Estou perguntando o material do suporte, não o martelo no universo. Estou pedindo ao material a ponta, a alça e a cinta do martelo.
Estou perguntando o material do suporte, não o martelo no universo. Estou pedindo ao material a ponta, a alça e a cinta do martelo.
Há uma entrevista de Russell Bobbitt, mestre de Hollywood, sobre isso em este artigo do Screenrant. Na verdade, existem vários acessórios, dependendo da natureza da cena em que ela se encontra. Borracha, fibra de vidro, você escolhe.
So how many hammers are usually on set? You see them flip it around and obviously it seemed lighter and then you see the real one and it's still fairly dense. It's pretty heavy.
Bobbitt: So all the different materials I use for Mjolnir. I have a metal one which is about 60 pounds and then we do a fiberglass one. We do a hard rubber and a soft rubber. The soft rubber is for stunts, if he's throwing it or catching it or hitting somebody or it hits somebody, we use a very soft rubber. The softer the material, the harder it is for me to sell as metal because it's more porous and it's harder to paint. The metal one looks beautiful because it's metal. The next one down is fiberglass. I can put a really beautiful paint job on a fiberglass hammer. That's the one he'll carry around a lot, you know, if he has, if I see that he's going to have a 12-14 hour day, I'm giving them something lighter because it's, eve if you're the perfect specimen that Chris Hemsworth is, and I'm sure lots of people will agree with me when I say that ,it still gets heavy after 12 hours, no matter how strong you are. So I provide lightweight ones and rubber depending on the stunts and whatnot. And I will, just a little trivial fact the paint for that fiberglass hammer to make it look like the real metal hammer and make it look like Uru metal, is $1,000 a gallon. That's a crazy long process, that takes two to three days, and that doesn't count the labor. If there's anything expensive out there, I find it.
Russell Bobbitt Interview: Marvel's Prop Master, Joe Deckelmeier for Screenrant, June 4th, 2018
Há também um suporte específico para as cenas do "personagem X não pode levantar Mjolnir (porque eles não são dignos)". Este é intencionalmente pesado, para propósitos de realismo. Não é especificado o que é feito, mas presumivelmente não é de borracha.
Bobbitt: But I also use old materials - not just 3D printing. Captain America’s shield shouldn't always feel light - so I use aluminium so the actor feels the weight of the piece.
With Thor’s hammer I get one that’s 80lbs so the actors have one they that can’t lift for some scenes. It adds authenticity and realism.
De volta ao 2012 (a fase 1 nem estava concluída!), Marvel vendeu alguns adereços em leilão. Abaixo estão as descrições fornecidas no catálogo do leilão, feitas por Profiles in History. Como estão um pouco cansados com o uso na produção, valem a soma modesta de aproximadamente US $ 3,000 - US $ 6,000 cada.
STUNT MJÖLNIR WAR HAMMER FROM THOR
Stunt Mjölnir, Thor's distinctive large, square-headed war hammer, with foam rubber head realistically painted to resemble ancient forged metal, entwined Nordic Design and Runes, and stout handle wrapped in brown leather with lanyard. Head measures 8 ½ in. x 5 in., 17 in. long overall.
[Item 212, Mjölnir stuck in rock] Exhibits minor cracking and wear from production use. $4,000 - $6,000
[Item 213, Mjölnir wielded by Thor] Exhibits an indentation on one end, some cracking and wear from production use. $3,000 - $5,000