The Standard (St. Catharines)

The world doesn’t need movie stars anymore: Garfield

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Andrew Garfield is unsure whether the world still needs movie stars.

The British star may be one of the most successful actors in Hollywood but he’s deliberate­ly avoided getting caught up with the lifestyle that fame has to offer.

After previously expressing his dislike of how fame changes the way people act and are treated, Garfield — who famously dated his The Amazing Spider-Man co-star Emma Stone — has made an even bolder statement during a new interview with magazine Time Out London.

“I don’t feel like I’m in that world,” he shrugged. “I have my life, I have my friends, I have my family, I have people who I am sincerely close to. The rest is a vehicle to get stories out there. I think celebrity culture is distancing. It keeps people on pedestals and that doesn’t feel healthy for the culture right now. I don’t know if we need movie stars anymore.”

Despite his comments, the London-born performer does believe people still need films and he points out that features should remind cinemagoer­s about what’s important and “meaningful” in life, especially in a world in which he feels human life is “so disposable”.

“Look at what is happening in our city with Grenfell Tower — the people

(Celebrity culture) keeps people on pedestals and that doesn’t feel healthy for the culture right now.”

Andrew Garfield

who are making decisions value money-saving over keeping people safe,” he sighed of the tragedy in June which saw a 24-storey block of flats in west London catch fire in a rapid fashion due to the building’s exterior cladding, causing an estimated 80 deaths and countless injuries. “This is a really sick time in Western civilisati­on, so I’m looking to be a part of feeding an audience and a culture with something that thinks to bring us back together.”

Garfield actively picks roles that are challengin­g and meaningful to viewers, such as his latest film Breathe. The 34-year-old stars in Andy Serkis’ directoria­l debut as Robin Cavendish, the real-life polio sufferer who became an advocate for fellow patients and the disabled after being diagnosed aged 28 and outliving his life expectancy.

 ?? PHILLIP FARAONE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Andrew Garfield attends the Breathe premiere during the 2017 Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on Sept. 11, in Toronto.
PHILLIP FARAONE/GETTY IMAGES Andrew Garfield attends the Breathe premiere during the 2017 Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on Sept. 11, in Toronto.

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