‘Grateful for my anxiety': Actor Lewis Pullman related to Thunderbolts* character's struggles
'He's very malleable and easily influenced because he hasn't had a real, strong, reliable source of love in his life,' the American actor said of his character, a dark Superman-like figure known as Sentry/The Void – although his civilian name, Bob, is how you might remember him best.
Think what would happen if Superman were super-depressed. Also, Bob appears capable of vapourising people with a flick of his hand.
'There's a contrast between being this all-powerful being and then having your greatest weakness and your main Achilles' heel be your own self,' Pullman, 32, said in video call from his apartment in Los Angeles.
He had just returned to the city, where he was born and raised, after a shoot in Vancouver, British Columbia, for the Netflix movie Remarkably Bright Creatures, based on American author Shelby Van Pelt's enormously popular 2022 novel. That was followed by a whirlwind press tour that had taken him from London and New York to Los Angeles and Miami to back to Los Angeles, just in time for his brother's wedding.
Pullman – the son of 71-year-old American actor Bill Pullman (While You Were Sleeping, 1995; Independence Day, 1996) – is the breakout star of Thunderbolts*, which has attracted praise for its candid depiction of mental health.
'What I love about this film is that it is so adamantly trying to rid our society' of the stigma around mental health, Lewis Pullman said. Like his character, he has an introspective bent, turning over every question in his mind before answering.
Although he had never read the comics featuring Sentry – also known as Robert Reynolds , shortened to Bob in Thunderbolts* – he was drawn to the profound sadness and isolation of the character, whose Mr Hyde-like alter ego is the Void, the darkness that lives inside Bob.
Struck by bouts of melancholy, Bob forges an unlikely friendship with Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova, who was trained as a child to be a Black Widow assassin.
'She sees something of herself in him,' Pullman said. 'She sees that they are both at the end of their lines.'
The role is a breakout turn for Pullman, who earned a supporting actor Emmy nomination in 2024 for his portrayal of a brilliant scientist in the Apple TV+ period series Lessons In Chemistry (2023). Before that, he played a pilot – also named Bob – in the 2022 hit Top Gun: Maverick.
'I should probably take a breather from playing Bobs,' he said with a laugh.
Lewis Pullman at the Thunderbolts* screening on April 30 in New York.
PHOTO: AFP
How did you first get involved in Thunderbolts*?
I got a phone call that was very vague and cryptic, and I was like: 'I should meet Jake (Schreier, the director) and see what this is all about.'
He couldn't give me the script, so he told me the story old-fashioned style, word by word. It was great to have that experience. You don't get it very often.
I had only three days to prepare for the screen test and audition, which wasn't as much time as I'd like. So, I tried to go as broad as possible, and then shrink it down and go as specific as possible in finding and discovering where it was that I, as Lewis, could relate to this character.
What did you pull from for the role?
What was so exciting and terrifying was how much I related to this character. In terms of the mental health parts of it, the anxiety and the depression, I have a dose of OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder) , self-doubt and the negative self-talk that can paralyse you.
I'm lucky to have come from a great family that was very proactive and resourceful about helping me figure it all out. So, to try to inhabit somebody who didn't have that – I was close enough to those alleyways to be able to see what it would have looked like had I not had those.
Have you had candid conversations with people in your own life about mental health?
I was a social work major in college in North Carolina, so I have had many conversations about these topics. Coming into this project, it was obvious that it was a major theme. But it was never our goal to make this a PSA (public service announcement). This is still an incredibly fun, large-scale blockbuster film. But by shining a flashlight on it, it becomes more real.
In many ways, my anxiety is something I'm grateful for. It's there as a protective mechanism. You don't just make a movie about it and then the conversation's over. I'll be talking about it until I circle the drain. And that's something I've come to be okay with and embrace.
Do you have personal experience with depression?
That's something that's less of a consistent force in my life. It comes in waves. But it's something that's deep in my marrow because, when you feel that, it's very hard to forget. I was able to tap into that in a way that was safe, with therapy, and then friends and support.
I go about therapy in the same way that I go about acting. I assume that I never know anything, that there's always something to learn. I did a lot of cognitive behavioural therapy in high school and now I'm in talk therapy.
I've realised that the times when you should stick with therapy the most is when you think you're doing the best without it. That's a mind game that I've fallen for a couple of times.
What would you say to people who feel like Bob?
