The Borneo Post

Ethan Hawke prayed God wouldn’t call him to become a priest

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VENICE: Ethan Hawke’s greatgrand­mother had wanted him to become a priest, but the American actor prayed that he would never get the calling, he said at the Venice fi lm festival on Thursday.

Hawke fi nally got his taste of priesthood when he was cast as a minister in Paul Schrader’s spiritual drama “First Reformed”, one of 21 movies competing for the Golden Lion that will be awarded on Sept 9.

“I’ve been surrounded by religion my whole life and it’s a very important dialogue, in my head anyway, so I was very grateful for the opportunit­y to play this character,” Hawke told journalist­s before the fi lm’s premiere.

Hawke plays Toller, an exmilitary chaplain struggling to come to terms with the loss of his son, whom he had encouraged to enlist.

Toller now looks after a small but largely empty tourist church. He is further challenged in his faith when a pregnant parishione­r, Mary, played by Amanda Seyfried, and her radical activist husband ask for counsellin­g.

The idea that life is a balance between “hope and despair” is a theme throughout the movie, although the fi lm does not answer which wins, Hawke said.

“It’s asking questions and how it bounces off you is what’s most relevant,” he said.

“The movie defi nitely walks that razor’s edge between utter despair and completely believing in love. The two are at war throughout the fi lm and they are so at the end to me.”

The movie is Schrader’s fi rst feature about spiritual life, but it also touches on the topic of climate change.

When Mary’s husband, tortured by the idea of bringing a child into a world that is on the edge of self- destructio­n, commits suicide, Toller begins to ask himself and others whether the church should take a greater responsibi­lity in eco-activism.

For Schrader, who wrote the script for classics such as “Taxi Driver” and directed 18 feature fi lms, including “American Gigolo”, the fi ght for the climate might already be lost.

“If you’re hopeful about humanity and the planet, you’re not paying attention. I don’t see humanity outliving this century,” he said, adding how his own generation of baby boomers has “screwed the planet for our children”.

Asked about the changes in the fi lm industry, Schrader said more than making a movie, the hard part was getting it seen.

“You know how do you get your head above the crowd? When there is 10,000 people in the piazza. We are here now in Venice for just that reason,” he said. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? Hawke (also left) and Seyfried pose during a red carpet event for ‘First Reformed’ at the 74th Venice festival on Thursday. — Reuters photos
Hawke (also left) and Seyfried pose during a red carpet event for ‘First Reformed’ at the 74th Venice festival on Thursday. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? Royal fans look at flowers and tributes left in memory of the late Princess Diana, at the gates of her former residence in Kensington Palace on the 20th anniversar­y of her death, in London, Britain on Thursday. — Reuters photo
Royal fans look at flowers and tributes left in memory of the late Princess Diana, at the gates of her former residence in Kensington Palace on the 20th anniversar­y of her death, in London, Britain on Thursday. — Reuters photo

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