Jai Courtney recently shared his thoughts on his character Captain Boomerang in the upcoming "Suicide Squad" film.
Fans will be seeing the anti-hero film "Suicide Squad" soon and the 29-year-old actor has talked about his costume in an interview with IGN. He said that the Australian superhero, who uses high-tech boomerangs to counter the enemies, will not be a mirror of the comic book version.
"It's not going to look like anything that's been done before," Courtney said.
Courtney also revealed that he had a few fittings on the costumes and the costume is under development.
David Ayer is set to pilot the upcoming film with Alex Ott, Andy Horwitz, Bruce Franklin, Charles Roven, Colin Wilson, Deborah Snyder, Geoff Johns, Richard Suckle, and Zack Snyder as producers. John Ostrander, Rober Kanigher, and Ross Andru will be the film co-writers.
Also, Courtney expressed his attraction to Ayer 's process and added that the director is approachable to his cast. Moreover, the actor disclosed that he has been training for the roles prior to Christmas in 2014. He will be meeting the other cast members in Toronto few weeks from now.
About his character's possible involvement in "The Flash" movie, Courtney revealed that it has not been tackled yet.
"I'm not withholding anything, but that is a dialogue that hasn't been opened yet," Courtney said.
"Suicide Squad" is an upcoming American film based on the DC Comics anti-hero team of the same name. It will also serve as the third installment in the DC Comics' shared film universe.
The movie will feature Cara Delevingne as Enchantres, Jai Courtney as Boomerang, Jared Leto as The Joker, Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flagg, Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, Will Smith as Deadshot, and Viola Davis as Amanda Waller. It will be produced by Dune Entertainment and will be distributed by Warner Bros.
"Suicide Squad" is slated to premiere in theaters and cinemas in the United States on August 5, 2016.
In another interview with Hero Complex, Courtney talked about his role Eric in the "Divergent" series. He said that revisiting the role for the second time was "great" and "a little funny" for him.