Channing Tatum talks his nude scene
Channing Tatum has become a professional to do everything for the camera, thank you in no case Magic Mike Films, but even he was certainly apprehended to undress for an action sequence in his new film, Roof.
“I have been really naked in front of many people on many different sets,” said Tatum, who spoke with Weekly entertainment For a first exclusive overview of the film. “Oddly, it was not very uncomfortable. I was in foreigners. The only bizarre part was to make a naked action sequence.”
The naked scene in question is briefly presented in the first trailer (below) for the film directed by Derek Cianfrance. Tatum, who portrays Jeffrey Manchester’s real crime during his stay under an alias in a community of North Carolina after having escaped prison, is surprised by suspecting in a US “R” toys and tries to escape.
“It was new because I said to myself:” The guys, we’re going to see everything. There is no way to film this without seeing something “”, recalls Tatum. “And they are like ‘Ah, we will discover it post [production]. ‘”
Even as an experienced actor who filmed several nude scenes, Tatum worried about the production would really be able to prevent the public from seeing. “There was a blow where you just go down in the barrel … I don’t know if you can even broadcast this,” quips the actor. “I don’t know how we do that.”
Aside, Tatum says that the experience itself was “funny and fun on the set” and joking that it was a bit like the “worst nightmare” of everyone, since he was “the only naked at work” and that he was filmed in a “R” us toy of all places.
Davi Russo / Paramount
RoofThe history of Manchester’s life for a period of six months in 2004, when he lived under the alias of John Zorn. After a daring prison break, Jeff rises in the walls of a “r” toys, emerging at night to explore the toy store. But when he falls in love with Leigh Wainscott (Kirsten Dunst), a divorced mother who works at the toy store, he tries to build a new life until his past begins to catch them.
“I really hope I love the film,” said Tatum. “He made bad decisions in his life. He is a fact. But he is probably the first to tell you. But I just find him a soul so beautiful and unhappy. It breaks my heart; he is so intelligent and alive, even for a telephone call. The first time I really talked to him.”
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RoofIn theaters on October 10, also features Peter Dinklage as an US “R” “R” toys, Juno Temple and Lakeith Stanfield as a Manchester, and Uzo Aduba and Ben Mendelsohn.
—Porting by Maureen Lee Lenker