It's okay to not smile, it's okay to cry, it's okay to let all those feelings out, and to not bottle them up. You'll find that, more often than not, there will be somebody there to catch you, if you're vulnerable enough to let them. NYTIMES
Thunderbolts* is showing in Singapore cinemas.
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Golden from KPop Demon Hunters tops music charts in US, Britain
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The song Golden has climbed to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart. SEOUL – The hype around Netflix's animated film KPop Demon Hunters (2025) shows no sign of abating, with a song from its soundtrack emerging as the summer's biggest pop hit since its release in June. Golden has climbed to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart, beating American singer Alex Warren's song Ordinary (2025) for the top spot, according to Billboard magazine on Aug 11. Golden is performed by singers Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami as the fictional K-pop girl group Huntrix in KPop Demon Hunters. Huntrix comprise Rumi, Zooey and Mira, voiced by actresses Arden Cho, Yoo Ji-young and May Hong respectively in the film. This marks the ninth song associated with South Korean pop to reach the highest spot on the chart, and the first by female lead vocalists. Golden joins songs like Seven (2023) by singer Jungkook and Like Crazy (2023) by singer Jimin, both of K-pop boy band BTS, on the list. Huntrix are also the first all-women group of three or more members to top the Billboard Hot 100 since American girl group Destiny's Child did so with Bootylicious for two weeks in August 2001, according to Billboard. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore NEL, Sengkang LRT resume service after hours-long power fault; Punggol LRT being restored Singapore Live: Services on Punggol LRT being progressively restored Singapore Luxury items seized in $3b money laundering case handed over to Deloitte for liquidation Singapore Plan to base Singapore's F-15 fighter jets in Guam cancelled Singapore Hyflux investigator 'took advantage' of Olivia Lum's inability to recall events: Davinder Singh Singapore Scoot to launch flights to Chiang Rai, Okinawa, Tokyo-Haneda, boost frequency to other places Singapore Off-duty SCDF officer dies after accident in Punggol; 15-year-old pillion rider taken to hospital Business Goh Cheng Liang, Nippon Paint billionaire and richest Singaporean, dies at 98 The Billboard Hot 100 ranks the most popular songs in the United States based on streaming, radio airplay and sales data. After debuting at No. 81 in early July, Golden has steadily risen through the ranks, climbing to No. 23, then No. 6, No. 4 and No. 2 before finally reaching the highest spot. The hit song is also the first No. 1 on the Hot 100 chart by any fictional act since the ensemble, We Don't Talk About Bruno (2021), which reigned for five weeks in February and March 2022, Billboard added. We Don't Talk About Bruno was a song from Disney animated musical film Encanto (2021) and performed by some of the film's voice cast members. Earlier in August, Golden climbed to No. 1 on the British Official Singles Chart Top 100, which ranks Britain's biggest songs of the week, based on audio and video streams, downloads, CDs and vinyl, compiled by Official Charts. It marked the first K-pop act to reach the top position since South Korean rapper Psy topped the chart with Gangnam Style in 2012. 'It represents another landmark moment for the globally dominating South Korean genre,' Mr Martin Talbot, chief executive of Official Charts, said in an article published on the company's website on Aug 1. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
Business Times
5 hours ago
- Business Times
Taylor Swift announces 12th album for 'pre pre-order'
[WASHINGTON] US popstar Taylor Swift announced her 12th album, titled 'The Life of a Showgirl, for 'pre pre-order' just after midnight on Tuesday (Aug 12) in posts on her website. Her online shop displayed blurred images of a record, CD and cassette tape overlaid with a glittery orange lock, explaining the album artwork would be 'revealed at a later date.' A disclaimer also notes that the release date has not yet been announced, and the album will ship before Oct 13. 'So I wanted to show you something,' the singer says in a video clip posted to her Instagram as she holds up a vinyl album, its cover completely blurred. 'This is my brand new album The Life of a Show Girl', she says in the clip from the 'New Heights' podcast, hosted by her boyfriend, American football player Travis Kelce, and his brother, ex-NFL player Jason Kelce. The Life of a Showgirl is the follow-up to Swift's last studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, which was released last year and sold 1.4 million copies the first day. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 2 pm Lifestyle Our picks of the latest dining, travel and leisure options to treat yourself. Sign Up Sign Up Since 2021, she has been making good on her vow to re-record her first six studio records in a bid to own the rights to them. In May, the 14-time Grammy Award winner, who was locked in a feud with record executives since 2019 over the ownership of her music, said she had bought back the rights to her entire back catalogue for an undisclosed sum. The 35-year-old songwriting sensation shattered records with her nearly two-year-long Eras tour that ended last year. It raked in US$2 billion over 149 shows around the world, making it the most lucrative tour in music history. Tickets for the tour sold for sometimes exorbitant prices, and it drew millions of fans. AFP

