“Anything that fights fascism, I’m all for it,” the Blue Moon star told a Berlinale presser when asked about the role of “famous artists” during a time when “fascism is on the rise in Europe and the U.S.” Hawke started his response by cautioning “the last place you probably want to look for advice in your spiritual counsel is a bunch of jet-lagged drunk artists talking about their film.”
But Hawke then referenced director Padraic McKinley’s historical drama, set in 1930s Oregon and about gold rush greed and survival. “It’s about a group of people who don’t think they have anything in common, who band together to fight institutional greed and malevolence to realize that they have so much more in common, and that’s worth fighting for.
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