
Kyle is a good, decent, hard-working young man who cracks under the pressure of financial ruin. “He's is a working class guy who believed that if he did the right thing and worked hard, that somehow he’d be able to have something in his life,” explains director Jodie Foster. “He inherits some money, and tries to invest it as intelligently as possible, but ends up losing it all at the hands of something out of his control. The only thing he has in the world suddenly disappears into thin air, and he doesn’t know how it happened. Kyle can’t accept that. He can’t accept that he did everything right, and yet, he’s supposed to just walk away. Kyle refuses to accept failure and move on – instead, he chooses to fight back.”
“I empathize with him,” says O’Connell. “I think his unfortunate situation is quite relevant and something people can relate to. Still, no one would sympathize with the actions Kyle takes.”

“Kyle continues to ask the hard questions that nobody’s asking,” says Foster. “He refuses to turn a blind eye away from what happened. He knows that he’s not going to get his money back, but he will get answers by any means necessary.”
O’Connell sees his character as a victim of a financial system lacking the appropriate safeguards to protect the market from manipulations and malfunctions. “It would be easy to write Kyle off as a villain. It is extreme to threaten lives, but I feel he was pushed past the breaking point,” explains O’Connell. “What Kyle has done is out of desperation, and my hope in portraying him is that will come to understand what drives him to the breaking point – though he’ll pay the ultimate price for his actions.”

To fully embody Budwell, O’Connell needed to tap into his own raw, visceral emotion. “Kyle is all heart. He makes rash, emotional decisions,” explains Foster. “Kyle is, at times, unstable and hard to take. But, there are other moments where he’s just a little boy, and you want to put your arms around him, and tell him it’s going to be okay. And Jack had to create Kyle based on a range of fluctuating feelings.”
Foster found O’Connell’s dedication to his craft truly admirable. “Jack is just such a wonderful gift of an actor,” says Foster. “I wish I approached acting that way when I was young with such incredible commitment and passion. I just love that about him – He’s able to just give so much. He just never stops giving.”

Opening across the Philippines in May 25, “Money Monster” is distributed by Columbia Pictures, local office of Sony Pictures Releasing International.
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