What's Inside?
- Elle Fanning calls 2025 her “exciting year,” embracing major artistic growth and intuition-driven choices.
- 'Predator: Badlands' redefines the iconic franchise with a futuristic twist and Fanning’s dual-synth performance.
- 'Sentimental Value' showcases Fanning’s emotional depth in Joachim Trier’s raw, intimate storytelling masterpiece.
When Elle Fanning once joked that 2025 would be her lucky year, few could have predicted how right she’d be. Two of her biggest projects, Predator: Badlands and Sentimental Value, are dominating the box office, each in their own unique way. From action-packed sci-fi to tender human drama, the 27-year-old actress is proving once again why she remains one of Hollywood’s most versatile and instinct-driven stars.
Elle Fanning’s Intuition and Evolution as an Artist

In a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Elle reflected on her lifelong sense that this year would be special.
“I think we can say that. You know what? From when I was a young girl, I knew that 2025 would be an exciting year. I love five, the number. I don’t know, I always felt that way. I am a very instinctual person. I feel so happy.”
Fanning, who began acting at just two years old, has experienced constant evolution in her craft. “When you start working at two years old, you’re going to feel shifts and changes constantly in those years. That’s just a given… The Great was certainly that. Now I’m feeling another shift. It’s a new chapter,” she said, referring to the acclaimed Hulu series that earned her critical acclaim.
That “new chapter” appears to be unfolding beautifully. Her latest roles, the bold futuristic synths in Predator: Badlands and the emotionally raw Rachel in Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, mark a striking duality. Yet for Fanning, the transition between genres wasn’t just seamless; it was illuminating.
Elle Fanning on Vision, Authenticity, and Artistic Trust

When asked about the lessons she took from both films’ success, Fanning offered a thoughtful answer that shows just how deeply she values artistic authenticity.
“I’ve been thinking about it. There’s a throughline with both to me. Both directors and the people around them — the producers who make the films happen — are very unwavering in their vision. Audiences are not looking for something that’s been formulated or calculated for them. They don’t want a director to say, ‘We’re going to do this because audiences like this…’ There’s no mathematical equation for art or for films.”
Following the success of Prey and Predator: Killer of Killers, Trachtenberg is taking the franchise into uncharted territory, making the Predator itself the protagonist. Set in a distant future, the Badlands combines familiar sci-fi elements with a fresh emotional depth. As Fanning put it, “It’s an unprecedented thing for the franchise to make the Predator the protagonist, and to have the synths involved, and a robot backpack.”
While Predator: Badlands explodes with spectacle, Sentimental Value thrives on intimacy. Directed by Joachim Trier, the film explores grief, self-discovery, and the imperfect beauty of human relationships. “It’s such an honest, personal film. It’s unwavering in that it’s just truthful. Only he could tell it,” Fanning explained.
“When you watch films, for me, the more specific and detailed you get — the less generalized it feels — the more universally it affects people.”
Further, Fanning recalled how she jumped from filming in New Zealand for Badlands to intense rehearsals in Oslo for Sentimental Value.
“It was wild. But honestly, I feel like it informs Rachel, coming off of a big action film… oddly enough it all worked together to help,” she said.
Predator: Badlands is now showing in the theaters.








