
A superhero movie is commonly about good boys, but not Good heavens*. It has a band of characters that falls into what can be called ‘Gray areas’.
Jake Schreier, director behind the Marvel movie, explained the complex characters in an interview with Empire.
“You are talking about a group of characters who have done many bad things, and maybe they are struggling to feel good about themselves,” said the filmmaker.
However, the director said: “There is an element that speaks with mental health and loneliness.”
“And how part of the darkness we experience in our lives cannot necessarily be fixed, but it can only be lighter through connection and find others,” he shared.
With regard to the lessons, Jake said he learned when filming Good heavens* That “there are so many things that I didn’t know before starting the movie”.
He continued: “The greatest learning curve for me was the proportion of the action to the most emotional scenes and driven by the characters.”
The filmmaker said: “And how, although they are more days of filming than I have had, the things of action eat them quite fast.”
“When we got to the end, he felt like, ‘Oh, now I feel that we get how to do a little better,” he shared.
“(In Thunderbolts*) We are in the middle of nowhere in Utah, in a beautiful location, possess a road and film in heat of 100 degrees,” Jake added.
“Or being in the second highest building in the world. These are very special experiences,” concluded the director.
Good heavens* It is transmitting in Disney+.