Woody Harrelson and Brie Larson talk "The Glass Castle"

From left, Sadie Sink, Charlie Shotwell, Ella Anderson, foreground center, Woody Harrelson, Naomi Watts and Eden Grace Redfield in "The Glass Castle." Picture: Jake Giles Netter/Lionsgate via AP

From left, Sadie Sink, Charlie Shotwell, Ella Anderson, foreground center, Woody Harrelson, Naomi Watts and Eden Grace Redfield in "The Glass Castle." Picture: Jake Giles Netter/Lionsgate via AP

Published Aug 10, 2017

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He's had a Hollywood career that has

spanned tending the bar at "Cheers" to fighting a futuristic war

in "The Hunger Games", while she won a Best Actress Oscar before

turning 30. Now Woody Harrelson and Brie Larson are sharing the

screen in new film "The Glass Castle".

An adaptation of Jeannette Walls' bestselling memoir, the

film chronicles her poverty-stricken childhood in an eccentric

and dysfunctional family, with Larson playing the central

character and Harrelson her alcoholic father.

Reuters spoke to the pair ahead of the film's UK release

this week. Here are excerpts of the interview.

Q: Woody, you directed a movie released this year called "Lost

in London", would you like to direct more?

A: WH:

Yeah. You know, now that my looks have betrayed me, I

can't count on doing this much longer. You know they like

handsome actors, so I am going to definitely direct more.

Q: Brie, what attracted you to play this character? Was it the

fact that you don't speak to your father for over 10 years?

A: BL: I think it has to do with family being complicated and

having lots of negatives and positives. I feel that life is like

that, you don’t get to pick and choose what parts of life you

get, you just get all of it ...

I think a lot of us feel like we're not allowed to be who we

are, least not allowed to be at the completeness of who we are.

And I want to encourage more people to feel like they can be all

things, you know, you can be complicated.

Q: How similar are you to the character you play in this film?

A: WH:

I think that is an important thing with any character,

you gotta find out what is in the character that is just like

you, and make up for the rest with imagination, you know.

But certainly like, he's wanting to be free, his belief that

education is, you know, (that it's) better when it's

experiential, better to get out in nature and just actually

experience what it is you're talking about, as opposed to

sitting in a classroom.

Some of his views on the medical system I tend to agree

with. 

Q: Woody, you played Lyndon Johnson in a new movie yet to be

released. Now that you played a vice-president, would you play

Donald Trump? 

A: WH:

No. I have to like the guy, I can't play him. 

Reuters

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