BvS Jesse Eisenberg IS Lex Luthor - Part 10

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Eisenberg also said that Luthor is "the best part he ever got to play"

I love how Jesse seems to have fallen in love with the character of Lex. A good actor can always bring a lot to a role...but if the actor really loves the character he is playing, it usually shows in a great way... Heath as the Joker, Hiddleston as Loki, etc...when an actor is having fun with the part and is fully invested, the audience can usually sense it and it just adds that extra spark.

So I'm glad Jesse enjoyed playing the character, it makes me even more anxious to see his performance.
 
lex is such a comedian in bvs, some of that will be funny, but could also be tiresome at a certain point if we don't get to see him with some seriousness
 
It's like those scenes in the trailers where Lex comes off condescending and sinister don't exist anymore. But one scene where he says, "Wow!" and now we've seen all of him and his full character and he's a comedian. Okay.
 
lex is such a comedian in bvs, some of that will be funny, but could also be tiresome at a certain point if we don't get to see him with some seriousness

Agreed, although when he says "the devil will do it" he seems pretty mad scientist scary, at least.

I wonder if when he loses his hair he'll do an about-face and sober up, and he'll then behave more like he looks in the bald picture of him.

Also, as some here have speculated, the high-strung genius nerd shtick may just be a public persona alter-ego used to get people to underestimate him.
 
It's like those scenes in the trailers where Lex comes off condescending and sinister don't exist anymore. But one scene where he says, "Wow!" and now we've seen all of him and his full character and he's a comedian. Okay.

The man who brings about Doomsday ain't no joke.

If Lex appears dorky at first, well that his 'secret identity' that hides how evil and brilliant he really is, much like Bruces playboy persona hides his brilliant mind, and Clarks unspectacular reporter persona hides his godlike powers. Everyone is wearing masks...including Lex, so I say go ahead and laugh at him now, once Doomsdays unleashed I don't think anybody will be laughing.

I sort of hope they play up 'Lex is a joke' in the beginning, to make the reveal when the mask comes off all the more shocking.
 
Well there you go:

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I'm choosing to trust Snyder on this.
 
Actually see the context and understand the depth?! He's asking too much of us. :o
 
We don't do, "wait and see." Such an idea is foreign to many of us. :o
 
What a bizarre idea. What's the point of that when I can decide I already know everything and start hating the direction they took here and now? :o
 
Back on Lex, I like what we've seen and read of Jesse's Lex so far. It's not your traditional take on him visually and personality wise but it's an intriguing one and I can say I won't be bored by him at all.
 
I can already see the crowds of fanboys who have been hating on him "changing" their minds once the movie comes out. We've all seen this before. Also, I'm really glad Snyder and co. are taking chances with this character and are not doing the obvious with him.
 
What is more likely is that fans will say they like the real lex but still didn't like the way his "public persona" was portrayed. For me, everything else about him could be great, but that trailer scene was bad
 
I can already see the crowds of fanboys who have been hating on him "changing" their minds once the movie comes out. We've all seen this before. Also, I'm really glad Snyder and co. are taking chances with this character and are not doing the obvious with him.
Fans could say they don't like seeing only the trailer versions of Lex where he does the facade. Then they end up liking the overall portrayal in final movie that shows him as more than a comedic Lex.
 
I've said it before but I truly think he's going to steal the movie.
 
I've said it before but I truly think he's going to steal the movie.

From what i've heard about him and Terrio concocting i also have a feeling that he will knock it outta the park. :woot:
 
Movie Sneaks A 'super-scary' Jesse Eisenberg? Meet the new Lex Luthor (with hair) in 'Batman v Superman'


http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/herocomplex/la-ca-hc-sneaks-lex-luthor-20160110-story.html

"I had a Mentos. Do you want one?" Perched in a glass conference room wearing a T-shirt with the sleeves hiked up, actor Jesse Eisenberg unrolls candy mints and makes polite conversation.

Meet the new face of the Machiavellian comic-book supervillain Lex Luthor.

