As revealed in their recent chats with Interview Magazine, Henry Cavill had to embrace his manly strength to tackle the iconic role of Superman in "Man of Steel," but Amy Adams knows that being strong doesn't mean being unladylike.

The red-headed star had given into some of her fears, reported Refinery 29.

"...I think that especially in the way as we're exposed as actors - and I'm not going to use the word celebrities, because I think there is a differentation - it makes it hard to be a voyeur and really pull from what's around you...I think I closed myself in a little bit more because I started to feel really vulnerable being looked at and photographed," she told the magazine for their June/July issue. 

But there is no indication of that demure reserve in Adams on Interview's cover, smoldering next to her equally sizzling co-star, Cavill. She subtly stunned in a vampy lip complemented by bedroom eyes and slicked back hair while Cavill broods with perfectly gelled hair and a piercing stare. 

The cover photo, taken by Mikael Jansson, seems to show that Adams can momentarily abandon her natural makeup and innocent looks to showcase her darker side, and take readers right along for the ride. 

The actress can also maintain her feminity while embroiled in a male-dominated world. "[Playing Lois Lane] was important to me because I do believe you don't have to act like a man to be strong. You can still be feminine," she said.

Both Adams and her hunky onscreen love share details about playing the famous Clark Kent a.k.a Superman and Lois Lane in the comic book story reprisal and they dish about their chemistry, according to PopSugar

Cavill on getting the superman role: "...I remember looking in the mirror and going 'I'm Superman.' But it was also one of those things where you go, 'This isn't winning the lottery - it's getting a lottery ticket. Now I've got to work out which numbers to scratch...'"

Adams on her appearance: "I always wanted to defeat supervillians - it's just the chicken-and-broccoli diet that I'm into. I have a small child, so the idea of getting up at 3 a.m. to train for a shooting...I just don't have it in me, although I have so much respect for people who do."

Cavill also said that Superman "can never really cry in a heaving, sobbing, emotional way, beat his fists in anger against a wall or laugh uncontrollably" out of fear of hurting someone.

The magazine hits newsstands on June 18.

And check out the trailer below to get pumped up for the movie release on June 14.