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聯合翻譯 引用自 China Post http://www.chinapost.com.tw/guidepost/topics/default.asp?sub=0

 

THE SAME BUT DIFFERENT


In the world of the X-Men, Charles Xavier is a powerful telepath, but Scottish actor McAvoy feels his greatest attribute is his compassion. "He's constantly trying to reach out and ease other people's pain," said McAvoy. However, at the end of "X-Men: First Class," he was injured and abandoned by his best friends Magneto and Mystique, meaning the man that Wolverine finds when he travels back in time is angry and bitter. McAvoy said his scene with Stewart is very important to the story. "He sort of gives my character a talking-to and tells me to get my stuff together," McAvoy explained.

One thing McAvoy made sure to do was make his character different from his future self. While he's not as foolhardy and selfish as in "X-Men: First Class," he's also not as wise as Stewart's older Professor X yet, either. The idea was that "when you have our faces close together," McAvoy said, "you see how different these men actually are."

Of course, no X-Men movie would be complete without some action scenes involving the series' most beloved character, Wolverine. Hugh Jackman, who has made the character his own, said the last movie about the hero, 2013's "The Wolverine," was almost a rebirth of the character on screen — "You see him coming to terms a little more with who he is, his nature." 

 

聯合翻譯 引用自 China Post http://www.chinapost.com.tw/guidepost/topics/default.asp?sub=0

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