The new movie will also star Taylor Kitsch as John Carter and was based on the character created by Tarzan creator Edgar Rice Burroughs. Of course we can't see a scantily clad Dejah on the big screen much to the dismay of the forever alone fanboys and the comic book geeks that pickup Thoris' monthly book from Dynamite.
Anyway, in the movie adaptation for "John Carter", Dejah would be played by Colins who might look familiar to comic book movie fans. This is because she was also Hugh Jackman's love interest/ common law wife in the prequel "X-Men Origins: Wolverine".
While seeing her onscreen is a visual treat, I was really hoping that they put Megan Fox as Thoris, because whether we'd like to admit it or not, she does have a strong semblance to the Martian princess.
Anyway, here's what our friends from Disney had to say about putting Collins in the role of Dejah Thoris:
It’s common wisdom among actresses and pretty much everyone else, too, that great parts for women in the movies are hard to come by. Playing a wife, girlfriend or best friend is easy enough to do—those parts are a dime a dozen. But roles that portray smart, strong, fully developed women, much less ones who know how to use a sword and hold their own in battle, are rare to the point of nonexistent. Imagine, then, how excited Lynn Collins (“X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” “True Blood”) is to be playing Princess Dejah Thoris in Academy Award®–winning writer/director Andrew Stanton’s action adventure film “John Carter.”
“Dejah Thoris is the Regent of Science and Letters, so she’s a very intelligent woman,” enthuses Collins. “She’s also the princess of Helium, which is one of the cities of Mars. You really don’t know exactly where they are history-wise on Mars in the film, but you do know that females are considered equals and that there are men and women fighting together.
“I found it so wonderfully modern and so exciting to be part of,” she continues. “I think Dejah’s in touch with both sides of her persona, the feminine and the masculine, and that’s so powerful. And as an actor it is so rewarding to play somebody who is actually so well balanced in that masculine and feminine to where the part about being a princess in a classic sense really just kind of comes in ever so slightly.
“The heart of the story is very much about saving my people and that’s about as big of an objective as you can get. When Dejah meets John Carter everything sort of shifts and yet the prime objective is still to save her people. She falls in love with him, and although that does not change her objective, it definitely changes her perspective.
“It’s so exciting to be working on a character like this because she’s such a strong feminine force with also all the vulnerabilities that come with being a female but with strength as well.”
Collins also feels incredibly lucky to be working with Andrew Stanton, who has taken extra care to make her feel both empowered and comfortable with her character and with the physical aspects of her the role. “I just can’t talk enough about Andrew Stanton,” she says. “He is so incredible and has made me personally feel so safe to explore myself in this role and in this world. I’m not only feeling like I am expanding as an actor but I’m expanding as a human being as well. The whole process is such a discovery and a journey with Andrew and I just I feel so safe as an artist.
“There’s also lot of fighting and wirework [in ‘John Carter’],” she continues. “I had this terrible fear of heights but that fear has been completely dashed because of this movie. Taylor’s character, John Carter, does a lot of jumping and a lot of those jumps involved holding me. So, I’m being flung everywhere in the process. It’s hard work, but it’s so great to have a director whom you trust and you can believe that the hard work that you put in is going to pay off.”
Working with co-star Taylor Kitsch, who plays John Carter, has also been a gratifying experience for her. “I’m really big into astrology,” she explains. “The way I’ve approached this is seeing his character like the planet Earth and my character like the planet Mars and the qualities that they embody are so different. Taylor and I are very different people, so I think that is really bringing so much to the project and to the chemistry that we have. We are just so different in real life that on screen you do believe she’s from Mars and he’s from Earth and you wonder how they are going to get together.
“There’s a banter that happens through the tension that they are male and female, but she’s so different than he would expect and so strong that interesting things start happening to his resistance. John Carter is like, ‘What kind of woman is this?’ The way the dialogue is written is incredible; it’s so much fun to play.”
(Opening across the Philippines on March 9, “John Carter” is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International through Columbia Pictures.)
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