- Presidential vote seen as referendum on Romania's European future
- Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes as Ferrari vie for title
- New Zealand unchanged in bid to hit back against England
- Macron seeks remedy to France's political crisis
- New Natalia Lafourcade album celebrates music's onstage evolutions
- Taiwan's Lai kicks off visit to US territory Guam
- Ivory Coast staple cassava meal gains UNESCO heritage status
- OpenAI to partner with military defense tech company
- Liverpool held but Slot salutes 'special' Salah
- Man City needed to break losing 'routine', says Guardiola
- Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late
- Mbappe admits penalty miss 'big mistake' as Bilbao beat Real Madrid
- 'Sad, disappointed' Mbappe pays penalty as Bilbao beat Real Madrid
- US stocks surge to records, shrugging off upheaval in South Korea, France
- Liverpool held in Newcastle thriller, Arsenal inflict Amorim's first defeat
- Shiffrin confirms she'll miss Beaver Creek World Cup races
- Corner kings Arsenal beat Man Utd to close gap on Liverpool
- Mbappe pays penalty as Bilbao beat Real Madrid
- NFL Jaguars place Lawrence on injured reserve with concussion
- North Korea, Russia defence treaty comes into force
- Openda hits brace as Leipzig beat Frankfurt in German Cup last 16
- Schar punishes Kelleher blunder as Newcastle hold Liverpool in thriller
- De Bruyne masterclass helps Man City end seven-game winless streak
- Syrian rebels surround Hama 'from three sides', monitor says
- Lawyers seek leniency for France rape trial defendants, blaming 'wolf' husband
- OpenAI chief 'believes' Musk will not abuse government power
- Thousands rally in Georgia after police raid opposition offices
- S. Korea opposition push to impeach president
- Powell 'not concerned' US Fed would lose independence under Trump
- French government falls in historic no-confidence vote
- Syrian White Helmets chief 'dreams' of never pulling a body out of rubble again
- NBA Suns lose Durant for at least a week with ankle injury
- Warhammer maker Games Workshop enters London's top stocks index
- Iran Nobel winner released for three weeks, 'unconditional' freedom urged
- Red Cross marks record numbers of humanitarians killed in 2024
- Johnson's Grand Slam 'no threat', says World Athletics boss Coe
- Qatar's emir and UK's Starmer talk trade as state visit ends
- Cuba suffers third nationwide blackout in two months
- Russia, Ukraine to send top diplomats to OSCE summit in Malta
- Spanish royals to attend memorial service for flood victims
- LPGA, USGA new policy requires female at birth or pre-puberty change
- Stick to current climate change laws, US tells top UN court
- British Museum chief says Marbles deal with Greece 'some distance' away
- Pope Francis receives electric popemobile from Mercedes
- Gaza civil defence: thousands flee Israeli strikes, evacuation calls
- Trump names billionaire private astronaut as next NASA chief
- Pidcock to leave INEOS Grenadiers at end of season
- Seoul stocks weaken, Paris advances despite political turmoil
- South America summit hopes to seal 'historic' trade deal with EU
- DAZN awarded global TV rights for Club World Cup
'It came from the gut': New mother Jennifer Lawrence returns with 'Causeway'
When Jennifer Lawrence was offered a script about a wounded US Army engineer who returns from Afghanistan to a strained relationship with her mother, she was on a sabbatical from acting and not yet a parent.
The Oscar-winning "Silver Linings Playbook" star, 32, whose fame had rocketed ever since the wildly popular "The Hunger Games" movies, had been a near-ubiquitous presence with a prolific run of movies, before announcing a pause because "everybody had gotten sick of me."
But when she read a script for "Causeway" -- then entitled "Red, White, and Water" -- something changed.
"It was really just something that came from the gut, just like this urgency," she told AFP at the Toronto film festival.
"I was very clear that I didn't want to work, and then somehow it landed on my desk, and I just had this sense of urgency, like 'let's make it, let's do this.'"
The subtle, character-driven indie movie -- which also became the first project for Lawrence's fledgling production company -- follows military engineer Lynsey's return to her mother's home in New Orleans.
A debilitating brain injury following an IED explosion in Afghanistan is not the only trauma she must overcome, as issues from her childhood and family life flood to the surface.
Lawrence chose the film in part to showcase "what these heroes go through to keep us safe."
"It was wonderful to be able to talk to the amazing men and women who have served, to try to get some more information and background," she said on the red carpet of the film's world premiere Saturday.
- Motherhood -
But she also partly drew on her own childhood for the role in "Causeway," in which Lynsey has a fractious relationship with her unreliable mother.
"I have complications in my childhood just like everybody else does -- so it was more kind of working that out," she said of the film, which began shooting in 2019 before it was interrupted by the pandemic and eventually resumed in 2021.
During that delay Lawrence also filmed and promoted doomsday comedy "Don't Look Up."
And she has since become a mother herself, giving birth earlier this year to her son Cy.
"Oh God, everything changes after you become a mom!" she told AFP.
"How am I complicating his life? I don't know yet," she joked.
The film sees Lynsey build an unlikely friendship with James, played by Brian Tyree Henry, an auto repair worker who fixes her truck when it breaks down.
While both grew up in New Orleans, their backgrounds are very different.
But he too has a family trauma buried deeply in his past, which the two bond over, in a relationship which soon forms the emotional anchor of the film.
- 'Invisible injury' -
"This film is an excavation of how we begin to process, how we manage, how we actually change, how we start to connect again," said director Lila Neugebauer, making her film debut after success on Broadway.
"Both Jen and Brian connect so deeply with their characters on this film, as actors and as human beings."
For Lawrence, there was "something about this woman who has been through so much, and is suffering from this invisible injury, and trying to rebuild her home and where she belongs."
"There was something that deeply connected with me," she said.
"Causeway" will be released November 4 in select theaters and on Apple TV+. The Toronto International Film Festival runs through September 18.
N.Fournier--BTB