretching myself as an actor. It’s all kind
of new to me, it’s such a large role, stepping on stage with some of the best
and most talented people in the world, actors and directors, it was
challenging.”
Elaborating on the character of Drax, Bautista said
“he’s always described as this warrior who’s hell-bent on rage, I always say
‘no, at the core of Drax, Drax is heartbroken over the murder of his family and
he’s just this very vulnerable guy.’ Very literal, and there’s that insane
side, that sociopath side – I don’t think Drax knows it’s wrong to kill
people,” he laughed. “Actually, he’s got a heart that’s bigger than his brain,
he’s a very noble character and his core is his heart.”
It became very clear that Bautista was a surprisingly
sweet, shy person behind his musclebound exterior. When a reporter asked if he
shed a few tears upon receiving the news that he would play Drax, Bautista
replied “It was true. I literally broke down, it wasn’t a few tears! I was
driving…I literally just broke down, I drove home, I was a mess…It was a big
deal to me, I can never explain how big it was to me, it was a life-changing moment.”
He confessed that the transition from wrestling to acting was far from an easy
one. "My first acting gig, I did as a favour for a friend and I realised two
things: one of was how hard it was and two was that I loved it, I wanted to
pursue it. There’s just not a lot of similarities, the only similarity is that
cameras are pointed at you and that’s all it is. Wrestling is so broad, so
conversational and acting is so much more intimate and intimidating!”
He continued, “It was hard for me to leave behind
wrestling, and I worked and struggle, worked and struggled and auditioned I
finally got the dream role of a lifetime, it was like make or break, I pretty
lost everything I gained while wrestling, I lost it all because I took a chance
on myself because I was passionate to pursue it. So it was worth a few tears, I
broke down. It meant that much to me.”
Gunn was moved by Bautista’s earnestness. “From the
beginning, sometimes you meet actors that you really like as people and you
really want to get them the role but they aren’t right for the role, you give
the role to the person who deserves the role and from the moment I met Dave, he
and I have a sort of connection. Within minutes of talking, I kind of liked
Dave and I liked him so much as a person that I was rooting for him to come
through, through a series of screen tests and a lot of different things he had
to go through to try and get the role, and when he proved himself to be by far,
the only person we ever thought of for the role was Dave Bautista despite some
stuff that the press might have said, Dave was the only person we offered the
role to because he was the best. Dave actually was that good, it was touching
for me and I say this of all the cast: they’re people whom I really like as
people, but they’re also the best people for the role.”
Zoe Saldana said she had stayed up all night to watch
the World Cup semi-finals game and was overjoyed that Argentina emerged
victorious. In spite of this, she looked alert and radiant. Even though she was
contacted directly by Gunn for the part instead of having to go through
multiple auditions, she still found it a nerve-wracking experience. “The first
thing you feel is flattered, super-blessed, your ego gets a little peaked a
lot, but the second thought is absolute panic because if you say ‘yes’, there’s
a lot of expectations lying on your shoulders because work that you’ve done
before has [been] brought [to] the attention of this awesome director and he’s
relying on you delivering what he’s seen you deliver before, which he thought
was so cool.”
Saldana was hesitant given the demanding nature of the
role, but decided to leap right into it. “ I was a little nervous when they
said yes, and then they told me about the 5.5 hours of makeup every day, and
then they told me about the shooting it for five months and we were going to be
shooting it for six day weeks, and there was going to be a lot of action and
fighting and rehearsals and then I said ‘okay, yes’. I kind of went ‘okay, I’ll
do it, I’ll do it!’ because I didn’t want to realise what I was getting myself
into but it ended up being a great experience, because it had everything that I
grew up wanting movies to have: it had action, it had comedy, it had a lot of
imagination and the story was really complete and all the characters had such a
beautiful journey from beginning to the end individually, but also as a
collective, and I thought ‘this is a great ensemble picture to be part of’.”
On being the only female member of the Guardians,
Saldana said “It feels great, it’s empowering because I know that it delivers a
very strong message to young women that besides being beautiful and delicate
flowers, that you can also channel your strength and not be afraid of it. It’s
very rewarding when you know you can climb a tree, or you can grab a weapon,
even though we’re in the world of make-believe, you can see yourself kind of
doing all these things and you feel very empowered.” She was grateful that she
was not alone – Gamora has a fearsome adopted sister whom she clashes with. “I’m
actually very happy to say that I’m not the only female in this cast and Karen
Gillan, who plays Nebula, did an amazing job and it’s really great to know that
I was sharing screen time with not only amazing male actors, but also with
another female actress because sometimes being the only female actress can be a
little lonely.”
