
Q: Natalie, in the first film, Jane was very much a spectator, whereas this time she’s right in the middle of Thor’s world.

You’d do anything for them, but at the same time, the simplest things can annoy you. You understand what it’s like to have that kind of love-hate sort of thing. You know, don’t do this.” I’ve certainly played that scene. Yeah, we couldn’t be 100 meters down the road before the three of us’d be, like, “Get off me. In one of the scenes where they’re on the spaceship exiting Asgard, Tom and I were saying “No, this has gotta feel like when you’re in the back seat in the car with your siblings”. Q: Did you use the relationships with your brothers for any of the scenes though? When I’m on set with Chris, whatever he serves I’ll return, and he’ll return back and that is the joy of it for me. The more you trust each other, the deeper you can go. The two characters define each other, and need each other, and all acting is about what happens in the space between people. From, from the beginning of Kenneth Branagh’s Thor all the way through Joss Whedon’s The Avengers and into “Dark World,” it has been an amazing adventure for both of us. We had the chance to ask the questions that Thor and Loki really haven’t had the focus to do yet.

We just had a chemistry and the same kind of enthusiasm.

We’re able to pick up where we left off, and have developed a great friendship along the way. There’s certainly a shorthand we have with this being the third film we’ve shot together now, and you spend a chunk of your shooting time getting to know one another. Q: Chris and Tom, the subject of trust is prevalent within the film and, having worked together now on a number of films is there an actor’s trust there between you?
