InStyle

As a kid, Mason Thames realized he wanted to become a performer each time he went to the movie theater with his dad and fell in love with the characters on-screen. After getting his foot in the door on Apple TV+’s For All Mankind, the 18-year-old is now recognized for his leading role in the record-breaking How to Train Your Dragon, this summer’s highest-grossing film (he’ll reprise the role of Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III in a follow-up, due 2027). This fall, Thames stars opposite Ethan Hawke in the horror sequel The Black Phone 2 and also appears alongside McKenna Grace, Dave Franco, and Allison Williams in Colleen Hoover’s Regretting You film adaptation. As if that weren’t enough, he’s also the lead (portraying Billie Joe Armstrong) in the forthcoming Green Day-inspired film, New Year’s Rev.

What do you hope to accomplish in the next 12 months?
I’m kind of just gone with the flow of things, but mainly just making my parents proud.

Who do you think is about to have a major breakthrough moment?
Aidan Bissett is an artist that I love so much, and he’s a really dear friend of mine. He just released a new album, which is so phenomenal and is on repeat 24/7 in my car and in my earbuds. Please go listen to it.

Who should play you in your biopic?
His name is Walker Scobell. He’s pretty great. Pretty fantastic young actor. And he’s very attractive. And, I think he could pull it off.

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TIFF 2025 (part 2)

Mason attended the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival a few days ago! Click on the gallery links below to see all photos.

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TIFF 2025

Mason attended the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival a few days ago! Click on the gallery links below to see all photos.

Events & Premieres Gallery Photoshoots
VMAN 55 (Fall/Winter 2025)


VMAN 55: Fall’s Most Wanted with Mason Thames

When he’s not training dragons or escaping from the criminally deranged on the big screen, Mason Thames is just a salt-of-the-earth Texan boy

Just 18 years old, Mason Thames is already proving he’s more than a breakout star—he’s becoming one of the most exciting young actors of his generation.

After his chilling turn as Finney Blake in 2021’s The Black Phone, as well as starring as Hiccup in How to Train Your Dragon, Thames is returning to the big screen for Black Phone 2 on October 17th, a sequel that promises even more tension, terror, and emotional depth. But this time around, Thames isn’t just the wide-eyed newcomer navigating his first major role—he’s a confident, seasoned performer. “Mason is a naturally gifted actor—he was born to do this,” says director Scott Derrickson. “But the difference between working with him at [18] instead of 12 is how little direction he requires. He instinctively understands the scenes as written and brings incredibly interesting acting choices to them. In Black Phone 2, I mostly just stayed out of his way.”

Thames spoke with VMAN about stepping back into Finney’s world, a background in ballet, and balancing the big screen with the small slices of life he enjoys back home in Dallas, Texas.

VMAN: So this is the sequel to the first Black Phone film. How have you changed as an actor, in tandem with your character?

MASON THAMES: I mean, it’s been such a fun journey starting out with Black Phone and working with Ethan (Hawke), and seeing how he works, and learning from that and so many other people on the set. That’s what I love about acting. I feel like I’ll continue to learn for the rest of my life, just working on new jobs and playing different characters. The journey that Finney goes on since the first one, he starts off kind of shy, kind of awkward, kind of to himself and all the trauma he went through. Then we flash forward four years, and he’s almost a completely different character. He has so much rage and anger and PTSD, coming off of what happened to him, and how he deals with that is a lot of fun. But yeah, Finney as a character, I think a lot of people are going to be very surprised and find it cool, the journey he’s taken. And I feel like, in very different ways—because, I mean, Finney and I are very different people—I feel like I’ve just matured a lot from that time, and I’ve learned a lot.

VMAN: Let’s go back to the start. How did you get into acting?

MT: So my sister—she’s a ballerina, and she was so fantastic. She’s done it for many, many years, and she used to go to class. I was always the little kid in the backseat with the iPad, and I remember one of the teachers came out. He probably just felt bad for me, but he was like, ‘Hey, do you want to take some classes?’ I was seven or so, and I was like, ‘Yeah, sure, let’s do it.’ So I took some classes, and I ended up performing and touring around Texas, doing The Nutcracker as Fritz, which was a lot of fun. And I think that kind of lit the spark for performing. You know, the ballet aspect was always kind of my sister’s thing, but I really liked performing. So I got into that, and I told my mom, ‘I don’t really like ballet, but I still want to perform.’

Ballet has given me a lot of things, especially for this industry—like physicality and taking direction—I feel like it’s helped a lot. And not taking things personally, because ballet teachers can be very scary sometimes. So it doesn’t matter what kind of environment I’m in; it’s a fun challenge. Especially for Black Phone, which is so scary and so serious. For me, that challenge is fun.

VMAN: I can see how ballet would be good training for acting because you have to make something that is so hard look easy and natural.

MT: Right. Like in How to Train Your Dragon, I fall a lot. I had to learn how to fall correctly and not hurt myself. And I learned from professionals, but also once I learned that I have to unlearn it, and make it look like a kid just falling.

VMAN: You’re still so young, and it’s still so early on in your career, despite all the success already. But do you ever think about getting into writing or directing?

MT: Yeah, 100%. I’ve always wanted to become a director. Even before I did— I mean, like, years ago, I never thought I was going to be able to be in this industry or be an actor. But I always used to watch behind-the-scenes stuff and watch how the directors work, you know, watch their wheels turn. It’s insane—they have this imagination and this vision for the world they’ve created.

VMAN: Who are some of your favorite TV or film characters of all time? Tony Soprano, Homer Simpson…

MT: Honestly, Homer Simpson [laughs] But really, I’m gonna go with Spider-Man. I grew up with Spider-Man. He was everything to me, and he taught me so much. And Batman, as well. Superman, all the superheroes that gave me hope as a kid. And playing Hiccup (in How To Train Your Dragon), out of all the people, definitely put that hope in me. And I hope that kids can go to the theater with their parents and see a hero like that, and have them be as inspired as I was.

VMAN: Lastly, what are you doing when not working?

MT: I’m hibernating in my bed with my dog. That is what I’m doing. Maybe some fishing with my dad, swimming, and making bonfires. But that’s about it.

Source: vman.com

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Current Projects
Regretting You
2025
Centers on the strained relationship between young mother Morgan Grant and her teenage daughter Clara, exacerbated by Morgan's husband Chris's tragic death, forcing them to navigate life's challenges together.

New Year's Rev
2025
Three buddies drive cross-country in a van, causing mayhem and mischief while racing to LA for their big break: opening for Green Day on New Year's Eve.

Black Phone 2
2025
As Finn, now 17, struggles with life after his captivity, his sister begins receiving calls in her dreams from the black phone and seeing disturbing visions of three boys being stalked at a winter camp known as Alpine Lake.

How to Train Your Dragon 2
2025
As an ancient threat endangers both Vikings and dragons alike on the isle of Berk, the friendship between Hiccup, an inventive Viking, and Toothless, a Night Fury dragon, becomes the key to both species forging a new future together.