Uma Thurman says her decision-making rule is still simple: if the arithmetic or the logistics look shaky, she walks away. The 55-year-old actor shared the principle while promoting a packed 2025 slate that includes Netflix’s “The Old Guard 2” and Showtime’s sequel series “Dexter: Resurrection.”
“I’m really, really practical,” she told The New York Times, later paraphrased by multiple outlets. “If there’s not a big enough budget and there’s a bunch of underwater stuff, I’m out.”
That pragmatism shaped a two-decade retreat from action work after Kill Bill. In separate appearances on Jimmy Fallon and in press interviews, Thurman said she avoided lower-grade fight pictures to protect a hard-won screen legacy while exploring drama, comedy, and Broadway.
Her return begins 2 July, when she trades blades with Charlize Theron in “The Old Guard 2.” Vanity Fair confirmed the release, and Spain’s Meristation says the sequel reached Netflix’s global top slot within 24 hours of launch. Production notes list Henry Golding and Chiwetel Ejiofor alongside Thurman’s villain Discord. She praised the first film’s emotional depth and admits she had “no training” before lifting a sword again.
Nine days later she debuts as Charley, a former special-operations officer guarding a shadowy billionaire, in “Dexter: Resurrection.” Regional outlet WCJC first revealed her casting; follow-up reports describe an 11 July double-episode premiere with Michael C. Hall and Peter Dinklage back on screen.
Asked whether Quentin Tarantino’s long-rumored “Kill Bill 3” might tempt her, Thurman struck the same measured note, telling Fallon the idea is “not immediately on the horizon.” Analysts say her filter—creative fit, solvent financing, and manageable stunt demands—offers a playbook for marquee actors amid rising production costs and crowded streaming calendars.