The Scotsman

A life transforme­d by a superhero role is just a marvel for Hemsworth

As his final chapter as Thor begins, the action star is still in awe of the films, finds Laura Harding

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Few roles have transforme­d an actor’s career as much as Thor has transforme­d Chris Hemsworth’s.

The Australian heartthrob was still best known for his role as Kim Hyde in Home And Away when he was first cast as the God Of Thunder in 2009, at the age of 25.

Now he’s 35 and a star of a multi-billion dollar franchise, the latest instalment of which, Avengers: Endgame, is poised to be amongst the highest-grossing films of all time.

And nobody recognises how much wielding Thor’s magic hammer has changed his life as much as Hemsworth himself.

“For sure,” he nods emphatical­ly. “Before Thor, my career was debatable, and I didn’t know if it was going to continue.

“I was sort of scratching around, little bits and pieces, and then this kicked off everything and opened up every door. Everything I’ve done outside of this has been in the shadow of this massive enterprise, or whatever you want to call it.

“We all grew up on these films, kind of like the audiences have.

“I got married, I had kids, it was kind of like going through high school or something.”

Now it’s time for graduation – Endgame will draw to a conclusion a story that started in 2008 with Iron Man and has continued through 22 instalment­s in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

“By this point in particular, there is a very nostalgic, bitterswee­t quality to it,” says Hemsworth, “because it’s potentiall­y the last time we are all going to gather like this.

“Each film had to work in order for the next one to work, in order for this to happen, so I constantly pinch myself and go, ‘Oh my god, how did I land this?’ and think how special it was.”

Indeed, since Hemsworth made his debut has Thor, he has married his wife

0 Chris Hemsworth’s Thor is among the leading Marvel heroes

Elsa Pataky and had three children, daughter India, six, and twin sons Tristan and Sasha, five.

“It’s been special watching them be pretty excited by it all, and watching what they relate to, but it all really hit home when they met Gal Gadot [who plays Wonder Woman in the DC Comics films].

“We were shooting in London last year and they are obsessed with Wonder Woman, they have seen the movie 100 times and they met her and were just in awe. They were hugging her and then would listen and then go and hug her again.

“It kind of hit home for me, it became very personal, I went, ‘Oh wow’, because I’ve had kids do that to me.

“I wish it was my own kids,” he laughs, “but you kind of realise what it means to people, the complete escapism, the fantasy, the adventure, the little lessons that are maybe sprinkled in there too, it’s pretty cool.”

He doesn’t even mind that his kids are enamoured with a superhero from outside the Marvel universe.

“We are all open,” he says with a chuckle. “If those films do well, our films do well – it’s about getting people to the cinema.”

And getting people to the cinema is something Avengers: Endgame is certain to do.

The film has already broken pre-release records at China’s box office and could hurtle to the top of the charts in the UK and US as one of the highest grossing

films of all time. The night before our chat, Hemsworth was joined by co-stars Scarlett Johansson and Paul Rudd, and directors Anthony and Joe Russo for a fan event in a London cinema, where hundreds of enthusiast­s dressed up as their favourite characters.

“It was incredible,” says Hemsworth. “They are the most, intense, enthusiast­ic fans, that know more about your character than you do and that is intimidati­ng, but it’s why you make these films.”

Indeed, some of the fans have such encycloped­ic knowledge of the comics and their history that Hemsworth has given up trying to match them.

“I read a few comics at the start of this whole journey back in Thor one, and I thought, ‘Oh yeah, I get the picture’.

“Then we started shooting and I would go to Comiccon and those kind of events and people would ask me: ‘You know in book number 463 of Thor’s journey...’ and I was like, ‘Uh-oh’.

“But then I just sort of gave in to the fact I am never going to be as versed and knowledgea­ble about that as those people.

“Also, you have to just take the character on and make it your own anyway.

“The very first film was about ticking all the boxes and saying, ‘This is what you know’, and then by Ragnarok [the third Thor film] it was like, ‘Let’s try something different, we can do our own thing.’

“Now there is a lot of nostalgia and awareness that this is a culminatio­n of 22 films and ten years worth of work, so it all has a different feel.”

“We all grew up on these films, kind of like the audiences have”

● Avengers: Endgame is in cinemas now

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