Sunday, 24 July 2011

Kristen Stewart Feels 'Strong' In 'Snow White' Armor

Walt Disney's Snow White was wishing for prince charming to come along. Kristen Stewart's Snow White looks like she has no problem going after what she wants.

While cameras don't start rolling on Snow White and the Huntsman until next week in London, the fair maiden herself was at Comic-Con today representin', along with evil queen Charlize Theron, huntsman Chris Hemsworth, prince Sam Claflin, producer Joe Roth and director Rupert Sanders.

And while there wasn't any footage to speak of, the very appreciative Hall H audience was treated to an exclusive first look at the principal characters in costume. Check out the all-around fierceness after the jump.

Stewart's Snow White doesn't have a yellow and blue dress, and there's not a bow to be seen. Instead, she was decked out in a full suit of armor and sported a giant shield with a white tree emblazoned on it. Her Prince Charming, played by Claflin, was similarly dressed, though he teased that his prince was not as sweet as he might have been in previous incarnations.

As the titular Huntsman, Hemsworth looked a bit ragged and dirty with his axe and commoner's clothes. When asked what it took to get him in costume for that, he joked that it required "about four or five of hours of rolling around in the mud, four days of drinking" and for the clothes to be dug up "from the backyard in Australia."

The evil stepmother, played by Theron, was as imposing as anyone could have been hoped for. Theron looked like a more badass version of the evil queen from the classic Disney cartoon, with a braided blonde coif on her head and a dagger in hand.

This, as a fable, she sort of just starts off as a bad person, so it was important to understand why she is the way she is," Theron explained about her character. "A lot of her circumstances will kind of bleed into her actions ... She's a serial killer; I'm pretty much preparing to play a serial killer."

This will be one of Stewart's first roles outside of "The Twilight Saga," and Roth said part of the draw of casting her was to be the one who helped her expand as an actress. For Stewart, it was the chance to play a tougher role.

"It's not a little girl sitting by a well with little tweety birds telling her what to do and where to go," she said of her character. The costume makes you feel kind of strong occasionally, sometimes, but I kind of feel tiny, my pinhead sticks out of these enormous things.

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