With his slender physique, sporty appearance and piercing blue eyes, he has a real presence, while cultivating a certain dose of mystery.
Some think that Cillian Murphy has something of the young David Bowie of the 1970s, an eerie strangeness coated in charm and reverie.
An enigmatic forties, this discreet Irish actor by nature, has a knack for finding himself in the surprise successes of the box office.
In videoconference, the star of the series
Peaky Blinders
answers questions calmly and seriously, but lets escape his joy as soon as one evokes his Irish roots.
Read also:
The Peaky Blinders series will end after six seasons ... or almost
From Ken Loach's feature
The Wind Rises
, Palme d'Or at Cannes in 2006, through the films of Christopher Nolan (he shot five including the
Batman, Inception
and
Dunkirk
trilogy
) or the sequel to
Without a noise
, which comes out on French screens this Wednesday, Cillian Murphy still leaves his mark on the characters he plays, a kind of graceful intensity mixed with concern.
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