“I’m constantly looking for something to shoot in Ireland. I’d love to come back. I have this fantas
“I’m constantly looking for something to shoot in Ireland. I’d love to come back. I have this fantasy about living in Cork. I don’t know why. I’ve only been there once.”So, what of the future? Workwise, another season of Outlander looms. When I press her on any unexpected plot twists, she is tight-lipped.“I’m not allowed to say anything,” she says.She would like to make more films.“I’ve been really lucky, I haven’t done a lot of films, but what I have done I’ve really liked. But I’m at a stage now where I would like to do something contemporary.”There have been forays into producing.“I have two projects I’m developing at the moment. I like producing because I’m using a totally different part of my brain. I’m looking at the whole of the everything. I also love working with female writers. I am in awe of these women’s minds. How do they create these things?”She herself writes. I wonder if the gestation of her child, the reframing of her own childhood that will inevitably come with raising him and the experience of Belfast will combine in her psyche to create a story of her own childhood.She laughs, and her body inclines a little towards the left, where somewhere, off in another room, her baby boy is sleeping. When she speaks her voice is wry.“Because I’ve so much time at the moment, right?”—Caitriona Balfe, Business Post Ireland interview -- source link
#caitriona balfe#business post#belfast#belfast movie#outlander