The Guardian (USA)

Anthony Hopkins’ 20 best film performanc­es – ranked!

- Anne Billson

20. Thor (2011)

Over the years, Anthony Hopkins acquired the sort of gravitas that allowed him to slot effortless­ly into his stint in the Marvel special effects salt mines, nowadays a rite-of-passage for every actor. And he is perfectly cast as Odin, the one-eyed ruler of Asgard, legendary know-it-all and, in the MCU at least, the father of Hela, Thor and Loki. “I’m a little like Odin myself,” Hopkins said in an interview.

19. Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

Everyone sneers at Keanu Reeves wrestling with his English accent in Francis Ford Coppola’s lavish vampire fest, while unfairly giving a free pass to Hopkins’ outrageous hamming as Van Helsing, a Dutch bon vivant who cackles “She is the devil’s concubine, whey-hey!” and babbles about decapitati­on over dinner. But the actor is having so much fun it would be churlish to complain.

18. When Eight Bells Toll (1971)

If this somewhat dour thriller had been as big a hit as Where Eagles Dare, another adaptation of an Alistair MacLean novel, Hopkins might have played British secret agent Philip Calvert more than once and ended up an action star. It wasn’t to be, but it’s fun to see him dangling from helicopter­s, or ramming speedboats, as he tackles hijackers off the chilly coast of Scotland.

17. Howards End (1992)

An embalmed slice of EM Forster heritage from the Merchant IvoryJhabv­ala stable, complete with bluebell woods and steam trains. Hopkins, in stiff-necked mode, plays stuffy widower Henry Wilcox, who unaccounta­bly proposes to blue-stockinged feminist Emma Thompson, resulting in endless talky ructions, with the snooty Wilcoxes treating the lowerclass characters almost as condescend­ingly as the film does. A good cast, but they’ve all been better.

16. The Road to Wellville (1994)

“My stools, sir, are gigantic, and have no more odour than a hot biscuit.” Barely recognisab­le behind Colonel Sanders facial hair and Bugs Bunny teeth, Hopkins plays Dr John Kellogg, an enemas-for-all evangelist and the inventor of the cornflake. Alan Parker’s film of TC Boyle’s novel is a fine showcase for the actor, though the scatologic­al satire should have been darker.

15. Amistad (1997)

Our man from Port Talbot plays ex-US president John Quincy Adams in Steven Spielberg’s courtroom drama about a shipful of slaves who, in 1839, are put on trial for their lives after rebelling against their captors. Hopkins talks with an accent, walks with a stick and delivers a grandstand­ing speech to the supreme court, his every appearance accompanie­d by the plangent tones of a patriotic trumpet.

14. 84 Charing Cross Road (1987)

This adaptation of Helene Hanff’s bestsellin­g memoir about her 20-year correspond­ence with the manager of a London bookshop is a favourite of American bibliophil­es and Brits who look back fondly on postwar rationing. He sends her out-of-print books; she sends him food parcels from New York. Sentimenta­lity is kept at bay, just, by Hopkins and Anne Bancroft giving a dual masterclas­s in the art of the voiceover.

13. The Mask of Zorro (1998)

Hopkins looks every inch the dashing hero with his flowing grey locks, dapper goatee and super fencing skills as Zorro, the legendary Hispanic champion of the people. But for all his swagger, he’s approachin­g retirement age, so must train undiscipli­ned young whippersna­pper Antonio Banderas as his replacemen­t. Old-fashioned swashbuckl­ing thrills in this superior costume romp, with some terrific stunt work.

12. Fracture (2007)

A wealthy aeronautic­al engineer (Hopkins, of course) shoots his unfaithful wife in the head, then watches in amusement while young prosecutor Ryan Gosling runs himself ragged trying to prove it. The plot would barely pad out an episode of Law & Order, but there is plenty of fun to be had in watching the seasoned veteran and the smug up-and-comer (and that’s just the actors) trying to outmanoeuv­re each other.

11. The Edge (1997)

Hopkins plays billionair­e Charles Morse, whose plane crashes in the Alaskan wilderness, pitting him against deadly terrain, wild beasts and a love rival played by Alec Baldwin. Screenwrit­er David Mamet seems keen to show that intellectu­als not unlike himself can hack it in the rugged manhood stakes, but as directed by Lee Tamahori, and with animal actor Bart the Bear stealing all his scenes, it’s more like an exciting sequel to Grizzly.

10. The World’s Fastest Indian (2005)

Hopkins turns on the down-toearth charm in this corny but likable biopic of Burt Munro, a labour of love for its Australian writer-director, Roger Donaldson. Munro is an eccentric but lovable New Zealander trying to realise his dream of taking his highly modified 1920 Indian Scout motorbike to the salt flats of Utah, where he plans to show the world just how fast he and his beloved bike can go.

9. Magic (1978)

Richard Attenborou­gh, who called Hopkins “the greatest actor of his generation”, directed him in five films, including this creepy character study about a hopeless stage magician called Corky who becomes a hit when he develops a ventriloqu­ist act with a foulmouthe­d dummy called Fats. Hopkins’s American accent comes and goes, and the story springs few surprises – Corky is clearly deranged from the outset – but the actor has a ball in the dual roles of sweaty loser and his evil id.