Gunn chimed in with “Karen and Zoe were a lot of fun
to watch on set because they had a huge fight scene, with these two
super-powered females fighting each other, and it was like two female Clint
Eastwoods battling it out and duelling and all of a sudden I would yell ‘cut!’
and they would go ‘tee-hee hee hee! Hee hee hee hee!’”
Gunn was given the job of taking the wild and
woolly Guardians and making them movie stars to stand alongside their
better-known Marvel counterparts. “I feel like because Guardians of the Galaxy in the comics, they are not quite as
well-known as say Captain America, Iron Man or the Avengers, I felt like that gave us a lot of freedom to really
create the cinematic version of Guardians
of the Galaxy. And I think that Guardians
of the Galaxy is more at home on screen than in the comic books, and it is
first and foremost a cinematic property, so I felt like it really gave me a lot
of freedom to do something interesting with it and create loveable characters.”
Ong did a double take. “Did you just say ‘loveable’?”
“Yeah, they’re ‘a bunch of a-holes’ but they’re still
loveable characters, even Drax!” Gunn affirmed.
Marvel movie fans have wanted to know the extent of Avengers director Joss Whedon’s
involvement with Guardians, and Gunn confirmed “Joss and I have been friends
for a long time, he read the script and gave me notes on the script, and the
biggest note he gave was to make it ‘more James Gunn’. And I said ‘it’s your
funeral’.” The character of Thanos, who first appeared in the mid-credits
stinger scene in The Avengers and who
is a major player in Guardians (played by Josh Brolin) is a figure who will
link the earth-based Marvel movies and the “Marvel Cosmic” ones. “I pretty much
had free rein and it wasn’t so much about making this movie lead somewhere but
it was about creating a great foundation so that it could lead somewhere, you don’t want to just have ‘fill in the dots’, we
want to create something that has substance that we can believe in it, that’s
really exciting and real and true. Then it gives a lot of the fans some of the
answers [that] we leave unanswered so that there are places to go, for the
Guardians to go in future,” said Gunn.
Gunn maintained that he was given a satisfactory
degree of freedom from the Marvel Studios higher-ups. “I pretty much do what I
believe [in] and I don’t approach a small movie like Slither or Super any
differently than I approach a big movie like Guardians of the Galaxy. I do everything I can with my heart, as
true as I possibly can, and I’ve been very fortunate in my career thus far to
have producers like [at] Marvel to let me have free rein and do something
really creative and excellent even though it’s for such a large budget.”
Guardians
is really about a group of outcasts, a group of people who feel like they don’t
belong, coming together, finding something within themselves that they didn’t
know was there – something heroic, something wonderful and very simply
something good,” Gunn said pithily. “And I think what the movie is about
includes all of us, no matter what country you’re from, no matter what part of
the world you’re from, the love of ourselves and each other and finding the
good within ourselves. And if there’s anything that makes this movie worthwhile
and worth spending two years of our lives doing nothing else but this film, is
for people to be able to walk out of the theatre feeling a little better about
themselves, feeling a little better about the person they were sitting next to
in the theatre and feeling a little better about the world in general.”
James Gunn couched Guardians
of the Galaxy as a movie made by outcasts, about outcasts and for outcasts.
“I think one of the things about Guardians
of the Galaxy is it’s about this group of oddballs, outcasts who are
plucked from obscurity in Marvel Comics and turned into these big movie stars,
and I think that we’ve talked about this a lot, that we all feel like that. My
last movie cost $3 million, it was an independent film, Dave is a wrestler whom
people didn’t think of as a real actor, Zoe has been pushed to the sidelines
for her whole life because she’s a person of colour from a place that not
everybody is from in this industry, Chris Pratt was a chubby guy when he got
this role, Vin Diesel’s a weirdo, Benicio del Toro’s a weirdo and the biggest weirdo
of all was Michael Rooker. We were just a group of oddballs and outcasts and
came together to make this movie and made something we all feel really good
about. The parallels are very interesting to me all the time and I think we all
feel this way, that through the process we’ve come to love each other. You’ll
hear us all talk about how much we love each other and you hear this on all
movies. The thing is, usually they’re lying but this time, it’s true,” he
concluded to applause.
Saldana said what was on everyone’s minds: “part 2,
everybody!”
We definitely like the Guardians enough to want to see
more – like the Jackson 5, we want them back!
Guardians of the Galaxy opens in Singapore on 31 July 2014.
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