In Mark Wahlberg’s inspiring new journey drama Arthur the King, the actor stars as an journey racer who inadvertently befriends a stray canine throughout a race, which accompanies him and his crew for over 400 miles throughout the Dominican Republic.
Wahlberg made an look at a particular fan screening on the AMC Century Metropolis 15, which served as a pet adoption occasion, on Monday, and spoke with ET’s Kevin Frazier about capturing the difficult movie — which was made much more grueling by an harm he sustained throughout capturing.
Wahlberg defined that, as a result of the movie relies on a real story, “You want to pay attention to the small stuff and you want to look the part.” This meant plenty of prep and plenty of coaching to prepare for the sort of racing that actually goes on throughout these excursions.
“Unfortunately, I tore my meniscus the first day, so all my training went out the window,” mentioned Wahlberg, referring to the piece of cartilage that serves as a cushion or buffer between the thigh bone and the shin bone. “Then it’s basically just about getting through it.”
“So I got to understand the suffering a little bit more than I wanted to,” Wahlberg added.
In accordance with the actor, the harm actually occurred in the course of the very first day of capturing, as they have been filming the second scene of the day. He went to a health care provider instantly and was warned that not pausing manufacturing and therapeutic might result in critical harm — however Wahlberg felt obligated to work by means of the ache.
“I just felt like, you know, it took a long time to get the movie off the ground and we were in the middle of COVID, and if I had shut it down, I don’t know if we would’ve got it up and running again,” he recalled. “So I just kind of toughed it out and I found different ways of getting through.”
In reality, it wasn’t simply the harm that was laborious for the motion star. As Wahlberg defined, “I did a lot of things that I didn’t want to do. The first was walking out of my trailer in spandex.”
“I thought I would never put on a superhero suit or spandex, and I put it on and I had to shave my legs. What little hair I had on my legs I had to shave off,” Wahlberg revealed, referring to the Lycra bodysuits the racers put on beneath their gear. “It still hasn’t come back.”
Within the film, Wahlberg and his racing crew — performed by Simu Liu and Nathalie Emmanuel — bike, kayak, run and zipline throughout 435 miles of rugged terrain. At one level, Bear Grylls makes a cameo as himself, and Wahlberg was requested if he’d ever be serious about occurring a survivalist journey with the well-known outdoorsman.
“If I get permission from my wife, yes,” Wahlberg mentioned of his spouse of 14 years, Rhea Durham, with whom he shares 4 youngsters.
Wahlberg defined that he even received scared throughout filming that his spouse would possibly get mad he went on the zipline due to how harmful it’s.
“She doesn’t think I need to be doing things that are too extreme,” he mentioned. “I mean, I’m not doing any Tom Cruise type of stuff. But I do enough where it’s like, ‘Yeah, you don’t want to put yourself in harm’s way.'”
Arthur the King races into theaters March 15.
RELATED CONTENT: