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Chris Pratt OK with being used as beefcake

Pratt and the gang return for more Guardian of the Galaxy fun

- bthompson@postmedia.com BOB THOMPSON

Sequel fatigue is always a problem for Hollywood moviemaker­s.

But one redo proved to be irresistib­le for Chris Pratt and the folks behind Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.

In the second movie, there’s another Peter Quill shirtless sequence showing off Pratt’s ripped upper body.

Director and co-writer James Gunn has complete creative freedom on the films but jokes that Marvel Studios head honcho Kevin Feige insisted on the reveal Part 2.

“There’s a beefcake clause,” says Gunn with Pratt, Feige and the cast at a West Hollywood hotel.

Pratt, who is currently juggling two mega-franchises with the Guardians and Jurassic World series of movies, shrugs off the Quill vanity replicatio­n shot.

“It hasn’t hurt my career,” he says of being objectifie­d as a hunk. “We’re props. They shine a lot of light on us, and paint us up with makeup, and they take a camera and point it at us. Half the time, what ruins it is us talking.”

Certainly fans enjoyed the look, the tone and the banter of the first Guardians film, which earned great reviews and a healthy box office of more than US$770 million.

Three years later, the Guardians’ gang of space misfits is back on track to save the universe but with a few twists as the avenging Sovereign society of superior aliens tracks them down.

As they do, Quill connects with his birth father Ego (Kurt Russell), a living planet, who shapeshift­s to human form. Ego’s a celestial being who just might be hiding something from his son.

Meanwhile, Drax the Destroyer (Dave Bautista) meets Ego’s protege, the naive Mantis (Quebec City-born actress Pom Klementief­f ). Gamora (Zoe Saldana) continues her galactic battle with sister Nebula (Karen Gillan). Rocket Raccoon (voiced by Bradley Cooper) is just as cantankero­us while Groot offshoot Baby Groot (again voiced by Vin Diesel) ups the cute factor.

Besides the veteran Russell, Sylvester Stallone has a small role as Stakar a.k.a. Starhawk, who issues a warning to Ravager leader Yondu (Michael Rooker), once Quill’s surrogate dad.

Special effects action again combine with one-liners and few sly postmodern winks as the golden oldie soundtrack informs the story points.

The tunes include Electric Light Orchestra’s Mr. Blue Sky, Sweet’s Fox on the Run and Looking Glass’ Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl) — another “earworm” candidate matching Blue Swede’s Hooked on a Feeling from the first Guardians movie.

Indeed, Guardians 2 is a delicate balance of emphasizin­g the comic energy of the first film and providing something new in the second.

“The thing that I didn’t want to mess up was the movie just trying to be a rehash of the first movie,” Gunn says of his sequel. “People were surprised by the first movie, and so far people have been surprised by the second film.”

At the centre of it all is Pratt’s Quill, of course. His dim-witted doofus Andy from the Parks and Recreation sitcom is now a distant memory. But Gunn still exploits the actor’s familiar likability from the show and the first Guardians.

“Chris Pratt is great,” Gunn says, “because he’s funny and he’s sexy and he’s got this vulnerable side.” What Pratt relishes in Guardians 2 is the prominence of defining what a family is in various forms and for assorted reasons.

“This is very much a family movie, and I like it,” Pratt says. “It’s really universal because I don’t think there’s anyone who hasn’t felt that (family feeling) at some point in their life.”

In fact, Gunn’s motivation, besides providing an entertainm­ent that pushes the boundaries of odd, is to celebrate the quirky bonds of the Guardians characters.

“It’s a movie about outcasts for outcasts,” Gunn says. “There are people all over the world that it touches, and that’s the most rewarding thing, by far, about making these movies.”

So the good news is Gunn, Pratt and the rest of the outfit have already signed to do a third Guardians, which may or may not conclude the cheeky space adventure series.

You can also expect to see the Guardians mob show up in the Marvel all-star extravagan­za, Avengers: Infinity War, set for a high-profile release in May of 2018.

There’s more. During the Guardians 2 credit scroll there are hints of what’s to come with images of original Guardians Aleta Ogord (Michelle Yeoh), Charlie-27 (Ving Rhames), a potential Miley Cyrusvoice­d Mainframe, and Starhawk (Stallone).

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chris Pratt, left, star of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, is embraced by the film’s director, James Gunn, who jokes the studio insisted on a “beefcake clause.” The film opens Friday.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chris Pratt, left, star of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, is embraced by the film’s director, James Gunn, who jokes the studio insisted on a “beefcake clause.” The film opens Friday.

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