 I have a game to play with you guys. I never have I ever had an embarrassing moment on set. I am embarrassed every day, on set and off set. All the time. Oh yeah. Walking on set usually is the beginning of the embarrassment for me, and it gets progressively worse from there as soon as I open my mouth. No, I've gotten radically injured on set. I had a piece of, on Mad Men I had a piece of the set fall and hit me on the head and I had eight stitches in my head. Jeez. The only two times I've been injured on any set were on Mad Men. Like the least action-oriented thing ever. It takes place in an office that I broke my hand and I got hit on the head. How'd you break your hand? Doing a weird stunt that was like a flashback. Smoking a cigarette really hard. Oh! I don't think I've had enough time on set to have an embarrassing moment, so never have I ever. I'm sure that will change though. Embarrassing. Yeah, all, everything happens on a set, you know. Never have I ever had a secret potty trick. I can wiggle my eyebrows, like do the worm with my eyebrows. Can you show us? One, two, three, go. That's impressive. It's kind of rusty. I don't think it's rusty at all. It's so cool. Do you have a party trick? Yeah, I can balance stuff on my head. What kind of stuff? I don't know what you got. Check it out. Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da. Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da. Ha! You want me to do this? I know I could do this. Well, not today, but I could do this bit. Never have I ever gotten a tattoo. I have a lot. Do you want to get a tattoo today? Yeah. Okay. I have never, never. I have a lot of tattoos. My entire back is covered in tattoos. Wow. That is not a lie. That's me. I know it sounds like I'm being ironic, but no, I am actually being serious. I'm covered in tattoos. Is it one big piece or? It's a collection of different pieces, but they all sort of marry together. So they look like one piece, but it is many different pieces that I've gotten since I think I started tattooing when I was about 18. So I go from here up to my armpits and across the top to bottom of my back. Never have I ever checked into a hotel with a fake name. I do all of it every time. I have one time because my team was like, do you want to check in with a fake name? I'm like, oh my God, that sounds so cool. What was it? I think it was Super Linus, my character's name at the time. What was that? Lin Cheney. That's funny. I always do. Cause then people can't just prank call your room or bring you up or weirdos. You just gotta avoid weirdos. Avoiding weirdos is 70% of my life. Never have I ever. Oh, I have, yes. Quite often, yeah. Can I tell you the name though? Do you have any old ones you could share with me? Old ones, no. In case I'll do the characters that I'm playing in the movie, you know. Never have I ever had an embarrassing username. My old Instagram name used to be brunette potato. I also formed a band called The Potatoes. You love potatoes. I love potatoes. She eats them every morning if she couldn't get them. Yeah. KDemon76. Oh dear. Yeah. With an 8, SK8. Sure. Extra rad. I get it. Yeah. Mine, no. I was dumb enough to put my real name in as my username. So then I'm like, whoa, why did I do that? Just come up with anything and then they don't know it's you. No, stupid. Never have I ever used someone else's toothbrush. I've used someone else's toothbrush. Chris Humsworth. He doesn't need to brush his teeth. He doesn't need to brush his teeth brush themselves. His abs brush his teeth. That's really creepy to watch. It's really weird. Yeah. Have I used, no, I used my head of arms. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Never have I ever had a crush on a fictional character. I probably, oh, I've definitely, Princess Leia, 100%. Like, that was a major moment in my seven-year-old existence was figuring that those feelings was possible. Yeah. I had a crush on Helen Mirren in Excalibur. Ooh, yeah. Yeah. Hubba-hubba. Yeah. And Jennifer Connelly in Labyrinth. Oh, right, yeah. Two good movies. The comic book Archie, you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Veronica, always kind of turned me on. I feel like it was someone from X-Men or something. Veronica's a great one, especially, you know, Riverdale. Yeah. I'm not hip, because a new TV show is all about that. Oh, wow. Yeah, I don't know about that. And never have I ever been a total fanboy. I will say that I did it this exactly one time, and it was to Jeff Bridges that year he won his Academy Award for a true grit. And I rarely get starstruck or that way. And I came up to him, I was sort of introduced to him, and I couldn't say anything. I wanted to say everything, and I couldn't say anything. Yeah, yeah. That was my time. And I felt like he was like, what's wrong with you? It's like a guy going like, it's like a fish. What was the funniest part of your filming experience? Well, we all know what it is, I think. Squiggly wiggly? Yeah. Chris Hemsworth does this