The guns come huge - both bicep and semi-automatic-wise – on the set of “The Expendables 2,” but how big was the competition between action heroes young and old for the most massive muscles?
PopcornBiz asked a squadron full of Sylvester Stallone's Expendables – including Jason Statham, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Dolph Lundgren, Terry Crews, Randy Couture and Scott Adkins, all action stars in their own right – to shoot off their mouths on a variety of subjects, and got a round of friendly fire in return:
On non-stop workouts, friendly rivalries and getting those biceps as big as Sly wants them:
Jason Statham: You never see any signs of pain. If someone has got a twisted whatever, no one is going to show that sign: ‘No – I’m fine.’ A lot of the stuff that we do, the ego gets thrown out of the window. Everyone has made their stamp in some way, so there is nothing to prove. We just want to get stuck in together, so there is a good feeling about it. No one is trying to fight for the camera here. The better everyone else looks, the better we all look.
Randy Couture: I think physically, the pace and the standard was set by Sly. At 65 doing all his own stunts from the first movie on into the second movie and even injured and with all the other hats he was wearing, so what is anybody else after that gonna say? ‘No, I ain’t doing that.’ ‘Well, Sly just did it. You’re gonna do it, too.’
Scott Adkins: The gym was pretty full every night with famous faces. Everybody secretly trying to keep up with each other…You’re expected to look a certain way. It’s the action film of the summer: you got to look like an action star. I think everybody is respectful of everyone else doing it.
Dolph Lundgren: It’s too late once you start shooting. If you’re not in shape by the time you get there, you’re never going to do it. It’s too hard and the schedule’s too tough. You had better get in shape if you’re going to last through the picture. So I don’t think there’s any kind of positioning – you just try to do your job and you try to deliver what’s expected of you rather….You have to be able to kick run and do whatever you have to do. The rest is just hard work and waiting around.
Terry Crews: Sly was like ‘I got a scene for your arms you're not gonna believe!’ Sly knew how hard I worked to be in shape for this movie. I was going twice a day because that's the thing: I'm a little insecure, and my thing was I come from a comedy world, done a lot of comedies, not typically a lot of action, and everybody had done more action than I had. It just became a thing where I wanted to prove that I could bring what I had to bring and find my purpose in the movie. And my thing was to bring the look and to bring the guns and the whole thing. With Sly, he appreciates that. The more cut you get the better. He's like "Look at you – you're nice and cut! I like that!’
Jean-Claude Van Damme: Flexibility, fighting wise, I know how to kick today as good as 'Blood Sport,' but mass-wise I lost weight again for another movie. Sly said, 'Your arms, your guns – they are too small! They look like toothpicks.' I said, ‘Don’t worry – I can go to the gym.' I went to the gym every day and did light, light, light weights, because if you don't take the juice you can not get big. So, light weights you can get big naturally. You have to eat and you have to do lots of long reps for a long, long time. You're doing arms every day. So I was concentrating on the arms only and he put me with that black T-shirt so you don't see the chest. You look like a crab, you know.
On witnessing the latest reunion of ‘80s action hero buddies and onetime business partners Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Bruce Willis:
Statham: They know what they’re doing. It’s a bit of a wink to certain sort of films they’ve all done – Arnold comes in and says ‘I’m back!’ There are all these sort of homage moments that come, and I don’t think anyone is scratching their head to try and create a character. Their character has already been established.
Adkins: The one day [on set] with the three of them together, it was such camaraderie from the Planet Hollywood days. Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger ganged up on Stallone, taking the Mickey out of his shoes, which I thought was quite funny. They’re on the level playing field and are friends that go back a long way. It was just fun to see that.
Couture: One of the more interesting and special moments for me was when we all had wrapped, it was about 8 p.m., I’d gotten my workout in and was back at the hotel, and there was an Italian place in the hotel. I was the only one in the restaurant, sitting there just finishing my meal, and here comes Bruce and Sly with a few of their people with them and they sit at a different table, and they call me over. So here I am sitting with these guys at this dinner listening to them tell stories – I was just a bug on the wall, listening to the whole thing thinking ‘I can’t believe I’m sitting here. This is remarkable.’
Crews: It was a dream come true to be able to walk up to Arnold Schwarzenegger and tell him he's terminated. It's one of those things that you go oh man, I could do this – This is America! America's a great place!
Van Damme: I'll tell you what: those guys were like role models for me, because we need to look at something to have a goal. I saw 'Rambo.' I saw 'Rocky.' I saw 'Conan.' I saw 'Die Hard.' And so to me, they were like heroes. I was back in Belgium watching them on the screen, buying tickets and dreaming of becoming like them. I wanted to be an actor since I was 12 years old, and now here I am and they're chasing me. A metaphor. I'm the villain, right, and so the only way to be good with them and to be scary against them and for them not to like me…so when I came on the set I didn't talk to nobody. Of course, when the movie was finished I was like, 'Hey, guys – I really admire you, but I didn't talk to you in the beginning because I wanted to have that type atmosphere, that type of tension.'
On Stallone’s complete understanding of the action genre as a filmmaker:
Statham: He’s the conductor. He likes to be that. No disrespect to Simon West because he’s the director of this film, but Sly creates these characters and he writes them so he knows them inside out. If you’re not hitting the right note, he’s the first person to tell you!
Adkins: Obviously he knows a lot about it because he’s the first guy to manufacture three franchises that have been successful. He’s been at the top of his game for over 30 years, and you can’t say that of many people. Obviously, everybody respects and knows what he’s done – how he talks and everybody listens. That’s why he’s able to be the ringmaster of all these big personalities, these big action guys. Everybody respects him and if you’re smart, you’ve gotta listen to what he’s said and pay attention.
Crews: He's like a magician. The brilliance of Sly is that he didn't give us a lot of backstory so you can keep building. Nothing's been set in stone…so it works out that there's a whole 'nother story somewhere deep in there for a 3 and for a 4 where you just keep going. This is the magic of Sly, this is why there are five Rambos, six Rockys. He really understands the lure of keeping everybody like ‘More, more, more!’ It's an amazing thing to watch.
Van Damme: Stallone asked me, 'Okay, tell me you're going to kill me.' I said, 'I'm going to kill you.' 'Okay, one more time.' 'I'm going to kill you.' 'One more time.' 'I'm going to kill you.' He didn't know which take to take, because if you do a good take you cannot repeat the same one so I gave him all the versions he wanted. He called my secretary and he said to her 'Tell Jean-Claude he's no good.' I started to get so sweaty! He said, 'He's excellent. I love him, but I don't know which f'ing take to use. Tell him to keep on going this way and I'm very happy.'
On who was most likely to utter the immortal phrase “I’m getting too old for this s***!”:
Statham: You’d think that would come out a lot, but I think I’m the only one who says it! I’ve actually said it more times than you might imagine.