Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

Conquering her fears and mastering French, Jodie Foster anchors Rebecca Zlotowski’s Hitchcockian thriller, charting new territory in her storied career.

Jodie Foster

Jodie Foster confessed she was “too scared” to tackle a lead role in a French-language film until director Rebecca Zlotowski’s invitation for Vie Privée proved irresistible, marking Foster’s first starring turn speaking French since 2004’s A Very Long Engagement. The psychological thriller premiered out of competition at Cannes on May 20, where Foster’s portrayal of Lilian Steiner—a Paris-based psychoanalyst drawn into a murder investigation—earned an eight-minute standing ovation.

Filmed last autumn in Paris and Normandy, Vie Privée reunites Foster with screenwriters Anne Berest and Gaëlle Macé, with Frederic Jouve producing under Les Films Velvet and France 3 Cinéma. Cinematographer George Lechaptois captures both the city’s elegance and the story’s undercurrent of menace, while Robin Coudert’s score underlines Lilian’s unraveling as she challenges official conclusions about her patient’s apparent suicide.

At Cannes, foster’s fluency in French surprised critics and attendees alike. The Guardian noted her performance “echoes Hitchcockian suspense” while applauding her seamless shift from Hollywood to the Croisette’s tradition of art‐house cinema. Industry observers pointed out that Sony Pictures Classics’ acquisition of North American rights underscores confidence in Vie Privée’s crossover potential.

Beyond Foster’s breakthrough, conversations at Cannes highlighted the film’s thematic exploration of memory and identity. Dr. Claire Martin, a Paris-based psychoanalytic scholar, praised Zlotowski’s “nuanced depiction of transference” but cautioned that the surreal regression sequences might alienate viewers seeking a conventional mystery. Conversely, festival programmer Thierry Frémaux heralded the movie as a “screwball thriller,” commending its tonal shifts as emblematic of contemporary French cinema’s daring.

Foster’s decision to engage fully—from conducting her own dialogue coaching to mastering pronunciation—reflects both her commitment to authenticity and her evolving selectivity; as she told People, she turns down projects that don’t “challenge me emotionally and linguistically”. With the film slated for international release later this year, Vie Privée may redefine Foster’s trajectory, positioning her as one of the few American actors to lead a major French-language feature.

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