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X-Men star James Marsden addresses his Marvel return for Avengers: Doomsday

X-Men star James Marsden addresses his Marvel return for Avengers: Doomsday

Perth Now2 days ago
James Marsden feels like his return as Cyclops in Avengers: Doomsday has been 'a nice little homecoming' for him.
The 51-year-old actor - who starred as the hero in 20th Century Studios' X-Men franchise from the 2000 eponymous movie until the character's death in 2006's X-Men: The Last Stand - is due to return as Cyclops for the upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) blockbuster, and while Marsden feels he is 'getting a little long in the tooth' to be a superhero, he's thankful he's been given the opportunity to suit up as the character again.
Speaking with Vanity Fair, Marsden said: 'I'm getting a little long in the tooth to put on the superhero costume.
'I was excited because you're a part of something gigantic, and I've spent 20 years listening to people say, 'When are you coming back? When are you coming back? Are you coming back?' I'm dead. Well, maybe not.
'I'm going to have a tough time struggling to get into costume if they waited a couple more years.'
The Sonic the Hedgehog star - who previously returned as Cyclops for 2014's X-Men: Days of Future Past - added it was 'pretty special' to step back into his beloved role for Avengers: Doomsday.
He said: 'So it's been a blast. It really has. It's been a nice little homecoming to a role that really put me on the map.
'It was the first real event project that I was ever a part of, and a very beloved character, this icon from the comics. And so to step back into that role was pretty special.'
Marsden won't be the only X-Men star to return for Avengers: Doomsday, as Sir Patrick Stewart (Professor X), Sir Ian McKellen (Magneto), Kelsey Grammer (Beast), Alan Cumming (Nightcrawler), Channing Tatum (Gambit) and Rebecca Romijn (Mystique) are also confirmed for the film.
Other stars announced for Avengers: Doomsday include Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Tom Hiddleston (Loki), Paul Rudd (Ant-Man), Anthony Mackie (Captain America), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), Sebastian Stan (James 'Bucky' Barnes) and Lewis Pullman (Sentry).
Meanwhile, The Fantastic Four - as portrayed by Pedro Pascal (Mr. Fantastic), Vanessa Kirby (Invisible Woman), Joseph Quinn (The Human Torch) and Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Thing) - are slated to join the team.
Avengers: Doomsday - which is being directed by Joe and Anthony Russo and is due to release on December 18, 2026 - will likely follow the Avengers, the New Avengers, the X-Men and the Fantastic Four as they join forces to stop Doctor Doom (Robert Downey Jr.) from unleashing his devastating plans across the Multiverse.
Recently, Anthony Mackie revealed the Avengers: Doomsday cast were still 'in the midst of it' and production was 'going well'.
When Screen Rant asked the 8 Mile actor if Avengers: Doomsday was close to wrapping, he said: 'No. Hell no. No, we are in the midst of it.
'I mean, it's such a big, moving set piece, and it's such a big story. The best part of shooting a Marvel movie is that it's always an ever-evolving canvas. There are those staple pieces, and then there are the pieces that circulate throughout the course of the shoot.
'So, we're in the midst of it, but it's going well.'
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X-Men star James Marsden addresses his Marvel return for Avengers: Doomsday
X-Men star James Marsden addresses his Marvel return for Avengers: Doomsday

Perth Now

time2 days ago

  • Perth Now

X-Men star James Marsden addresses his Marvel return for Avengers: Doomsday

James Marsden feels like his return as Cyclops in Avengers: Doomsday has been 'a nice little homecoming' for him. The 51-year-old actor - who starred as the hero in 20th Century Studios' X-Men franchise from the 2000 eponymous movie until the character's death in 2006's X-Men: The Last Stand - is due to return as Cyclops for the upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) blockbuster, and while Marsden feels he is 'getting a little long in the tooth' to be a superhero, he's thankful he's been given the opportunity to suit up as the character again. Speaking with Vanity Fair, Marsden said: 'I'm getting a little long in the tooth to put on the superhero costume. 'I was excited because you're a part of something gigantic, and I've spent 20 years listening to people say, 'When are you coming back? When are you coming back? Are you coming back?' I'm dead. Well, maybe not. 'I'm going to have a tough time struggling to get into costume if they waited a couple more years.' The Sonic the Hedgehog star - who previously returned as Cyclops for 2014's X-Men: Days of Future Past - added it was 'pretty special' to step back into his beloved role for Avengers: Doomsday. He said: 'So it's been a blast. It really has. It's been a nice little homecoming to a role that really put me on the map. 'It was the first real event project that I was ever a part of, and a very beloved character, this icon from the comics. And so to step back into that role was pretty special.' Marsden won't be the only X-Men star to return for Avengers: Doomsday, as Sir Patrick Stewart (Professor X), Sir Ian McKellen (Magneto), Kelsey Grammer (Beast), Alan Cumming (Nightcrawler), Channing Tatum (Gambit) and Rebecca Romijn (Mystique) are also confirmed for the film. Other stars announced for Avengers: Doomsday include Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Tom Hiddleston (Loki), Paul Rudd (Ant-Man), Anthony Mackie (Captain America), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), Sebastian Stan (James 'Bucky' Barnes) and Lewis Pullman (Sentry). Meanwhile, The Fantastic Four - as portrayed by Pedro Pascal (Mr. Fantastic), Vanessa Kirby (Invisible Woman), Joseph Quinn (The Human Torch) and Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Thing) - are slated to join the team. Avengers: Doomsday - which is being directed by Joe and Anthony Russo and is due to release on December 18, 2026 - will likely follow the Avengers, the New Avengers, the X-Men and the Fantastic Four as they join forces to stop Doctor Doom (Robert Downey Jr.) from unleashing his devastating plans across the Multiverse. Recently, Anthony Mackie revealed the Avengers: Doomsday cast were still 'in the midst of it' and production was 'going well'. When Screen Rant asked the 8 Mile actor if Avengers: Doomsday was close to wrapping, he said: 'No. Hell no. No, we are in the midst of it. 'I mean, it's such a big, moving set piece, and it's such a big story. The best part of shooting a Marvel movie is that it's always an ever-evolving canvas. There are those staple pieces, and then there are the pieces that circulate throughout the course of the shoot. 'So, we're in the midst of it, but it's going well.'

