WonderCon: Blake Lively on Green Lantern

After the panel, ComingSoon.net/SuperHeroHype joined press backstage to talk with stars Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively about the film and their reactions to the finished effects work. You can read the Reynolds interview here and find Lively’s responses below.

Best known for her role on “Gossip Girl,” Blake Lively received critical praise for her turn last year in Ben Affleck’s The Town. In Green Lantern, she plays Carol Ferris, childhood friend to Reynold’s Hal Jordan and the owner of Ferris Aircraft, for which he test pilots experimental planes. Lively talked with us about the film, her character and her hopes that, should the film develop a franchise, she might fulfill Ferris’ transformation into the villain, Star Sapphire.

Q: I see you’ve got your own Carol Ferris Barbie there.

Blake Lively: Oh my god. It’s crazy! It’s just so wild. I feel like I need to go home and buy a Barbie magical dreamhouse and play with myself. Wait, that doesn’t sound right. (Laughs) Next question!

Q: Did you know much about Green Lantern heading into this project?

Lively:
No, I actually knew nothing about Green Lantern. I imagined that no one else in the world knew anything about Green Lantern and, as soon as I got the role, I was quickly humbled by how naive I was. People just came out of the woodwork. People I had never even imagined. I’m on the set with a ton of New Yorkers. Very serious people who don’t geek out often. Very tough. Here they were asking about all these things like Star Sapphire and Hector Hammond and Parallax and, “Who’s going to be the villain?”, “Which Green Lanterns are going to show up?” and, “Is Bzzt going to be in it?” What are you guys talking about? It’s also really exciting that I didn’t know anything about it because then, you know, my nephews don’t know anything about it. To introduce, or reintroduce a character to a younger generation you have a lot more freedom and you’re not being compared to all the different incarnations that you’ve seen before. The more staple commonly-known superheroes. So that’s really exciting.

Q: You’ve obviously gained a following thanks to “Gossip Girl,” but how much more intense is this, particularly when you are in a room like that and the added fact that the characters have such a following?

Lively:
You definitely feel the pressure. Before I even took on the role I felt the pressure to make the fans proud. To do the character justice. When a story has been developing for so long — and this is one of the longest running comic books of all time — there’s such history and such a fanbase. There’s a responsibility to do it right and to do justice to these characters that people love so much. So when we were on-set we had such an attention to detail. There was some question as to whether my hair would be blonde or brown. To me it was never a question. Carol Ferris is a brunette and she had to be a brunette. And then once they made that decision, they tested 14 different shades of brown. I flew out to North Carolina just to test the brown. Three different weekends on-camera. So with that kind of attention to detail — if it was down to the shade of my hair — you can imagine how it was in the world of Green Lantern in the suits, in the Corps, in the world of Oa. Warner Bros. is a company that really makes their films with such integrity. They take these big films and they could just make a lot of money off of them and do a fine job, but they really — if you look at the Harry Potter or the Batman franchise — make movies that are actually really great films and not just big movies that make money. We were really lucky to work with them on this sort of project. 

Q: What was your experience working with director Martin Campbell?

Lively:
He’s an incredible person to work with. I never met a person who works so hard and is so old (laughs). He would get up at 5:00 in the morning and go to the production office and we would go, “Yeah, but it opens at 9:00. Why would you go in at 5:00?” And he said, “I get to work before all these people come in and distract me!” And I thought he left at 9:00am. No, he would continue be there the whole production day and leave at 8:00pm. He is somebody who will take something very fantastical and find the realism in it. When I watch “Casino Royale” and I watch those fights, I could feel my ribs cracking. He makes it so realistic. To bring that realism to a thing like this, so the audience can grasp on to something. Because when it’s taking place on Earth and in space, you can get lost in the fantasy of it all. You need something, some human interaction, something to connect with in it. To grab on and take the journey of the film. We were really lucky to have Martin tell this sort of story and I love working with him. He spent a lot of time rehearsing, flying out every weekend. He would spend 12 hours a day going over the script, talking about the characters, their backstories, their history. And then before we shoot the scene we would spend an hour in the trailer before shooting. On a film this large every moment costs a lot of money, and the fact that we could sit in that trailer and rehearse for an hour to make the scenes better, to make the story better, was an amazing, amazing thing. They afforded us that chance to make the best movie we could make.

Q: Once you really got into the world of Green Lantern, what did you grow to love about it?

