Brad Pitt has admitted he might "organically" retire from acting - but he's not sure.
The 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' star has spoken about the movie's director Quentin Tarantino's recent comments about planning his own retirement after his next film.
Pitt, 55, admitted that he has other interests and he's not sure whether he will naturally end his screen career or never stop.
Asked about Tarantino's comments and how he feels about giving up movies, he told PEOPLE: "No, I don't know. I don't know. I enjoy doing other things. I think that one day I'll just wake up and organically it'll be done. Maybe I won't wake up and that's why it'll be done."
Pitt recently admitted that acting is a "young man's game".
Speaking of his other passions, he said: "I'm behind the camera on the producing side and I enjoy that a lot. But I keep doing less and less.
I really believe that overall it's a younger man's game - not that there aren't substantial parts for older characters - I just feel, the game itself, it'll move on naturally. There will be a natural selection to it all."
US President Donald Trump has stated on Saturday that he is considering cancelling a series of concerts commemorating the United States' 250th anniversary after several artists dropped out, opting for a speech instead.
Italy has banned two concerts involving US rappers Kanye West and Travis Scott due to take place in July in the northern city of Reggio Emilia, authorities said on Saturday.
Bret Michaels, frontman of Poison, the rock group best known for its working-class anthem 'Nothin’ But a Good Time', has withdrawn from a concert series commemorating the United States' 250th anniversary, the latest in a wave of cancellations.
An Austrian court has sentenced a 21-year-old man who admitted planning a foiled attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna in 2024 to 15 years in prison on Thursday, finding him guilty of various, mainly terrorism-related offences.
The personal assistant who injected "Friends" star Matthew Perry with a fatal dose of the hallucinogenic drug ketamine was sentenced to 41 months in federal prison on Wednesday, bringing to a close the prosecution of five people who admitted to playing roles in the actor's death.