Spider Man: Far From Home star Jake Gyllenhaal shows his FAILED attempt of tackling post 'premiere blues'
Spider-Man: Far From Home actor Jake Gyllenhaal was recently seen joining Tom Holland and Zendaya on the red carpet of the movie's premiere. Here's what he did after the premiere ended.
Spider-Man: Far From Home premiere took place in Los Angeles recently. The cast and crew, including Tom Holland, Jake Gyllenhaal, Zendaya and Samuel L Jackson and others, walked the red carpet. We also saw a small Avengers: Endgame throwback when little Lexi Rabe also made an appearance at the premiere. She posed with Tom. While we saw how the premiere unfolded, Jake has given us a glimpse of how things went down after the premiere wrapped up. The actor, who plays Mysterio in the new Spider-Man movie, headed to the bar to cope with the post-premiere blues but things did not go in his favour.
The actor took to Instagram to share a video from post the premiere where he is seated at the bar with his fishbowl headgear mimicking his gear from Mysterio. The actor is seen seated at a bar with fish and chips placed in front of him. The actor's face isn't visible and clearly, he took can't see what's kept in front of him. Thus, while the beer overflows from the glass and the fish falls off the plate. The actor eventually gives up.
He shared the video with the caption, "Post Spider-Man premiere blues. #spidermanfarfromhome." Check out the video below:
Post Spider-Man premiere blues. #spidermanfarfromhome
Spider-Man: Far From Home embarks Jake's journey into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The actor confessed he felt the "pressure" because his comic book counterpart is "so different" from the one shown in the movie. “Walking into the MCU, the Marvel Universe, it’s huge. There’s sort of a lot that’s expected of you, in the process of making the movies and also as the character. And it’s the same kind of feeling of someone giving you that suit and putting it on and going, ‘Is this right for me?’” he told GQ Magazine.
Although he had "fun" joining Holland, he felt the pressure of joining such a storied franchise. “I think people love that character and it’s so different from the character in the comics, and when you’re doing something as different from the comics as we did in this, I think you go like [winces]," he added.
























