Lively:
I really love that Hal wasn’t a superman. He is just a man. He’s somebody who inherits great responsibility, but you’re not really sure he wants it. I’m not sure every man in the world would say, “Yeah, you know what? I want to sacrifice my life to go fight aliens and have my family specifically attacked and targeted and everyone I love and save the Earth.” The fact that he had reservations about being the person responsible for saving planet Earth. The fact that he had weaknesses. His father was taken from him. He was a person with great potential, but was broken and guarded. I loved that, because not everyone is a hero and without Ryan there would have been no Hal Jordan. He’s somebody who could be incredibly intimidating and super and he’s incredibly talented and intelligent, but he’s also very humble and kind and witty and charming. To relay all of those emotions he’s a very human superman. And I loved that about Ryan. I loved that about Green Lantern. Also the fact that he is weak. He looks to people around him for support, whether it’s his nephew or Carol, because people do need each other and I thought that was beautiful.

Q: What was it like working with Peter Sarsgaard? We haven’t seen too much from him in the footage or the trailer.

Lively: I actually didn’t get to work with Peter much. I wish I would have been able to work with him more, I’m such a fan of his, so maybe it’s a good thing. He had a restraining order against me, so maybe that’s why (laughs). He’s such a talented actor and it was so important to him to really disappear under this character, because with prothetics, he spent eight hours a day. He would come to work at three in the morning and then shoot all day until the evening. That alone could have carried his performance. He’s such a great actor he would say anything looking like that and he would be so incredible. He did all the extra work. When he’s in that crazy head. His daughter came to set one day and she was hysterical because he wasn’t the same. He was like, “Baby!” and she had no idea who this was. And the way he moved, the way he talked, even the way he batted his eyes was even different. He’s just such a talented actor and fascinating to watch. Even when I would wrap I would sit around and watch him in scenes.

Q: When you were in the audition process, did they look for that? Thinking that you could play a villain somewhere down the line?

Lively:
The way that this movies came to me was that I had made “The Town” with Warner Bros. and they saw the footage of that and they said to me, “We want you to look at ‘Green Lantern.’” I still had to audition for it. It was really nice for me that this was a studio that wasn’t looking for some girl to have her legs greased up and her boobs out and that’s all that mattered. They saw a pain-riddled, drug-addicted, drug mule mother from Boston and said, “Oh, we want her to be the female face of our next franchise film.” Those are the people I want to work for. That’s the kind of story that I want to tell, where the art and the craft means something to them. I think they saw from my role in “The Town” that I was able to be dark and angry and be a villain. All I did was screentest with Ryan once and it was more about seeing the chemistry between Hal and Carol and to see if we could spar against each other and have that rivalry and that tension, but also that kindness and care.



Q: How would you compare Carol Ferris to female comic book leads like Lois Lane or Mary Jane?

Lively:
She’s very untraditional in the fact that she is head-to-head with Hal and the fact that they are always challenging each other was something was really nice. That she’s not waiting for him to save her. There are times where he experiences weakness where she has to come in and save him and I think that that’s a little more like real life. Like I was saying, where you’re missing something you can have a family member, a friend, or a lover fill that and empower you and make you stronger in that area and it’s nice to see that in a comic book film, because when there’s a hero. He’s the hero and he saves the world and he saves his love, but the fact that other people can be heroes too is pretty cool.

Q: What do you think this film would do for your career? With Chris Evans on “Captain America” he said it was great because it would bring great attention but bad because it would bring great attention.

Lively:
I don’t think there’s anything negative that you can say about being a part of a film that has such a strong fan base and people that are so supportive. Just sitting in there and showing those ten minutes of footage and hearing the reaction, I grabbed Ryan and said, “If that doesn’t make you feel good then I don’t know what does!” You know? So to do something that brings people happiness and excitement you only feed off of that energy. Hopefully people will like it. I don’t think about jobs and how they’re gonna affect my career or my path or this, you know? If I connect with a role, with a character, with a story, with the filmmakers that to me is the reward. That to me is the success and if receive it well then terrific and if they don’t then at least I had a good time making it. That’s how I feel.

Q: What would you say to those who don’t already have “Green Lantern” on their radar? What’s so special that they should see it?

Lively: Like I was saying earlier, it’s really exciting to introduce a superhero to a generation that’s not aware of him yet. I’m such a fan of “Harry Potter,” it’s not healthy (laughs). It’s so not right, but when the books were over I thought, “I may as well end my life and now that the movies are ending, I don’t know how I’m going to continue on.” I sometimes fantasize about the idea of, “What if there was another J.K. Rowling who could create another character like Harry Potter?”

(Ryan Reynolds comes up behind Blake and shakes his head.)

Lively: Go away, I’m talking about Harry Potter!

Ryan Reynolds: Harry Potter? Yeah, they need the money!

Lively: I’m just saying it’s that same sort of thing. It’s a character that not everybody is aware of and that’s exciting and also the fact that it take place on Earth as well as space. The world we get to explore is just so much more vast and, I don’t know, it’s so exciting. Just watch that. That will make you want to see it!

Green Lantern hits theater on June 17th in both 2D and 3D.

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