squiggly wiggly dance with his shirt unbuttoned, and he looks like a big chiseled noodle. That's probably the best way I've ever had him described. Big chiseled noodle. I did see in another interview with you, Decatur. You said it was very distracting having him around with his shell. Tell us more. I just found it to be difficult to focus on dying when he had his body all noodling around the room. And I wasn't the only one. I know Jeff Bridges was laughing, and also Lulu was laughing. And it was difficult. And I think that maybe we were laughing more because it was like a break from feeling so distraught and scared and sad in that scene. I would also like to praise him on his accomplishment for achieving chiseled physique. It must have taken a lot of hard work and zero fun. What do you do for a workout? Unnoodle. Just noodle around. I didn't share any scenes with Chris. So my experiences with him have always been shirted. Very unlucky. I wish, you know, one of these days. It was a blessing. I think you said his abs were shiny. Yes. Each one has its own little sparkle, which I love. It was crazy. They're ridiculous abs. And we're doing an intense scene. So it's a little bit like, yeah, and I'm in a stool. And they're very much my love. Tied up and weeping. We did have a moment of hysteria during the roulette table. Whilst we were filming that little section, there was a moment of hysteria where we just could not stop. Chris does a lovely dance. Chris does that dance. And we just... Shortled pretty quickly. I don't know that we expected it to happen. And then it happened. And then we were all like dying of laughter. I've had a lot about this Chris Hemsworth noodle dance. Yeah, that's literally what it is. It's a noodle dance. It's a noodle dance. I've never heard of that. Oh, yeah, well, there you go. All right. How distracting was it having him around just shirtless and noodley? Well, the noodle dance is distracting anyway because it's hilarious. And I think that's what it's for anyway. But, you know, after a while, we realise that it's part of a costume and more than anything, you just realise how great he is as an actor because it just all lends itself to this character that he is. And he's brilliant as he's brilliant. What he did with that role was really special. One of my other favourite scenes in the movie was when you got legend. Tell us about shooting that. Many different takes, many different angles. I was doing all of the bludgeoning. There was definitely a glass-type bottle there. And it just takes some practice. I had to practice with the stunt supervisor to make sure that I was doing it safely. And then we just made sure that we moved like it was convincing enough to do it. I just love the fact that it was so surprising for everyone. That's my favourite thing. We had very different experiences on the film. You know, Lewis was in his top to bottom. My experience was a little more truncated. The most fun was really just the high, high, high level of filmmaking that everybody was operating on. Drew had a very specific idea of what he wanted from moment to moment and scene to scene in this movie. And to be able to work on things that are seven, eight minute long tracking shots that do not cut away, that are so highly orchestrated and highly finely tuned, that's fun. Like that's getting to do some really cool jazz as a musician. Like that's pretty fun. Yeah, some real movie making. Yeah, some real movie making. Not just master, then over, over, master, over, over. It was really using all of the tools at our disposal. And we had some pretty cool tools. Other than your own backstory, which character's backstory did you like best? I really liked the character Miles in the film. I thought the reveal is so earned and it's been teased throughout the whole movie. Like he's got this weight, he's got this secret, he's got this thing, he really wants to get out. He's just like, what is it? What possibly is it? And then when it's revealed, it's revealed in the most kind of sickly, fascinating way. I really liked that one. I just said thanks as if I wrote the film. I'm true, thanks man. And not to just, you know, predictably toss it right back at you, but I think it's a really good challenge that you kicked ass in, is like, is having one character and which is so believable and you're making it as believable as possible and so that the payoff of when you find out a different layer within that character is extra explosive. This beginning scene, it's like, it's seriously a riot and you have this amazing southern accent and somebody was asking, you know, what's it like to try and act as, it's very meta because you're acting as somebody, acting as somebody, acting as somebody, but it's not really anything different. It's like what Rando said, acting as survival or whatever, because really you had to do that as best as possible in order to survive. You had to play that character that's playing the character. It's kind of cool to put a bit of a rabbit hole.