Wearing that costume and feeling so strong and that your body was an intimidating factor and an inspiring factor for your army, as we all were. Because after a certain point, I never once felt silly or strange standing in my cape, that started to become, just a couple of days after putting it on, one of my biggest allies. I kind of became, I think, a bit addicted to it or perhaps addicted to the advantages it was giving me. There was always a part of me going, ‘Okay, am I going to stop doing this?’ But I really was really kind of happy and surprised that I kept it up. There’s a way of doing it and there’s a way of talking about it and as you can see I’m not very good at talking about it. To try to get all those in, with a man who really doesn’t talk that much was a challenge, and then to do it all in front of a green screen. I mean, he’s crazy, and there’s a fearlessness that borders on insane. There’s an arrogance there, there’s a confidence, there’s a humor, there’s a dryness, there’s a passion, there’s a certain amount of humanity, and then, the guy is a nut job. Then you can fun with the other things because it was actually difficult to suck all that in and let out… He had a lot of things going on. Just that feeling of real inner-confidence. I literally walked around Montreal with my shoulders back and my chest up. Also, that fire is burning inside you, and then you can go completely the opposite way. Every time I trained, it made me feel more like a Spartan, more like a king, more like I was impressing my men and more like they would be willing to follow me. ![]() Even doing a lot of working out just before the takes, and constantly doing that. For me, I really focused on becoming as big and as strong and as confident in those things as I could possibly be.
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