LOS ANGELES (AP) - Dylan O'Brien says that sticking with his lead role in the action movie āAmerican Assassinā helped him recover from a traumatic accident during filming of a āMaze Runnerā sequel in March 2016.
OāBrien told The Associated Press on Monday that being back on a set was a necessary step in his recovery. He said at times after the accident he felt like he wasnāt going to be able to return to filming, but he didnāt want to let acting go.
āIt really helped a lot, actually. It sort of became in a way that step that I needed in recovery to know I could do it again, I could still be on a set and things could be done in the right way, too, and things could be done safely in the way that theyāre supposed to be done,ā OāBrien said.
āAmerican Assassinā involved numerous stunts and fight scenes.
āI didnāt want to let go. It would have been hard to say you know, āAh, forget it. Iām not going to be able to make it.ā Which I did genuinely feel for the longest time. But I just - I decided that it was probably going to be best for me mentally actually to do it.ā
He declined to discuss his injuries sustained or what he remembered about the accident while filming a sequence involving two vehicles in British Columbia, Canada. But he said the shock of the accident helped him to understand his character in āAmerican Assassin,ā who becomes a CIA counter-terrorism operative after his fiancee is killed by terrorists.
āGoing through any sort of trauma like that, funny enough, I felt like I was more informed about the aftermath of an incident like the one my character goes through than I ever couldāve been,ā OāBrien, 25, said. āSo I kind of then ended up having a lot of pride in sort of diving into that, portraying that.ā
Co-star Sanaa Lathan says she could see how OāBrien used his own experience in his performance.
āHeās been through a lot,ā she said. āI was really impressed with how he brought that depth and that pain to this character. I really believed it. ⦠I havenāt talked to him about this, but it probably was a cathartic form of therapy too, to just get it out.ā
The āTeen Wolfā star has remained largely out of view and hasnāt publicly discussed the accident or extent of his injuries, which were serious enough to halt production on the film, subtitled āThe Death Cure,ā for nearly a year.
A report prepared by the occupational safety agency WorkSafe BC said OāBrienās accident happened after a change was made to an action sequence involving two vehicles that were not connected. It stated that drivers would have to keep the two vehicles close enough together to make the stunt work, and that OāBrien was harnessed to one vehicle while physically riding on the back of another. Several details about the accident were redacted, and the report did not detail OāBrienās injuries.
Worksafe BC stated that a meeting was not held after filming plans were changed. The agency later determined that the production had complied with its recommendations, which included that appropriate rehearsals should be performed and certain high-risk sequences should be done by qualified stunt people.
Last week, OāBrien made his eighth and final appearance with his āTeen Wolfā co-stars at San Diegoās massive Comic-Con.
āItās always kind of weird, man - itās great though. Itās a great weird. Comic-Con has always cracked me up,ā OāBrien said.
āAmerican Assassinā hits theatres in September.