Alyson Stoner reveals secret ordeal after missing out on ‘Hunger Games' role to Jennifer Lawrence
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  • News.com.au

Alyson Stoner reveals secret ordeal after missing out on ‘Hunger Games' role to Jennifer Lawrence

A former child star has detailed their secret health struggle attempting to land the lead role in action blockbuster The Hunger Games. US actor Alyson Stoner, who shot to fame as a child star on Disney Channel, auditioned for the character of Katniss Everdeen for the debut 2012 film – a part which later went to Oscar winning actress Jennifer Lawrence. Losing out on the role was particularly crushing for the now 31-year-old, who goes by they/them pronouns, as the star reveals for the first time their extreme preparation during the casting process, all while battling an eating disorder. 'Katniss was the ultimate role and the ultimate strong female lead: purpose-driven, sharp, athletic, and, thankfully, a heroine whose capacities were more important than physical beauty. But the role was playing with fire for me,' Stoner writes in their upcoming memoir, which was obtained by Vanity Fair. 'Katniss was characteristically thin — not starving, but small enough to reflect growing up in an underfed district — and muscular from hunting and archery. 'If I was going to devote myself to checking every box of the character description, I had to commit to strenuous training without fully succumbing to my eating disorder.' Stoner writes, then aged 17, they attended a 'world-renowned medical weight loss camp' to ready themselves for The Hunger Games auditions, where they went through 'two weeks of seven hours of daily exercise on a calorie deficit', despite already being considered underweight. 'I didn't recognise the irrational exceptions that doctors (and society) made for Hollywood, because it was all I knew,' Stoner writes. 'Even at 10 years old, I had to get a medical physical before flying to film Cheaper by the Dozen, and an industry-referred doctor discovered a heart murmur. Upon sharing that I had dizzy spells and blackouts, he didn't mark anything on my file because it 'might stop the production company from letting you work.' I followed the doctor's orders and ignored the murmur like he did, deducing that Hollywood must exist above medicine, above the law, and even above common sense. 'Doctors and trainers should've never permitted an underweight minor to do seven hours of fourteen-mile hikes, heavy lifting, and high-intensity cardio. 'But all I had to say was that I was training for an acting role. They assessed me as mentally stable and opened the door. Then, on off days, I took myself (and all my mental stability) bouldering in a nearby forest to build tactical prowess like Katniss.' After filming three tapes, Stoner found out weeks later they didn't get the job. 'I sat on my bed with vacant eyes and a distant mind. I didn't know what to do with myself,' Stoner writes. Several other actors were also vying for the role in the franchise, which was adapted from Suzanne Collins' popular books, including Emma Roberts, Abigail Breslin, Saoirse Ronan and Hailee Steinfeld. Lawrence, now 34, ultimately landed the part as a relative newcomer to Hollywood. Director Gary Ross previously said it was the 'easiest casting decision I ever made in my life.' 'I absolutely cast the right person for the role and in my view there wasn't even a question who the best Katniss was,' he said to Entertainment Weekly. Stoner's memoir Semi-Well-Adjusted Despite Literally Everything hits shelves August 12.

These daring artists shocked the world. A new show reveals why
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These daring artists shocked the world. A new show reveals why

