James McAvoy Movies
Onscreen for nearly a decade at the time he was cast in director
Kevin McDonald's
The Last King of Scotland, Glasgow-born actor
James McAvoy seemed to many an overnight sensation. The fact is, however, that the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama alumnus had already formed the foundation of an enduring career at the time he was charged with holding his own opposite the formidable -- and, eventually, Oscar-winning --
Forest Whitaker.
McAvoy's parents divorced when he was just seven years old. In the aftermath, he and his mother would go to live with his grandparents in Glasgow's housing projects, with the youngster's notable interest in stage and film work eventually leading him to study at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. At 16,
McAvoy made his professional acting debut in the child abuse drama
The Near Room, with a role in the long-running British crime drama
The Bill following in short order. On the heels of a part in 2001's Emmy Award-winning WWII miniseries
Band of Brothers,
McAvoy caught the eye of critics in the small-screen adaptation
White Teeth before being cast in a pivotal role in the sci-fi effort
Children of Dune.
While roles in such U.K. television dramas as Early Doors,
Shameless, and
State of Play found
McAvoy growing increasingly comfortable on the small screen, feature performances in
Bright Young Things,
Wimbledon, and
Inside I'm Dancing (aka,
Rory O'Shea Was Here) brought him to the attention of Hollywood. In 2005, the actor went global in a very big way with a pivotal appearance as Mr. Tumnus in
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. But it was his
Last King role the following year, as a hard-partying doctor who gradually becomes a captive to one of the 20th century's most notorious dictators, that truly propelled him to international acclaim.
With his star-making role in
The Last King of Scotland,
McAvoy became not only a critical darling, but a serious dramatic talent whose future appeared to hold great things as well. Indeed, his follow-ups to
Last King proved to feature him in one lead role after another. He romanced
Anne Hathaway in
Becoming Jane, a story about the young
Jane Austen; anguished over his separation from Keira Knightley in the Oscar-nominated WWII-era romance
Atonement; and fell unexpectedly in love with
Christina Ricci in the fantasy
Penelope. After this string of romantic leading-man roles,
McAvoy did an about-face and co-starred as a reluctant but innately talented assassin in the action-packed thriller
Wanted opposite
Angelina Jolie and
Morgan Freeman. He had the lead role in 2009's drama The Last Station, and played a layer in the historical drama The Conspirator one year later. He voiced the part of Gnomeo in the animated family film Gnomeo & Juliet in 2011, and that same year he was cast as the young Professor X in the action spectacle X-Men: First Class. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 1997
- R
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This period drama was based on the Booker Prize-winning novel by author Pat Barker, one of a trilogy dealing with World War I. James Wilby stars as Siegfried Sassoon, the real-life war hero and poet who, in 1917, writes a statement against the war that is read in Parliament. Faced with the choice of either a court-martial or time in a mental hospital as a result, Sassoon chooses the hospital, and is sent to Craiglockart, a Scottish castle where shell-shocked vets are being treated by Freudian therapist Dr. William Rivers (Jonathan Pryce). Sassoon soon befriends a pair of fellow inmates. One, Billy Prior (Jonny Lee Miller) is suffering from battlefield trauma. The other is shy young fan and fellow poet Wilfred Owen (Stuart Bunce), whose own anti-war writings, encouraged by Sassoon, will go on to make him posthumously famous as well. In the meanwhile, the once-zealous Dr. Rivers begins to question his role of mending patients' minds so that they may simply go back to the front lines. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jonathan Pryce, James Wilby, (more)