Shifting gears, the baby-faced actor played a teen murderer in the 1998 NBC movie "I've Been Waiting for You". Returning to the big screen, Foster joined an impressive cast that included Adrien Brody, J Mantegna and Bebe Neuwirth, as members of a Jewish family in 1950s Baltimore in Barry Levinson's semi-autobiographical Liberty Heights (1999). Cast as Ben, a character based on Levinson's cousin Eddie, who also served as the inspiration for Steve Guttenberg's character in Levinson's "Diner", the young actor deftly portrayed a rebellious teen whose antics include dressing up as Hitler on Halloween and courting a black classmate (Rebekah Johnson). After delivering that standout turn, Foster appeared in the pilot episode of NBC's "Freaks and Geeks" playing a mentally challenged student and then joined the cast of other up-and-coming young players (Shane West, James Franco, Marla Sokoloff, Jodie Lyn O'Keefe) in "Whatever It Takes" (2000), a modern version of "Cyrano de Bergerac" set in high school.
Returning to the big screen, he appeared as a high school basketball star who loses his girlfriend right before his big senior year in Get Over It (2001), a teen comedy co-starring a playful Kirsten Dunst. After a small role in the well-received war drama "Black Hawk Down" (2001), he turned up in the ensemble caper comedy-turned-box office bomb, Big Trouble (2002). Despite being held back by the events of 9/11-the movie featured a nuke on an airplane and jabs at lax airport security-it suffered under the weight of a large cast and muddled storyline. In Northfork (2003), a quirky fairy tale from the Brothers Polish (Michael and Mark), Foster played Cod, one of the eccentric denizens of a local bar in a frontier town in Montana. Set in 1955, the story centered around a group oddball residents who refuse to leave town when the government tries to evacuate them before construction begins on a nearby hydr lectric dam.
Foster next appeared in The Punisher (2004), the first-but probably not last-failed comic book adaptation courtesy of Marvel Comics mogul Stan Lee. Then in Hostage (2005), he played a seriously deranged punk who, along with two buddies, kidnap an shady accountant (Kevin Pollak) and his two children after a bungled robbery. Foster next joined the ensemble cast as the new mutant, Angel, in the third installment of the series, X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), directed by Brett Ratner. This time, the mutants face a peculiar choice after a cure for their mutations is found: retain their uniqueness and remain isolated from society or give up their strange powers and become human.
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