Earlier saw Chris Pratt talk about his Marvel contract which may hint at an appearance in The Avengers: Infinity War movies.
The article also saw Pratt mention how director James Gunn motivated him on set, with than more than a few times Gunn dropping the f-bomb.
Via GQ:
âI think that he had gotten a lot of success over the past few years being the funny sidekick,â says Gunn, âwhich means that he always has to juggle to entertain everybody. And the truth is, Chris didnât trust himself to just be Chris Prattâand how desirable that is to an audience.â
âI thought I was bad,â Pratt concurs. âI thought I was doing bad acting. I would just think: My bullshit meterâs going off. This screams inauthentic to me.â Pratt says that Gunn had little patience with this. âHeâs like, âWho gives a sh-t what you think? I donât fâing care!â â
Heâd literally say that?
âYes! Heâd be, âItâs not your fâing movie, dude, itâs mine! Trust me and shut the fâ up and do what the fâ I tell you, and scream it!â Heâs like, âMore! Louder!â I would get pissy because as an actor, you sometimes hate that direction: Louder, faster. But itâs trueâsometimes you have to be louder, speak more clearly, let the words do the work, and just get out of the way.â
Now Gunn has taken to his Facebook page to offer the following:
Nice GQ article on Chris, in which Iâm heavily quoted and there is a bit of Guardians of the Galaxy 2 talk. Although Iâm often very honest in articles about myself, Iâm usually much more careful when I am interviewed about others. You never know what someone else is sensitive about. This was probably the most honest Iâve been in an interview about an actor, and both Chris and I talk about how he would initially tend to get in the way with his thoughts on set (and also the accompanying self-judgments). Iâd yell at him and tell him I didnât give a sh-t what he thinks. It seems kind of mean and funny in the interview, but I think itâs an important thing for all artists to remember: IT DOESNâT MATTER WHAT YOU THINK. What matters is the work and the act of creation. It is our job to DO, not to judge. Constant assessment of what we are doing, especially while we are doing it, creates a stilted and needy piece of artwork, when the world needs boldness. If youâre a true artist, the world needs YOU, not what you think you should be.
My job with Chris on set was to help get him out of his head. Chris was able to transform his way of acting throughout the making of Guardians and Iâm really proud of what heâs done (and, like him, I get teary when I think of what weâve got coming in GotG2.)
Itâs all good as the two are reteaming for Guardians of the Galaxy 2 and likely a third Guardians film.
