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Back to black

Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson reignite their ‘Avengers’ chemistry in the reboot ‘Men In Black: Internatio­nal’, out in the UAE tomorrow

- TESSA THOMPSON | Actress

In the summer of 1997, Men in Black became the movie that cemented up-and-comer Will Smith’s global status as a movie star. A universall­y panned sequel followed in 2002, followed 10 years later by a better received but notoriousl­y troubled third instalment.

According to Hollywood’s clock, that means it’s officially time for a revisit. The Will Smith-free Men in Black: Internatio­nal, now in theatres from director F Gary Gray, stars Marvel Cinematic Universe veterans Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson as the new agents in the expanding ‘MIB’ landscape.

Despite being fresh off the recordbrea­king success of the behemoth

Avengers: Endgame (where Hemsworth plays the mighty Thor and Thompson

plays fan-favourite heroine Valkyrie) the stars admit they worried about measuring up to the original MIB.

ALL ABOUT THE VISUALS

“We’ve been discussing this a lot,” Hemsworth said in a phone interview. “Personally I always have a certain amount of fear and healthy anxiety as far as the work I’m about to embark on. Particular­ly when there’s a pre-establishe­d franchise, which we’ve both dealt with in the Marvel world, you use what’s available to you in terms of what’s been done before and you let the fear motivate you, then push it aside and make your own version.

“I like to make films that I’d like to see in the cinema,” he continued. “Visually impressive and fun — and that’s what this embodied. And the fact that it wasn’t a remake or a reboot but a continuati­on and an opportunit­y to expand the universe was pretty epic.”

That understand­ing of the film as an update to the series rather than a reboot also helped ease Thompson’s anxieties about measuring up.

“All of those worries and trepidatio­n went away because I think what we’re doing is so important in its way,” she said. “We’re living in a time in Hollywood where there’s a lot of nostalgia and a lot of beloved franchises are being revisited. There’s never been a woman at the forefront of those stories so I think it’s really exciting to revisit these properties with an inclusive lens and a more modern sensibilit­y.”

Though you wouldn’t know from the title, women have factored into previous instalment­s of MIB, though not prominentl­y. Emma Thompson reprises her

Men in Black 3 role as the head of the or

ganisation and jokes with Tessa Thompson’s character about their employer’s misleading name.

“The reality is that women exist in the organisati­on through the name on paper wouldn’t make you think that,” Tessa Thompson summarised. “And I think that’s such a cute, funny joke because that exists in every crevice, not just in Hollywood but in the world.”

CULTURAL CONVERSATI­ON

The timing of introducin­g a female agent into the universe as the film industry seeks to increase representa­tion and inclusion among its own ranks is not lost on the actress.

“Obviously this is happening in a time where this cultural conversati­on, particular­ly in Hollywood, is around representa­tion,” she said. “The truth is, the producers and the studio had been wanting to continue this franchise for a while. That idea happened before any of these conversati­ons around representa­tion.”

Joining Thompson and Hemsworth as a franchise newcomer is Liam Neeson, who plays a pivotal supporting role in the film as High T, the head of MIB’s London bureau. Filming wrapped before the actor’s viral interview with the Independen­t was published earlier this year, in which he reflected on a friend opening up about her rape and the conversati­on prompting him, as a young man, to walk the streets for days looking to kill a “black [expletive].”

Thompson says she discussed the controvers­y with Neeson via email.

“I realise that there were some cultural difference­s in terms of where he grew up, what his words meant to me and what they might mean to fans,” she said of the Irish actor. “People actually, not just fans. Forget about a movie, just humans.”

Though she says she has more thoughts about the topic “than we have time,” Thompson says Neeson was “responsive” to the conversati­on.

“I think it’s really complicate­d but I realise that sometimes there can be a chasm between your intention and your impact,”

she said. “I think his intention was to open up an honest dialogue about revenge and what it means to be vengeful. And I don’t think he realised the impact of his words in terms of talking about race and the fact that violence is perpetuate­d upon people of colour just because they’re of colour.

“I think I understand his heart from having worked with him,” she added. “I think if there’s still any sort of curiosity or concerns about his initial words that people need to go and revisit what he most recently said. The truth is, the onus isn’t on me and it shouldn’t be on Chris or Gary or anyone else involved in the movie to explain but Liam.”

Men in Black: Internatio­nal marked Thompson’s third big blockbuste­r outing with Hemsworth, following Endgame and 2017’s Thor: Ragnarok.

“Working with Chris is really my introducti­on to making big movies,” the actress said. “Ragnarok was my first time making a movie of that size and scope, so I’m still kind of a baby at it. It’s interestin­g that my whole trajectory since I’ve started [on blockbuste­rs] has been with Chris. I feel really lucky because he’s so good at it and so giving and has taught me so much about the stamina it takes to make these kinds of movies, the imaginatio­n, the sense of humour, and how important it is to keep morale up on set, which he does so well.”

Another significan­t thing about her previous experience­s working with Hemsworth, Thompson says, was the chance to star opposite him not as a romantic lead but as an equal.

“I think it remains to be very rare, particular­ly to have a female and male team up where their dynamic is not romantic but is complicate­d, where they get to spar and battle in intellect and where they are partners,” she said. “And to get to do that in the context of a bigger tentpole movie, I think, is really unique.”

For his part, Hemsworth said, “Having this great friendship that continues to grow through each of these experience­s has been a huge advantage. You’re able to hit the ground running and not spend the shooting schedule getting to know each other and understand one another’s rhythms and find the chemistry. No matter how hard you try, it’s kind of there or not. And we were lucky enough from day one on Ragnarok to notice that we’re like-minded and have similar approaches to our work. It’s definitely one of my favourite working relationsh­ips.”

“I think it remains to be very rare, particular­ly to have a female and male team up where their dynamic is not romantic but is complicate­d.”

 ?? Rex Features ??
Rex Features
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 ??  ?? Chris Hemsworth, Tessa Thompson and F Gary Gray at the ‘Men in Black: Internatio­nal’ film photocall, in Beijing, China, on June 9.
Chris Hemsworth, Tessa Thompson and F Gary Gray at the ‘Men in Black: Internatio­nal’ film photocall, in Beijing, China, on June 9.
 ?? Photos by AP, Rex Features and courtesy of Sony Pictures ??
Photos by AP, Rex Features and courtesy of Sony Pictures

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