Sebastian Stan faced prosthetic challenges in A Different Man

Sebastian Stan had to adapt to the challenge of wearing facial prosthetics in the first part of his film 'A Different Man'.

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Sebastian Stan faced prosthetic hardships in A Different Man
Sebastian Stan faced prosthetic hardships in A Different Man

Sebastian Stan had to overcome the challenges of wearing facial prosthetics in 'A Different Man'.

The 41-year-old actor stars in the new movie as Edward, an aspiring actor with facial disfigurement who undergoes reconstructive surgery in his attempts to start a new life, and had to adapt to the physical demands of wearing the prosthetics.

Sebastian told The Hollywood Reporter: "You have eyesight only in one eye, and you don’t see someone coming from the other side as quickly."

Director Aaron Schimberg revealed that the prosthetics even had an influence on Stan's performance in the second half of the film after Edward had had the reconstructive procedure.

The filmmaker said: "Even though the prosthetics would physically be gone, it would still be there for him (mentally)."

He said: "The prosthetic was something that, when I was writing the script, I thought, ‘Eventually this will get figured out somehow.’ But we’re three weeks away from shooting, and I am like, ‘What are we going to do here?'"

The movie sees Edward become obsessed with an actor called Oswald (Adam Pearson) - who is playing him in a production based on his former life - and Schimberg had trouble trying to incorporate the prosthetic into the picture until Stan came to his aid with a makeup artist.

He said: "The prosthetic was something that, when I was writing the script, I thought, 'Eventually this will get figured out somehow.' But we're three weeks away from shooting and I am like, 'What are we going to do here?' There's no movie without that prosthetic."

Sebastian is a producer on the flick and reflected on how he had full confidence in Schimberg's vision for the project.

The 'Falcon and the Winter Soldier' star recalled: "I remember Aaron coming in and saying something I’ve never heard a director say before, which was so helpful at the time. [He] essentially sat down and said, 'I wrote this thing. You guys are the actors. But we’re all here now and we’ve got to make this our own.'"