8. Surviving Picasso (1996)

When he’s playing historical figures such as Richard Nixon or Alfred Hitchcock, Hopkins sometimes seems an odd fit, if not actively miscast, though he never fails to give value for money. One of his most enjoyable forays into biopic territory is this portrait of the artist as a muse-abusing monster, livelier than usual fare from the Merchant

Ivory-Jhabvala team. Best approached not as a serious study of hotblooded creative genius, but as a movie of bad accents, complete with berets and Brasserie Lipp.

7. Shadowland­s (1993)

Hopkins plays CS Lewis – theologian and the creator of Narnia – in what is essentiall­y an Oxbridge Love Story, exploring the conflict between intellect and emotion when the introverte­d academic finds true happiness with forthright American poet Joy Gresham (Debra Winger), only for her to be diagnosed with terminal cancer. Attenborou­gh directs William Nicholson’s screenplay (originally a TV play) and the results are solid, with classy performanc­es from the two leads. Guaranteed to cause sniffling.

6. The Two Popes (2019)

Jonathan Pryce plays the archbishop of Buenos Aires and future Pope Francis; Hopkins plays his predecesso­r, German-born Pope Benedict XVI, who is thinking of resigning after the Vatican leaks scandal and sexual misconduct cover-ups. Against all odds, these two very different men become friends, shoot the breeze and interrogat­e their own slightly dodgy pasts. This right load of pope-aganda is made palatable for non-Catholics like me by two wonderful performanc­es, the Cinecittà-recreated Sistine Chapel, and the idiosyncra­tic rituals of popery.

5. The Elephant Man (1980)

Get out your hankies for the heartbreak­ing true story of John Merrick, whose disfigurem­ents condemn him to a life of mistreatme­nt in a Victorian freak show before he is rescued and rehabilita­ted by an ambitious surgeon. It’s John Hurt, under a ton of prosthetic­s, who gets the showy role in David Lynch’s historical drama. But it’s Hopkins who provides the film with its compassion­ate gaze in a lovely performanc­e as Frederick Treves, who takes the disfigured man under his wing and shows him kindness.

4. Titus (1999)

With his National Theatre training, it’s surprising Hopkins hasn’t done more Shakespear­e on screen. He played Claudius in Tony Richardson’s Hamlet, and Lear in a TV movie, but he hits peak stentorian eloquence in the title role of Julie Taymor’s thrilling adaptation of the Bard’s goriest play. Titus Andronicus is a victorious Roman general whose refusal to show mercy sets off a chain reaction of rape, dismemberm­ent and murder, culminatin­g in Hannibal Lecter-style atrocity. The Hopkins voice at full throttle can make your hair stand on end.

3. The Remains of the Day (1993)

This Merchant Ivory-Jhabvala adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Booker-winning novel gives Hopkins one of his meatiest pent-up roles. He plays the loyal butler at a 1930s English country mansion who refuses to acknowledg­e that he is sacrificin­g his own happiness for an employer whose sympathies lie with the Nazis. Emma Thompson plays the housekeepe­r who tries to break through his reserve. A polite but merciless dissection of the British dream of empire in which everyone knows their place.

2. The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

“I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti.” Brian Cox in Manhunter is creepier, and Mads Mikkelsen on TV is funnier, but it was Hopkins who turned Hannibal Lecter into a pop culture phenomenon with his performanc­e in Jonathan Demme’s film of Thomas Harris’s thriller. In less than 25 minutes on screen, that blue-eyed lizard stare and Katharine Hepburnmee­ts-Truman Capote delivery won a best actor Oscar and elevated Hopkins to superstar status, even if Hannibal and Red Dragon would later reduce everyone’s favourite serial killer to a sort of cannibalis­tic Dr Frasier Crane.

1. The Father (2020)

If you assumed, wrongly, that Hopkins was coasting through his twilight years, Florian Zeller’s cleverly filmed adaptation of his own stage play, which places you in the head of a man with dementia, will set you straight. The actor shuffles a full deck of emotions, exercising his considerab­le charm and charisma while struggling to recognise his daughter (Olivia Colman), flirting with a new caregiver, or losing his bearings in familiar surroundin­gs as his mind betrays him. It’s a career-best performanc­e – brave, painful, and utterly heartbreak­ing.

The 93rd Academy Awards will take place on 25 April. The Father will be released in the UK on 11 June.

 ??  ?? Anthony Hopkins as Odin in Thor, with Chris Hemsworth and Tom Hiddleston. Photograph: Zade Rosenthal/Marvel Studios/Allstar
Anthony Hopkins as Odin in Thor, with Chris Hemsworth and Tom Hiddleston. Photograph: Zade Rosenthal/Marvel Studios/Allstar
 ??  ?? Jack Hawkins and Hopkins in When Eight Bells Toll. Photograph: Rank/Allstar
Jack Hawkins and Hopkins in When Eight Bells Toll. Photograph: Rank/Allstar

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