The Total Film Interview - Anthony Hopkins

Although he may disagree, it’s no fluke that Anthony Hopkins’ CV is stacked with real-life figures, including some of the most towering names of the 20th century (Richard Nixon, Adolf Hitler, Pablo Picasso, CS Lewis) to men whose lives were a little more modest (Burt Munro in his new film The World’s Fastest Indian, a working-class New Zealander who broke the land-speed record in 1967 on a souped-up 1920s’ Indian motorcycle). Hopkins is a submersive chameleon whose own subtle, taciturn personality allows him to vanish under the skin of the person he’s playing.

Nor is it a coincidence that Hopkins’ most renowned, iconic role – Hannibal Lecter – is a blood-curdling sophisticate, able to charm and seduce but flip the switch in a millisecond to unleash the rage-fuelled currents underneath. He won Best Actor playing Lecter in The Silence Of The Lambs, and has always been able to channel the demons of his past into his deep-rooted performances (he was tormented throughout his youth by alcoholism). That reservoir runs deep, and although it made him one of the most difficult and (his own word) arrogant young actors of his generation – a director’s nightmare – in recent years he’s “learned to appreciate directors.”

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