The Sun (Malaysia)

Totally out of this world

> Tessa Thompson talks about how she and director Taika Waititi work together to reimagine her Valkyrie character as the Han Solo of Thor: Ragnarok

- BY HANNA FLINT

THE SPOTLIGHT on Tessa Thompson has been steadily growing brighter ever since her impressive turn as an unapologet­ic black activist in Dear White People.

Since then, she has landed roles in Ava DuVernay’s critically­acclaimed Selma and opposite Michael B. Jordan in Creed.

Now, the American actress is seen in her biggest role to date – as Asgardian warrior Valkyrie in Thor: Ragnarok.

Indie filmmaker Taika Waititi was hired to make the third Thor movie, and Thompson believes it’s his background that makes this third instalment stand out from the rest.

“With this film, they really wanted Ragnarok to really feel like what Ragnarok means, which is the destructio­n of the old and the birth of the new,” the actress tells the Independen­t.

“It needed to have a filmmaker that feels very singular, you needed to have someone who was going to really shake up the tone.

“If you look at Taika’s work, he’s such an auteur and so funny, his humour is really specific. I’m just happy that Marvel let him make a Taika Waititi-ish Marvel movie.”

Thompson says she was a fan of Waititi’s work before she was cast in the movie.

She revealed that she’s seen What We Do in the Shadows “multiple times” and said of his debut Boy, “[it] broke my heart and filled it”.

“I think he’s so, so, so talented,” she continues. “They really let his personalit­y shine through and really, he is all over it, because he was such a part of the integral process of us ad-libbing, and would throw alternates out.

“He’s just so funny that he enthused the script with him.”

Thompson and Waititi had worked together to make sure that Valkyrie stood out from the other female heroes already seen in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

She drinks, she’s jaded and she’s more than a match for most of the men in the movie.

“It was quite collaborat­ive but [Taika] and I got on from the minute we met each other,” the actress explains.

“He pitched Valkyrie as sort of the Han Solo of the movie, and so I sort of knew the space that she wanted to occupy, and we wanted to subvert any sort of cliches in our portrayal of her. I say ‘ours’ because he was really integral to that.”

Valkyrie is certainly more than just a potential love interest for Thor, though she does replace Jane Foster, the God of Thunder’s exgirlfrie­nd and brilliant scientist who was in the first two movies and played by Natalie Portman.

Coincident­ally, Thompson and Portman were working together on another movie, Annihilati­on, right before Thor: Ragnarok began production in Australia.

“It was really cute because I literally went from Annihilati­on on Friday and flew to Australia to work on Thor that Monday which is nuts,” the actress remembers.

“And the whole time I was on Annihilati­on, I would practise my swords work on set, so it was funny to be doing that in front of Natalie because she would just crack up.

“She said that Chris was lovely and he was, she was totally right.” – The Independen­t

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 ??  ?? (below, left) Thompson and Waititi … creating her Valkyrie character (top, inset, above, and right) in Thor: Ragnarok.
(below, left) Thompson and Waititi … creating her Valkyrie character (top, inset, above, and right) in Thor: Ragnarok.

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