The Telegram (St. John's)

Foster asks to be part of thriller

- BY LINDSEY BAHR

Writer-director Drew Pearce hadn’t even sent out the script for his futuristic, hospital-for-criminals thriller “Hotel Artemis” when Jodie Foster called asking to be part of it.

Foster said she’s done that quite a few times: It’s a strategy for finding the best roles. The 55-year-old actress said she tries to read everything written for a certain age range, male or female. That’s how she became the first person to join “Hotel Artemis,” in which she play a 70-something nurse and proprietor of a hospital for the bad guys in a riot torn Los Angeles alongside Dave Bautista, Sterling K. Brown, Jeff Goldblum, Sofia Boutella, Jenny Slate and Charlie Day. The film hits theatres Friday.

Foster spoke to The Associated Press recently about the film, directing and the stigma of failure.

Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.

AP: You haven’t put yourself in front of the camera very often recently. What was it about this film besides the age range?

Foster: I just love the idea. I’d been looking for a while and I really was hell-bent on wanting something that felt like a full transforma­tion.

AP: It’s kind of unusual to have a woman of this age leading an action film.

Foster: I think it’s great. I mean, why not? And it’s funny because, I’m not sure I would

call me an action hero, but I did a lot of movies with a lot of action in them and maybe I wasn’t like a sheriff or a police man, but I was the girl carrying her daughter to safety with the explosion in the background, so it’s fun to see me inhabit a movie like that but in a different capacity.

When people look back and they sum up my career and they say, “Well you played a strong woman in this movie and a strong woman in that movie and how’d you manage to do that?” And I’m like, “Uhhh, I don’t know? I saw the script and I was drawn to it because that’s who should fascinate me, she’s who I should be interested in.” I’ve never been interested in the girl who wears that jewelry so well or the wife of the interestin­g person. I wanted to be the central character.

AP: Do you have any directing projects coming up? Foster: I don’t. I’m happy just being open to something coming along that I love and I feel passionate about and I never know where that is going to take me. There’s part of me that’s really scared because I’m kind of a good student and like, what college do I go to next? But I think it’s really good for me. It’s really good for me to be humble and say like maybe I’m going to act on an iphone. Why do I have to keep proving to everybody over and over again something that I did 25 years ago?

I believe that “The Beaver,” for example, which I believe is my best movie and I know it’s not for everybody, but I do think people will look back on that movie and will finally say “Oh I see, it’s better than .... ” There was a lot of baggage that got hoisted onto the film. I feel like the film was really trying to say something important.

The truth about directing is I don’t really care, because, I got to make a movie that I love. And that is such a pleasure in itself that that really is the greatest reward. So I don’t really take a lot of offence about how it is received. I’ve learned to shrug my shoulders and go “I’m sorry you didn’t like it” but I did my best. With acting it’s harder to do that because you’re not in charge.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this May 20, 2018 photo, actress Jodie Foster poses at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles to promote her new film “Hotel Artemis.” Foster stars as the head of a hospital for criminals in the near-future set thriller opening nationwide on Friday,...
AP PHOTO In this May 20, 2018 photo, actress Jodie Foster poses at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles to promote her new film “Hotel Artemis.” Foster stars as the head of a hospital for criminals in the near-future set thriller opening nationwide on Friday,...

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