Brad Pitt may not be gracing the the silver screen as often in the future, and he's opening up about being in the last stages of his film career.
The actor told GQ magazine in a cover story interview published Wednesday that he's approaching retirement.
“I consider myself on my last leg,” Pitt said, “this last semester or trimester. What is this section gonna be? And how do I wanna design that?”
Pitt is still slated for acting gigs in 2022, including director David Leitch’s action blockbuster “Bullet Train” about five assassins aboard a fast moving train, and the historical drama film “Babylon.”
The 58-year-old actor, known for his performances in “Fight Club” and “Once Upon a Time In Hollywood,” has gradually receded from onscreen roles and instead has taken a more prominent position behind the camera as a film producer. Pitt is the current CEO of Plan B Entertainment that helmed works such as 2016 "Moonlight," Golden Globe-winning film "Minari" and the just-released remake of "Father of the Bride."
'Father of the Bride' mom Gloria Estefan recalls her wedding-day disaster: The dog ate her dress
Andrew Koji breaks out in 'Snake Eyes,' eagerly awaits an invite to Brad Pitt's house
The production company will be behind various movies in 2022, including Netflix’s "Blonde" starring Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe and "Women Talking," an adaptation of Miriam Toews’s novel, which the Academy Award winner said is "as profound a film as anything made this decade."
Although Pitt has not been formally diagnosed, he told GQ he may have prosopagnosia, otherwise known as face blindness, which prohibits him from recognizing new faces or remembering people he meets in social settings (though Pitt says "nobody believes" he suffers from the condition).