Eddie Redmayne Movies
When he began signing for cinematic parts, British lead
Eddie Redmayne took full advantage of his sweet, open-faced, and congenial appearance, ironically selecting a series of roles that required him to project an undercurrent of intransigent, occasionally pathological emotional extremity blanketed by a cover of innocence. He made his first significant mark in 2006 with two such psychologically demanding roles: that of Alex Forbes, a young murderer cracking under the weight of a severely dysfunctional friendship with his second victim and his own father's mistreatment in the psychological thriller
Murderous Intent; and that of Edward Wilson Jr., a CIA suit's son reeling from his father's emotional removal in
Robert De Niro's ambitious period drama
The Good Shepherd. In 2007,
Redmayne waxed equally intense as a young homosexual who commits rueful matricide in
Tom Kalin's
Savage Grace, and -- on a slightly different note -- donned period costume for a small role in
Shekhar Kapur's
Elizabeth: The Golden Age. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi