Benedict Cumberbatch Looks Back At His Most Iconic Roles - Eric -Movie Trailer

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Transcript
00:00Hi, I'm Benedict Cumberbatch. I am an actor, and these are some moments from my acting.
00:11This is a guy I played in a Deerstalker and a Belstaff jacket, this sort of human meerkat.
00:17Called Sherlock Holmes.
00:19It's due to 1B Baker Street, where we filmed.
00:22We weren't really on Baker Street, we were on...
00:24I don't know what the name of the street was.
00:26Somewhere we could actually film.
00:28And it was an amazing moment.
00:31I'd done a bit up till then, but he was and is a very iconic character in literature and on screen.
00:38And I think I was something like the 75th iteration of him, dramatically.
00:42After Robert Downey Jr. was the last before me.
00:44I mean, I knew I was stepping into the limelight, taking on the role of an iconic character like Sherlock.
00:48And yet there was a huge deal of the weight lifted by Mark and Stephen Moffat.
00:56Mark Gatiss and Stephen Moffat who co-created and wrote it.
00:59It was challenging, wonderful, life-changing.
01:04It was kind of like a brain gym.
01:06It was creative, it was also very tight and controlled.
01:10It was exhausting, it was invigorating, it was a lot.
01:14Afternoon.
01:16Yes, this is a giant turd.
01:19Fire-breathing turd.
01:21That's a horrible mental image.
01:23No, that's Mark, that's the dragon in The Hobbit.
01:26Look, I mean, yeah, I auditioned for this in Cannes and a few other things on my iPhone in my best friend's kitchen,
01:31who I now run Sonny March, my production company.
01:34So it's kind of full circle talking about him.
01:36Amazing, amazing.
01:38Peter Jackson was like, it'd be interesting if you do the voice.
01:40And I was like, I want to do the mo-cap thing.
01:42I want to do what Andy Serkis does and he's a mate and I just love it.
01:44I like being in my body as a performer.
01:46Okay, you can come over to New Zealand and do that if you want.
01:49We had about two weeks' workbooks crammed into four.
01:54And by the end of it, we did it in segments.
01:57And then I said, can I do the whole thing?
01:59The whole thing? The whole scene?
02:01And I said, five pages, yeah.
02:03And I did and it was great, it was fun, it was crazy.
02:06And then I did a lot of voice work on top of that.
02:08Which, unlike the voice work for Eric, had a lot more vocoder work.
02:12So that really had to be deeper.
02:14I mean, he's a 400-year-old fire-breathing serpent.
02:16I love you only so much as a biped human.
02:18Impressive.
02:20What else do you claim to be?
02:23This guy, Alan Turing.
02:25No messing around.
02:27That's who he is.
02:29Yeah, I mean, just a deep love of him.
02:33A deep sort of empathy with his pain and his struggle.
02:36It was an amazing experience.
02:38A beautiful script of a delightful, dishonoured hero.
02:45And to tell this story and bring it into light was a real privilege in my life.
02:48And it brought me in contact with a nostalgia for Manchester,
02:53where he ended up and ended his life.
02:56I did a lot of his greater work.
02:59An extraordinary mind.
03:01A beautiful human being.
03:02A fragile soul in an indelicate world.
03:06Hoping to make it better.
03:08Yeah, that's him.

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