London:Filmmaker Woody Allen says he has accepted one reality of his life that he will always remain a "predator" in the eyes of a "large number of people" owing to his step-daughter Dylan Farrow's sexual abuse allegation against him.
In an interview with The Guardian, the 84-year-old veteran director once again addressed the allegation which was made in 1992 but has caught steam in the wake of the #MeToo movement.
"I assume that for the rest of my life a large number of people will think I was a predator. Anything I say sounds self-serving and defensive, so it's best if I just go my way and work," Allen said.
He also talked about actors, including Timothee Chalamet and Rebecca Hall, who distanced themselves from the director in the wake of the global campaign against workplace sexual harassment.
"The actors have no idea of the facts and they latch on to some self-serving, public, safe position.
"Who in the world is not against child molestation? That's how actors and actresses are, and (denouncing me) became the fashionable thing to do, like everybody suddenly eating kale," Allen added.
The filmmaker recently came out with his memoir,"Apropos of Nothing" that also got embroiled in a controversy.