What about stunt work for you? Did you have to do any sort of training or anything?
I had this crazy rig that I had to be on. It was invented for The Matrix. It was 30 feet tall and 20 feet long arm, and this gyroscopic wheel that's around your waist and it moves off of your weight. It just seems like, 'Oh, that's fun and easy,' but it required so much core strength to slowly control this thing. I would also go on it and go nuts and do cartwheels and spins and send the videos to my nephews. 'Look how cool your aunt is!' That was just the best part of it to me. But if we went on to a second or third, that's when I really get to do the stunts because she becomes a villain.
What sets this one apart from every other superhero movie out there?
Well, the Green Lantern is a really unique film in that it's interplanetary. There's the city that it takes place in on Earth, and you know we have our cool things that we do there, like pilot planes. But then there's also the outer space realm. There's aliens from all over the galaxy. So it encompasses so much, it's such a big film, it's such a huge undertaking, and that's something that you don't normally see. You either see space or you see Earth, but to have both in one film is unique.
Is there a shadowing of Star Sapphire in this film?
You know, her piloting name is Star Sapphire. We drop little hints towards all the stories in the comics. But, you know, Star Sapphire is a little bit further down the road. It's more Sinestro that we [have] this time.
Are you looking excited to be a villain?
I would love to be a villain.
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