Tom Hanks and Robin Wright Wore Girdles, Used A.I. to Get ‘Rid of the Saggy Neck’ as 17-Year-Olds inHere

Mar. 15, 2025

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on Oct. 25.Photo:VALERIE MACON/AFP via Getty

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on Oct. 25.

VALERIE MACON/AFP via Getty

To play teenagers in theirnew movieHere,Tom HanksandRobin Wrightrelied on movie magic — and some close-fitting undergarments.The film, whichreunites the formerForrest Gumpcostarswith director Robert Zemeckis, follows Richard (Hanks) and Margaret Young (Wright) over the course of several years as they fall in love, get married and have a family together.For the scenes when Hanks, 68, and Wright, 58, portrayed the younger versions of Richard and Margaret, Wright shared exactly how A.I. technology de-aged them in a new interview withThe New York Times.“It’s literally data they derived from interviews Tom and I did when we were 18, 19, 21; still photographs; stuff that is online. They deposit it into this machine, and they made us up to look 17,” she said.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Robin Wright and Tom Hanks in ‘Here.'.Sony PicturesWright and Hanks did contribute, too, she added: “We wore the costumes, we had girdles when we had to be young.”“We were acting physically, raising the octave in our voice, to be a 17-year-old,” Wright said elsewhere in the interview. “But A.I. gave us the innocence in the eyes and the youthful skin. And got rid of the saggy neck.”Tom Hanks and Robin Wright in ‘Here.'.SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINMENT INCThe experience of seeing themselves de-aged in real-time on a monitor as soon as they filmed a scene was “kooky,” Hankstold PEOPLE at the Oct. 25 world premiereofHereat the AFI Fest in Los Angeles.“That was like the gimmicky kind of aspect of it, because you could do that with regular makeup if you want to do that. But because we have this other super fast-filter computer that happened right then and there, we don’t have to wait for the post-production process to view [ourselves as young].”But for Hanks, playing an adolescent wasn’t the biggest challenge. It was portraying someone on the cusp of middle age.“The hardest for us was when we were playing 35. That time when your metabolism stops, gravity starts tearing you down, your bones start wearing off. You stand differently,” he toldEntertainment Tonight.Hereis in theaters now.

To play teenagers in theirnew movieHere,Tom HanksandRobin Wrightrelied on movie magic — and some close-fitting undergarments.

The film, whichreunites the formerForrest Gumpcostarswith director Robert Zemeckis, follows Richard (Hanks) and Margaret Young (Wright) over the course of several years as they fall in love, get married and have a family together.

For the scenes when Hanks, 68, and Wright, 58, portrayed the younger versions of Richard and Margaret, Wright shared exactly how A.I. technology de-aged them in a new interview withThe New York Times.

“It’s literally data they derived from interviews Tom and I did when we were 18, 19, 21; still photographs; stuff that is online. They deposit it into this machine, and they made us up to look 17,” she said.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Robin Wright and Tom Hanks in ‘Here.'.Sony Pictures

Robin Wright and Tom Hanks in ‘Here.'

Sony Pictures

Wright and Hanks did contribute, too, she added: “We wore the costumes, we had girdles when we had to be young.”

“We were acting physically, raising the octave in our voice, to be a 17-year-old,” Wright said elsewhere in the interview. “But A.I. gave us the innocence in the eyes and the youthful skin. And got rid of the saggy neck.”

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright in ‘Here.'.SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINMENT INC

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright in ‘Here.'

SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINMENT INC

The experience of seeing themselves de-aged in real-time on a monitor as soon as they filmed a scene was “kooky,” Hankstold PEOPLE at the Oct. 25 world premiereofHereat the AFI Fest in Los Angeles.

“That was like the gimmicky kind of aspect of it, because you could do that with regular makeup if you want to do that. But because we have this other super fast-filter computer that happened right then and there, we don’t have to wait for the post-production process to view [ourselves as young].”

But for Hanks, playing an adolescent wasn’t the biggest challenge. It was portraying someone on the cusp of middle age.

“The hardest for us was when we were playing 35. That time when your metabolism stops, gravity starts tearing you down, your bones start wearing off. You stand differently,” he toldEntertainment Tonight.

Hereis in theaters now.

source: people.com