CANNES, France — After a string of hospitalizations for long COVID, Paul Schrader had a realization.
''If I'm going to make a film about death,'' Schrader told himself, ''I'd better hurry up.''
The health of the 77-year-old filmmaker, whose films and scripts have covered half a century of American movies, from ''Taxi Driver'' to ''First Reformed,'' has since improved. But that sense of urgency only increased when Russell Banks, a friend of Schrader's since he adapted Banks' ''Affliction'' into the 1997 film, began ailing. Banks died in 2023.
Schrader resolved to turn Banks' 2021 novel ''Foregone'' into a film. At the time, he imagined it would be his last. But Schrader, who's been as prolific as ever in the past decade, has said that before.
In 2017, he surmised that ''First Reformed'' was his final cinematic statement. Then he made 2021's ''The Card Counter.'' And, after that came 2022's ''Master Gardener.''
''The irony is every time you think, ‘Well, that's about it,' you have a new idea,'' Schrader told The Associated Press in an interview at the Cannes Film Festival. ''And you have to write the new idea and make the new film. ‘OK, God, put that thing on hold. I'll be back to you when I've finished my film.'''
Schrader, chuckling, adds: ''I'm going to start a new company called Post-Mortem Cinema.''
On Friday, Schrader was to premiere his Banks' adaptation, now titled ''Oh, Canada,'' at Cannes. It's his first time back in competition in 36 years. And, particularly given that he's joined this year by Francis Ford Coppola and George Lucas — all of them central figures of the fabled New Hollywood — Schrader's Cannes return comes with echoes of the heyday of '70s American moviemaking. ''Taxi Driver,'' which Schrader wrote, won the Palme d'Or here in 1976.