LOS ANGELES: When Jodie Foster wanted to explore the human relationship with technology and virtual intimacy in her latest directorial effort Money Monster, she opted to use Wall Street as her setting and raise the dramatic stakes by holding George Clooney hostage.
“I wanted to see how those things affected these two human beings, in this small little room, who are confined with each other,” she said.
Sony Pictures’ Money Monster, premiering at the Cannes Film Festival this week and opening in US theatres on Friday, sees Clooney play Lee Gates, a suave, showboating host of a money news TV programme, held hostage live on air.
Gates and his producer Patty (Julia Roberts) are forced by the captor, who lost his life savings investing in stock that Gates had vouched for, to dig deeper into the technical glitch that wiped away millions of dollars of people’s savings.
“George’s disaffected old school journalist has to learn some new tricks, he has to become more of an activist journalist,” Foster said.