Straits Times
7 hours ago
- Straits Times
Taylor Swift announces new album, The Life Of A Showgirl
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Taylor Swift's appearance on New Heights was confirmed when the podcast's social feeds posted a short snippet revealing Swift sitting alongside Travis Kelce. NEW YORK - American singer Taylor Swift relishes announcing her albums in dramatic fashion. On Aug 12, she did it again, revealing the name of her 12th original studio album, The Life Of A Showgirl, when a countdown clock on her website ticked down to 12.12am Eastern time (12.12pm Singapore time). The 35-year-old did not disclose the release date of the album, or any other information about its tracks. Known for meticulously placing Easter eggs before announcements, Swift's team set off speculation from her hyperattentive fan base by posting a carousel of photos on Instagram on Aug 11. Could the 12 photos, taken at stops on the Eras Tour, correspond with the singer-songwriter's 12th studio album? Did the pattern of orange outfits align with Swift's practice of colour-coding her catalog? 'Thinking about when she said 'See you next era…,'' the post's caption teased. The announcement coincided with the news that Swift would be making a rare media appearance on the podcast New Heights, which is hosted by her boyfriend Travis Kelce and his brother Jason Kelce. The episode is slated to post on Aug 13. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Power fault downs MRT service on stretch of North East Line; recovery may take 2-3 hours Singapore Live: NEL MRT service between Farrer Park and Buangkok stations restored Singapore Plan to base Singapore's F-15 fighter jets in Guam cancelled Business Singapore raises 2025 economic growth forecast but warns of uncertainty from US tariffs Singapore Circle Line to close early most Fridays and Saturdays, start late most weekends from Sept 5-Dec 28 Business Goh Cheng Liang, Nippon Paint billionaire and richest Singaporean, dies aged 98 Business StarHub buys rest of MyRepublic's broadband business in $105m deal; comes after Simba buys M1 World After tariff truce extended, a Trump-Xi summit in China? The fan theorising began to build on Aug 11, when the podcast posted to social media a teaser advertising a 'VERY special' mystery guest in silhouette. Her appearance was confirmed on Aug 11, when the podcast's social feeds posted a short snippet revealing Swift sitting alongside Travis Kelce. The decision to appear on New Heights may be more than just favouritism. The Kelce brothers' show has its own huge fan base. In August, it was ranked 10th in audience reach in the United States. Travis Kelce, the Kansas City Chiefs star tight end, has mentioned Swift sparingly on the podcast, which features a crossover of sports and pop culture topics. But every public appearance from the couple has been closely dissected since their relationship became public in 2023. Swift has been largely quiet since her mammoth world tour ended in December 2024 after traversing five continents over nearly 150 shows. But Swift announced in late May that she had bought back the master recordings of her first six albums from the investment firm Shamrock Capital, giving her ownership of all of her music videos, concert films, album art and photography and unreleased songs. It was a momentous deal – worth a reported US$360 million (S$463 million), according to Billboard magazine – that ended a saga over the recordings that began in 2019 when music manager Scooter Braun acquired the catalog. Mr Braun sold it to Shamrock the following year, prompting Swift to begin the process of re-recording those works and releasing them as Taylor's Version. 'All I've ever wanted was the opportunity to work hard enough to be able to one day purchase my music outright with no strings attached, no partnership, with full autonomy,' Swift wrote in a letter that announced her purchase. Her most recent original studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, was released in April 2024 after she announced it while accepting a Grammy. Though Swift has kept a low profile, she has been a frequent target of US President Donald Trump. Swift endorsed former US vice-president Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election (despite Mr Trump's posting of artificial intelligence-generated images that falsely suggested that the singer had endorsed him). Mr Trump later said he preferred the wife of one of Kelce's teammates, who reportedly liked a social media post supporting Mr Trump. Last week, he took further aim at Swift in a post on Truth Social in which he claimed that her popularity had declined since he disavowed her. NYTIMES