When Annie Leibovitz shot a naked, heavily pregnant Demi Moore for the cover of Vanity Fair in 1991, it caused an uproar. Some retailers in the United States, including supermarket chains Giant and Safeway, refused to stock the magazine, while others wrapped it in brown paper. 'We are a family-oriented business,' huffed a spokesperson for Giant in the Washington Post at the time. 'Very young children go to the magazine section while waiting for their parents to finish shopping. We did what we thought was right.' Supporters, though, saw the image as a refreshingly empowering depiction of pregnancy; the magazine's sales and subscriptions rose in the aftermath. Remarkably, more than 50 years earlier, Australian photographer Max Dupain had taken a similarly provocative photograph in Sydney. His 1939 Birth of Venus features the silhouette of a naked pregnant woman flanked by two sculptures, all reminiscent of Botticelli's Venus. It's a stunning image, says Emmanuelle de l'Ecotais, co-curator of Man Ray and Max Dupain, a new show at Heide Museum of Modern Art that, for the first time, pairs the pioneering photographers who worked on opposite sides of the world. The show includes more than 200 photographs, many of which are vintage prints. They speak to each artist's willingness to reject tradition, convention and expectation, while celebrating beauty and the female body. De l'Ecotais says the pairing – the brainchild of Heide's artistic director Lesley Harding – is inspired. Twenty years older than Dupain, the American photographer shared a fascination for depicting beauty, the body and pleasure. 'There's something about beauty and the beauty of women, and the body, that is an ongoing thing for Man Ray,' she says. Dupain, she adds, shared this fascination; the exhibition 'is all about beauty and pleasure'. Both artists were also deliberately provocative, de l'Ecotais says. 'For me, it's really obvious that they are looking to push the limits all the time. Being controversial is really important.' Another Dupain image in the show – Nude 1934 – would have courted similar controversy to that of his pregnant subject, says Harding. 'She's a bride, but she's inverted, so she's a negative,' she says, adding that the photograph is mesmerising. 'The deliberate inversion of time and the way that he's doing what Man Ray liked to do, being disruptive, presenting a woman in a veil with no clothes on ...' Dupain, born in New South Wales in 1911, received his first camera at 13, and, like Man Ray, was swept up in the global movements that upended art in the early 20th century. Both adopted pioneering techniques that helped shift perceptions of photography away from mere documentary record and into the realm of art. De l'Ecotais has made a study of Man Ray's work since she was an intern specialising in photography at the Pompidou Centre in Paris. In 1994, when the gallery received the work that remained in Man Ray's studio after his death in 1976 – some 12,000 negatives and 5000 prints – she was given the task of cataloguing it. Her efforts became the basis for the landmark show Man Ray: Photography Inside Out in 1998. Born Emmanuel Radnitsky in Philadelphia in 1890, Man Ray moved to Paris in 1921 (his Jewish-Russian family changed their name to Ray in 1912 in response to antisemitism in the US). He arrived in Paris at a time when Surrealism and Dadaism were in full swing. His portraits include a who's who of the art world: Andre Breton, Gertrude Stein, Salvador Dali and Virginia Woolf. Marcel Duchamp, one of his closest friends, was an inspiration for Man Ray, who embraced 'an approach [that says] all methods and all mediums are interesting: the point is not the technique, it's what you want to say, what you want to express,' says de l'Ecotais. The same was true for Dupain, who is best known for Sunbaker, the iconic image of a swimmer fresh from the ocean, lying on the sand. Taken in 1937, it came to represent an idealised vision of the sun-bronzed Aussie, and remains Australia's most recognisable image. (Ironically, the subject is actually a Brit, Harold Salvage.) But Dupain's lesser-known early work is remarkable and pioneering, says Harding, co-curator of the current show. She says that, like Man Ray, Dupain played with technique and used innovations such as solarisation and superimposition, as well as cropping, framing and playing with angles and subject matter. 'The idea of them being contemporaries is probably not immediately apparent, but they were both at the peak of their powers in the 1930s,' says Harding. 'They both had this capacity to synthesise things, to take them back to their essential element ... [they saw] this enlightened or more inventive possibility.' Dupain's interest in Man Ray was already evident in 1935 when, aged just 24, he showed insight and maturity in his review of the book Man Ray Photographs 1920-1934 for The Home magazine. Embracing what he learnt about his Paris-based counterpart and other international photographers, the Sydneysider adapted some of their techniques and made them his own, as well as carving out his own approach. 'Man Ray appealed to me because he was radical,' Dupain later told his biographer, Helen Ennis. 'He didn't give a stuff for his contemporaries or his peers … he went ahead and did what he wanted to do.' Clearly, Dupain recognised a kindred spirit. Loading Both artists worked with women who were artists and photographers in their own right: Lee Miller worked with Man Ray in Paris and also became his lover, and Olive Cotton met Dupain at photography school and went on to work with him; the pair later married. Stunning images of and by both women are showcased in the exhibition in a section called 'Collaborators'. Another synergy was that the work of both men featured in fashion magazines, which was often how they made a living. Dupain's photographs, influenced by Hollywood and modernism, appeared in advertisements for David Jones and in several publications, particularly The Home. Man Ray worked for French Vogue from 1924, as well as for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiaparelli, but started developing his reputation through images published in Harper's Bazaar. His photographs of Parisienne women were more about people than fashion, says de l'Ecotais. In the 1930s, his use of solarisation and superimposition made his name. 'It's only a few years of success but it's a big success,' she says. The pairing of their work celebrates not only the impact they had in their lifetimes, but also the legacy of their innovations. '[Both artists'] work feels incredibly fresh, it feels thoughtful and it has this energy about it,' says Harding. De l'Ecotais says the legacy of both artists is ongoing and very significant. 'When you look at these images, they are very modern and contemporary; they haven't aged at all.'

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