Shia LaBeouf says Brad Pitt helped him find God while filming Fury

Actor Shia LaBeouf claims to have "found God" during the making of his latest film, Second World War epic Fury.

Known as much for his off-screen bad-boy persona as much as for his on-screen charisma in films like the Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and Dark of the Moon, former Disney child star LaBeouf says that he was influenced by co-star Brad Pitt and director David Ayer in his spiritual awakening.

He told Interview magazine: "I found God doing Fury. I became a Christian man ... in a very real way. I could have just said the prayers that were on the page. But it was a real thing that really saved me.

"I had good people around me who helped me. [Brad Pitt] was really instrumental in guiding my head through this. Brad comes from a hyper-religious, very deeply Christian, Bible Belt life, and he rejected it and moved toward an unnamed spirituality. Whereas [David Ayer] is a full subscriber to Christianity. But these two diametrically opposed positions both lead to the same spot, and I really looked up to both men."

LaBeouf, 28, has a Jewish mother and Pentecostal father, who are divorced. He has previously identified himself as Jewish, writing in I am Jewish, compiled in honour of slain journalist Daniel Pearl: "I am what you would call a claimer Jew. See, I claim to be Jewish because it is beneficial to be Jewish ... How? I have a personal relationship with God that happens to work within the confines of Judaism ... Really, I feel cocky when I say I am Jewish, not bad cocky, but good cocky. Because what I am really saying is that I am one of the few chosen ones out there. I made it; God chose me and I take pride in that.<sup>"

He has also said: "Religion is funny. If it gives people hope, it makes sense. But it never made sense to me."

In Fury, LaBeouf plays a Christian soldier whose faith helps him to cope with the shocking violence he sees all around him, while Pitt – in real life a pacifist – plays a tank commander who believes that violence is necessary and takes to it with relish.

His own life has seen plenty of drama. He was fired from a Broadway play and briefly imprisoned after spitting at a policeman, and has been treated for drug and alcohol abuse.

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