Action hero days are over, says Liam Neeson
Career making thillers 'was all a pure accident,' says acting veteran
Special set of skills or not, Liam Neeson says he's finished making thrillers.
In an interview, Neeson said that he plans to stop even though it's hard to turn down the lucrative offers he gets thanks to his box-office success in the three Taken films, as well as other thrillers. Neeson believes he's simply getting too old to be an action hero.
"The thrillers, that was all a pure accident," said Neeson.
"They're still throwing serious money at me to do that stuff. I'm like, 'Guys I'm sixty-f--king-five.' Audiences are eventually going to go, 'Come on."'
Neeson still has two upcoming revenge thrillers he's already shot: Hard Powder, in which he plays a snowplow driver who faces off with drug dealers, and The Commuter, with director Jaume Collet-Serra, who also directed Neeson in Unknown, Non-Stop and Run All Night.
But, Neeson said, those will be his last.
"I've shot one that's going to come out in January sometime. There might be another. That's it," said Neeson.
"But not Taken, none of that franchise stuff."
Instead, Neeson has turned back to dramatic work. His Watergate drama Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House premiered Monday evening at the Toronto International Film Festival. In it, he plays the high-ranking FBI official who was the Washington Post's "Deep Throat" source in the scandal.
Neeson has also lined up to co-star in Widows, by Twelve Years a Slave director Steve McQueen. In December, he starred in Martin Scorsese's spiritual epic Silence.
Neeson was always surprised by the unlikely turn his career took beginning with 2009's Taken. He thought the film, he once said, would go straight to video. The three Taken films have grossed $929.5 million US worldwide.