Filming Avengers: Endgame Sounds Like A Logistical Nightmare For Its Actors

Filming Avengers: Endgame Sounds Like A Logistical Nightmare For Its Actors

A movie as bold and intriguing as scope as Avengers: Endgame — the culmination of plot threads, character arcs, relentless post-credit teases, and actor contracts across over a decade of blockbuster film making — naturally invites with it the hushed procedure of secrecy. But that doesn’t just apply to avoiding leaks: It applies to its stars.

The cast of Avengers: Endgame has long made clear the pressure, both jokingly and realistically, of having to maintain the utmost secrecy of making the film.

At times that pressure is about the absurdity of it, as they go on a press tour for a movie where they can say even less than you can usually say on a blockbuster press tour.

At times, it’s about the unity such a weird experience has forged among them.

But in being able to talk about what they can’t say about the movie itself, they also reveal that, honestly? It seems pretty damn weird from an actor’s point of view. Brie Larson recently told Inquirer about her first day filming on the set of Endgame, a process that involved her having absolutely no idea what she was actually filming outside of… her one line:

I flew to Atlanta for my first day on Endgame. I had no idea what I was shooting, what the movie was. I didn’t know if anybody else was in a scene with me. I didn’t know anything.

And it’s not until you show up that you get your pages for the day. But you only get your part. So it was like a scene that was completely black redacted, and then just my one line. I’m very excited to talk about this once the movie is out, because I can’t give the details away.

That is, apparently, not a process that ever actually changes, even as you film more and more of the movie, as Chris Hemsworth noted on Ellen last week, where at least his understanding of what Endgame is at this point has evolved from no clue at all to… well, a vague idea, because he has no idea how it’ll all be put together in the final edit:

It’s funny, I feel like a fan of this whole thing as much as anyone else, and I’m interested to see if I live or die or what happens to me. I have a rough idea of what happens, but no, I have not seen the film and I really do not know how it ends.


An actor is never really going to have a full context of the film they’re making until they see that final cut, of course — that’s just the editing process, that’s just how moviemaking works. Things change, things can get swapped around, what might have been shot with one intent could be chopped up and fixed around to be used in another context.

But with something like Endgame, it seems to go so much further beyond that, in order to keep as little information about the film from getting out into the hands of eager, speculation-driven fans in advance as possible.

For these actors, it’s like only helping to build one piece of the puzzle, without having any idea of what the shape of your puzzle piece is, how many other pieces there are, or hell, what the puzzle is even a picture of once it’s all put together.

The puzzle piece is less of a puzzle piece in that way and more of this bizarre, contextless mush. What is it even like to have to film like that?

We’ll find out soon enough — as will stars like Larson and Hemsworth — just what secrets all those puzzles will reveal when finally put together, when Avengers: Endgame hits theatres April 24.


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