James McAvoy: Extreme opinions are everywhere
James McAvoy is in no mood to hold back.
Ahead of the release of his new film, Speak No Evil, the Scottish actor is happy to speak frankly to journalists about what drew him to the psychological thriller, and how he feels its themes of toxic masculinity and manipulation reflect the way society is changing.
âIt seems to be OK to be more extreme, to be more fundamental, to be less nuanced, to be less compromising,â he tells BBC News.
When asked about the impact of social media, and the rise of influencers such as Andrew Tate in fuelling what national police chiefs describe as the âquite terrifyingâ misogynistic radicalisation of boys and young men, he is equally straightforward.
âItâs no surprise that itâs happening within the conversation of masculinity,â he explains. âI do think that thereâs a malaise happening across society. People are looking for answers, and sometimes uncompromising, unapologetic, strong-appearing people are easy to gravitate towards,â McAvoy says.
Thatâs what makes his character, Paddy, compelling â a charming, confident yet darkly calculating individual who uses the cloak of social norms and politeness to tighten his toxic grip on those he exploits.
The film is based on Christian Tafdrupâs dread-inducing 2022 Danish horror film of the same name, which left audiences squirming.
It follows two families with children, including a mute boy, who grow close on holiday and meet up for a weekend on their return. But the seemingly innocuous reunion is undone by a creeping unease that spirals from the edges of deceit into a nightmare of chilling intention.
Critics praised the ambition of Tafdrupâs film, which the New York Times called âutterly fearless in its mission to unsettleâ, underpinned by its shocking final scenes.
Its simmering tension and unflinching social commentary on modern apathy, complicity and abused ideals earned a flurry of nominations at Denmarkâs award season.
Two years on, the Hollywood remake sees Eden Lake director James Watkins reimagine the film through the lens of insidious masculinity.
McAvoyâs Paddy, a passionate, gregarious husband to wife Ciara (Aisling Franciosi), exudes an apparent rugged self-assuredness that appeals to American couple Ben (Scoot McNairy) and Louise Dalton (Mackenzie Davis).
Struggling with work worries, marriage difficulties and anxiety over their daughter Agnes (Alix West Lefler), Ben and Louise fail to communicate effectively.
This makes the allure of Paddy particularly strong for Ben, who is struggling to meet traditional masculine expectations.
McAvoy suggests this is how influencers like Tate, who the actor previously told Empire was a direct influence on his performance, can offer an apparent solution to disaffected young men who often feel forgotten or vilified in todayâs landscape.
âThey seem to have the answer,â he says. âThey seem to have success. They seem to be capable of great happiness, which is what Paddy is kind of selling [in Speak No Evil].
âWhen youâre lost, youâre looking for somebody whoâs clearly found themselves and found their own way. So why wouldnât you go with them and try and get the answers?â.
But McAvoy makes clear this âsimplistic, selfish, fundamental approach to lifeâ is, to him, ultimately âunrealistic⊠and barbaricâ.
Family ties
The filmâs tension between the values we preach and our intentions is one of its central themes.
McAvoy says âwalking the tightropeâ between public acceptability and the dark self-obsessed âanimal version of humanityâ is what attracted him to the role.
In a four-star review, the Independentâs Clarisse Loughrey wrote that while the remake is âcleaner and less daringâ than the original, McAvoyâs performance is one of the âmost impressively repugnant of the yearâ.
She said its âviscerally, uncomfortably familiar take on entitled masculinityâ is âdelivered with a self-satisfied smile, as a gossamer cover to the violent rage belowâ.
NMEâs James Mottram similarly praised the âgloriously unhinged⊠off-the-leashâ McAvoy as the highlight of a âtop-notchâ horror-thriller, also awarding four stars.
And Total Filmâs Jamie Graham said Watkinsâ âshrewd, engrossing and pleasingly nastyâ imagining is unafraid to push the source material in new directions, with McAvoy âperfect⊠for this particular brand of Alpha male bruteâ.
The 45-year-oldâs varied career is littered with roles that push at the depths of psychology â from playing Macbeth on Londonâs West End to starring in the film adaptation of Irvine Welshâs Filth and portraying multiple personalities in M Night Shyamalanâs horrors Split and Glass.
But Speak No Evil is his first to take place in a claustrophobic family setting.
Of course, Hollywood has a long history of exploring crises in masculinity and the family unit, namely 1955âs Rebel Without A Cause, starring James Dean as an angst-ridden misunderstood teenager adrift from his parentsâ pre-war values.
But Speak No Evil goes further, delving deeper into the reasons for, and impact of, toxic male behaviour â more openly discussed within the past decade.
Unlike the Danish original, which McAvoy avoided watching before shooting to stay free from influence, Watkinsâ script addresses how familial cycles of abuse form â explicitly referencing Paddyâs trauma at the hands of his father. This repeats through his own violent behaviour towards his mute son, Ant, played by newcomer Dan Hough.
Watkinsâ version also gives the children a hugely expanded role as part of this exploration â resulting in a markedly different ending to Tafdrupâs.
Davis explains that Agnes and Ant embody a âclear channel through which their instincts can flow.â
This openness allows them to find ways to communicate and work together in sharp contrast to their parents.
Davis feels it acts as a mirror for the importance of adults getting âback to that placeâ where they can be as honest and unfiltered as children, who simply say: ââNo, I know whatâs wrong here. And I donât feel safe.'â
Disability âreflects social barriersâ
The filmâs touchstones of communication and breaking through barriers of superficiality are ultimately pulled together through Antâs relationship with his disability and his fatherâs abuse.
The trailer reveals he is mute due to an apparent tongue defect, but the reason for his silence is not as it seems.
Ant still attempts to communicate the truth, dropping non-verbal clues wherever possible.
Paddy, as well as being abusive, exploits his sonâs disability to cover his own tracks by appearing a saintly figure â playing on societyâs attitudes toward disability.
For McAvoy, this resonates on a personal level, shaped by his understanding of disability through his previous work.
The actor has twice played characters who use a wheelchair, most famously as a young Professor Xavier in the X-Men franchise.
However, when, as a wheelchair user myself, I ask him what he learned from the experience, he points me to his first role: portraying Rory OâShea, a young man with the life-limiting condition Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy in 2004âs Inside Iâm Dancing.
Today, the film would likely be questioned within the complex debate over non-disabled actors taking on disabled characters.
McAvoy explains he would stay in his wheelchair all day when filming, even off-set, to gain a more authentic awareness of the physical and social obstacles disabled people face.
He says this exposed him to disingenuous attitudes from many people, who seemed more interested in appearing compassionate rather than genuinely engaging with him.
âI found it was really jarring,â he says, âbecause I just thought: âOK, Iâm sitting here in a wheelchair, but I can talk to you and we can talk about anything you wantâ.
âInstead of people engaging with somebody whoâs different or has more physical obstacles in their life than they do, they get almost⊠scared, and just have the sheen of âIâm a good person because I can pity youâ.â
His frustration is clear: âItâs a complete barrier to getting anywhere in a relationship or having a conversation that actually means anything.â
The heart of these issues remain in Speak No Evil â a film remade for a social media age in which everybody is speaking but nobody is truly listening.