Eisenberg has just finished filming behind-the-scenes footage for "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice," expanding on Luthor's ancillary storyline that Warner Bros. dreamed up for his character's immense corporation, LexCorp. It's a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the SEO-friendly villain that will be used to market the film, which opens March 25.

Gone is the magnificent underground lair or ascot-heavy wardrobe, replaced with a Fortune 500-friendly progeny. This is the millennial Luthor, a deviation that Eisenberg dubs a relief. "When you're doing a movie like this and playing a character that's already been played, the further away it is from those previous incarnations the better," Eisenberg said. "Because chances are, especially with a guy like Gene Hackman or Kevin Spacey, you're not going to get favorably compared."

Also absent: Luthor's signature hair style — or lack of hair. True comic-book aficionados know that Luthor is usually presented totally bald. Many months back the studio released images of Eisenberg outfitted in the famous chrome dome. But recent footage has shown the young mogul introducing Superman's alter ego, Clark Kent (Henry Cavill), to Bruce Wayne (Ben Affleck) capped with long, flowing brown locks not dissimilar to Eisenberg's real hair.

When asked to explain Luthor's new hairdo, Eisenberg would only joke about it. "Literally, there would be one of those Wile E. Coyote things where the piano drops from the sky randomly on his head. That's what will happen to me." Clearly Warner Bros. is protective of even the tiniest strand of spoilers in the latest addition to the franchise relaunch of the DC Comics movie-verse.

However, Eisenberg promises the patience will pay off, "When you see the movie, you'll see. It's the greatest scene that I've ever gotten to take part in — it accounts for the change in hair."

Eisenberg is best known for portraying neurotic, verbal characters such as Mark Zuckerberg in "The Social Network" or the reporter interviewing David Foster Wallace in "The End of the Tour." So the actor called stepping into the scoundrel spotlight a "liberating experience."

He admits that playing an iconic role in a highly anticipated movie comes with a price.

"The only difference between this movie and everything else I've ever been in is this has an audience that has prior expectations, and that's the only thing that I find disconcerting because it feels like some people are occasionally ready to get angry at me for the part they haven't seen me play yet. It's bewildering."

Eisenberg's Luther will still be a calculating force of evil, but like the new Superman that came before him in "Man of Steel" this is a chance to re-introduce and expand the classic character. So there's going to be a bit of Luthor back story — a compelling reason for Eisenberg to take the role.

"The character has a core of reality," Eisenberg explained. "[Luthor] has a back story that's tragic and an emotional inner life that's authentic. That's in the movie. It was my interest in playing the character with a real emotional core, and this writer, Chris Terrio's interest in creating a character that seemed viable in reality."

In the film, Luthor becomes the physical catalyst for the epic battle between Superman and Batman. He's the little "v" between Batman and Superman. He's particularly worried about Superman's powers — apparently Luthor isn't keen on letting an omnipotent alien gain access to whatever he wants. That and a heaping messiah complex.

"To call him self-aggrandizing is to say that the Titanic was a sailboat," Eisenberg said. "He is a narcissist of the first order but complicated in that way as well in that he is terribly troubled and competitive and vengeful. He looks at Superman not as somebody to destroy but as genuine threat to humanity."

Despite Eisenberg's empathetic connection to Luthor, "Batman v Superman" director Zack Snyder originally approached the actor for another part in the film. Snyder won't reveal that character. "Let's call it a secret, but nevertheless it was the exact opposite of Lex Luthor," Snyder said, taking a break on the phone from drawing "Justice League" Aquaman in his storyboards. After Eisenberg declined, Snyder went back and offered him something "cooler," the role of Luthor.

"I feel like once [Eisenberg] found out who Lex was he embraced it," Snyder said. "Once you kind of start digging into Lex, it's a bit of a scary thing to be that guy. I don't think he just goes 'Oh, I'll just be that guy and then when I go home I'm not him.' I think the thing with Jessie is he wasn't immune to the reality of playing a super-scary character."
 
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