By Craig Mclean

Published: Friday, 02 December 2022 at 12:00 am


Dateline 2032, the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. In sci-fi series The Peripheral, we meet Flynne, played by Chloë Grace Moretz, 25, test-driving a virtual reality game for her brother (Jack Reynor).

Dateline 2099, London: Flynne is flung into the future, her in-game avatar zipping around on a motorbike, battling killer robot chauffeurs and trying to save tomorrow’s world – while also fighting off dark web assassins back in her present.

Dateline 2011, New York: the last time I met Moretz, when she was promoting Martin Scorsese’s Hugo alongside co-star and fellow 14-year-old Asa Butterfield. “I was a little baby girl!”

You were – and a movie star. This time-travelling, mind-bending thriller is your first proper TV project since your child acting days. Why so long away, and what brought you back?

I was really hesitant on being a lead in a television series. I knew from friends that it was quite an undertaking – something you have to sit with for eight months, and really care about a character to go that deep. Then this came on my radar. You hear [author] William Gibson and [producers] Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan – if you’re a sci-fi fan, which I am, those are three very cool heavy-hitters.

This show, Nolan and Joy’s Westworld, your 2021 film Mother/Android: these are dystopian tales. Is current sci-fi so dark as a reflection of our society?

This show is actually contrary to other sci-fi.  Yes, the future to which they are travelled is pretty bleak… But depending on what they learn, they could use that information to mitigate their impending doom.

When you look at our politics, economy and environment, does it make you pessimistic about our future?

It’s hard to not be pessimistic, especially when we envelop ourselves in the 24-hour news cycle. But I do try to be a glass-half-full kind of gal. Otherwise, it’d be very hard to get out of bed in the morning.

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Chloë Grace Moretz in The Peripheral.
Amazon Studios

Are you a gamer?

I grew up gaming! I have four older brothers, and they were always bigger and stronger than me. But it was one of the ways that I could best them at every corner.

Given your brothers’ involvement in the business of your career, was Flynne’s closeness to her brother relatable?

Definitely. On top of that, when Jack and I signed on, we said to the producers: ‘We’d love to get to know each other.’ And our first FaceTime, we spent three hours talking about our lives… So much so that by the time we finally got to London, everyone was like: “Wait? Didn’t you guys just meet?” We were really like brother and sister from the jump.

What does setting the far-future storyline in London bring that setting it in, say, New York wouldn’t have?

There’s such a massive juxtaposition between the American South and London. Also, I never hear the Southern accent against the RP British accent. And it’s a real fish-out-of-water story. To see how Flynne mutates herself to fit in better – at least for the first season, I don’t think that would have been as interesting if it had been localised within America still.