Welcome

Welcome to Brie Larson Archives, your most comprehensive source for the Academy Award winner Brie Larson. She is best known from movie production such as Room, Just Mercy, Scott Pilgrim vs The World, Kong: Skull Island and more. Brie can be seen as Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers in the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies. We aim to provide fans with high quality photos and videos, all the latest news, career information and more. Check out the site and please come back soon.

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Brie Larson and Samantha McMillen covers The Hollywood Reporter

Written by Marilia on Thursday, March 12th, 2020 No comments

Brie Larson and Samantha McMillen graced the one of the 4 covers of Power Stylists’s The Hoolywood Reporter edition that’s edition celebrating 10 years. Our gallery was updated with high quality scans and more. Watch the special video below:

Brie for Marie Claire UK

Written by Marilia on Saturday, February 9th, 2019 No comments

Brie is gracing the cover of this March issue of Marie Claire UK and it is such another gorgeous photoshoot. Check out the cover, scans and some outtakes in our gallery!

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When Brie Larson won an Oscar for the 2015 movie Room, I jumped for joy as if I knew her. I hadn’t even seen the film yet, but I’d just finished the moving novel by Emma Donoghue that it was based on (about a mother and her five-year-old son held captive in a room), and felt certain she had done the role of Ma justice.

I wouldn’t get to know her until 2017, when we started following each other on Twitter. I was feeling insecure about being vulnerable, so when I heard her talking about her own vulnerability, I decided to reach out to her. What would follow were messages about work, life, self-care and cross-stitching. These messages were sporadic in nature. After all, we are both busy people. She is an actor, producer and director; I write about pop culture, disability (I have cerebral palsy), blackness and womanhood. But the consistent, overriding impression I always got was that Brie Larson is a person who cares about the world and the people in it.

Aside from Room, the 29-year-old has starred in Trainwreck (2015), the critically-acclaimed indie film Short Term 12 (2013) and the blockbuster Kong: Skull Island (2017). Last year, she made her directorial debut in the indie comedy-drama Unicorn Store. It’s an impressive body of work in a relatively short space of time, but most people might not realise that far from being the ingénue, Larson – who was born in Sacramento, before moving to LA with her mother and sister – has been working since she was a child. Best known stateside for the sitcom Raising Dad(2001) and Disney Channel movie Right On Track (2003), she also had a stint as a pop star, signing a record deal at 13. These days, as a Time’s Up activist and advocate for sexual-assault survivors (she famously refused to clap when presenting Casey Affleck with an Oscar because of allegations against him), the actress utilises any power she has to be vocal about social and political issues. I can’t wait to see what she does with the power that comes with her latest role – Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel in Captain Marvel, the 21st (and first female-led) film in the multimillion dollar franchise.

Meeting Larson in person for the first time, it’s immediately clear why she was chosen for this role. Passionate, funny, genuine and kind, she’s eager to see the diverse and inclusive world she lives in reflected back on the big screen. She might not be a superhero in real life, but she’s ready to fight like one to make the world better…

I was thrilled you requested me to interview 
you. I thought, ‘This is game-changing’. It’s the biggest opportunity I’ve had. Nobody usually wants to take a chance on a disabled journalist. 
I’d love to know what your particular reasons were.

‘About a year ago, I started paying attention to what my press days looked like and the critics reviewing movies, and noticed 
it appeared to be overwhelmingly white male. So, I spoke to 
Dr Stacy Smith at the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, who put together a study to confirm that. Moving forward, I decided to make sure my press days were more inclusive. After speaking with you, the film critic Valerie Complex and a few other women of colour, it sounded like across the board they weren’t getting the same opportunities as others. When I talked to the facilities that weren’t providing it, they all had different excuses.’

And people don’t realise how vast the disabled community is. It isn’t just white men in wheelchairs. Some of us don’t use mobility aids, others use them part-time; some disabilities are visible, others are physical but invisible. I find it so hard to see people 
in this industry who look like me, so if I have any sort of visibility or notoriety, I can lift somebody else up.

‘I want to go out of my way to connect the dots. It just took me using the power that I’ve been given now as Captain Marvel. [The role] comes with all these privileges and powers that make me feel uncomfortable because I don’t really need them.’

I guess you got a taste of that power with the success of Room. I heard you found promoting 
the film quite overwhelming.

‘I’ve never craved the spotlight that often comes along with success in this business. It’s a by-product of the profession and a sign of the times. But any uncomfortableness I feel is balanced by the knowledge that it gives me the ability 
to advocate for myself and others.’

You had messages of support from Emma Stone and Jennifer Lawrence, which must have helped.

‘I found a supportive sisterhood, not just in Emma and Jen, but in the many women I’ve had the opportunity to come across and learn from over the past few years. It’s 
a community of like-minded people, which has been a gift.’

Read more at Marie Claire UK

Total Film (February 2019) Scans

Written by Marilia on Saturday, February 9th, 2019 No comments

Captain Marvel is featured on this month issue of Total Film. I’ve updated the gallery with scans. Check out our gallery!

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Scans: Premiere (March 2019)

Written by Marilia on Thursday, February 7th, 2019 No comments

Our gallery has been updated with HD scans from the french magazine Premiere. Enjoy!

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Scans: Elle México (February 2019)

Written by Marilia on Friday, February 1st, 2019 No comments

Our gallery has been updated with HD scans from Elle Mexico February issue. Enjoy!

Empire UK (February 2019) Scans

Written by Marilia on Friday, December 28th, 2018 No comments

We have a brand new image of Brie as Vers training with Jude Law in Captain Marvel in a scene that was showed during Comic Con Experience. And you also can check this out in the new issue (February 2019) of Empire UK, our gallery was just updated with HD scans, enjoy!

The MCU’s first female-fronted superhero story is ready for lift-off

IF 2019 IS THE YEAR OF MARVEL, then its glorious dawn arrives on 8 March, when the long-awaited Captain Marvel finally hits cinemas. Avengers: Endgame and Spider-Man: Far From Home follow in its wake (the former by just six weeks): both a tantalising MCU triple-hit and bamboozling narrative prospect after Infinity War’s post-credit sting saw Nick Fury paging Captain Marvel.

This isn’t the only reason Captain Marvel is laden with significance though; why it’s so much more than just yet another comic-book film. Making 2019 so much more than your average year in superhero movies.

Firstly, this isn’t, as many expected, a typical origin story. The film begins with Carol Danvers (Brie Larson) already imbued with her powers and a member of the Kree military unit, Starforce. It’s the first MCU film set in the ’90s. It’s the first to feature the alien race — and enemy of the Kree — the Skrulls (a scene which showed Carol Danvers trapped in a Skrull ship was shown at Brazil Comic-Con earlier this month). It’s the first female-fronted Marvel superhero movie. It’s also co-directed by a woman, Anna Boden — another first for the studio. And, as confirmed by Marvel President Kevin Feige, Captain Marvel won’t just be a run-of-the-mill hero with run-of-the-mill superpowers. She is, in fact, set to be the most powerful of them all. Ever. And possibly, you imagine, the key to Endgame. The character who might make all the difference to righting the wrongs of Infinity War. Of resurrecting those who were made dust. Is it 8 March yet?

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EMPIRE UK (FEBRUARY)

Total Film (Annual 2019) Scans

Written by Marilia on Friday, December 28th, 2018 No comments

Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame is featured in the annual issue of Total Film. You can find HQ scans on our gallery:

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