loki-for-ruler:

Films starring/featuring Tom Hiddleston

Phone Operator

Randolph Churchill

John Hall

Oakley

Mr. John Plumptre

Edward

Loki

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Freddie Page

Captain Nicholls

Loki

Prince Hal / Henry V

Tom

Enjoy them! (I’m guessing this has probably already been done, but I thought I’d give it a shot in case)

torrilla:

Naturally optimistic Tom Hiddleston unlocks ‘melancholy side’ to play vampire in Only Lovers Left Alive

Tom Hiddleston had to play down his “irritating optimism” to get into his latest role of a “melancholy” vampire.

The Thor star plays Adam, alongside Tilda Swinton’s Eve, in Only Lovers Left Alive, and playing the reclusive musician was a “big stretch” for him, he said.

Speaking about his character at an event at the British Film Institute on London’s South Bank looking ahead to the Toronto and Venice film festivals, he said: “He is romantic, and melancholy, and poetic, and sensitive, deeply creative, and nostalgic for a pre-digital age where creativity was more of an endeavour…and he’s a vampire.”

Hiddleston described working with Swinton as “amazing”, adding: “She’s an extraordinary, extraordinary artist. It really felt like a dance in a strange way because Adam and Eve became alive as much as we invested in them.”

A tale about the relationship between the two vampires, the London-born actor said Swinton’s character in the film complemented Adam.

“In a way her breadth can hold Adam’s complexity, and it’s really a love story between these two fine and delicate creatures of the night,” he said.

Hiddleston said he could see similarities between himself and Adam, but added that he is a much more optimistic and happy person.

“There’s a lot of me in Adam for sure, but Adam is also darker than I am,” he said.

Adding: “John Hurt is in the film and Adam is described by his character as a ‘suicidally romantic scoundrel’.

“I have probably an irritating optimism sometimes in myself and I had to turn the volume on that down.”

Taking on the role did not intimidate him and he said he enjoyed challenging himself.

“It was wonderful, because acting is the privilege of living in the shoes of someone else for a time, and Adam was a big stretch for me,” he said.

Hiddleston, who starred in Midnight in Paris, had to lose weight for the part, but said he does not believe a performance should be judged on how much an actor has changed their appearance.

“I had to change my physicality to some degree.

"I’m very sceptical of this current vogue of performances being judged according to how much weight you put on or lose, because I don’t think it’s what it’s about, truly.

"I just had to do more exercise and eat a bit less,” he said.

The actor is taking on Shakespeare in December when he will play Coriolanus at the Donmar Warehouse – and he has started learning his lines already.

“It’s a monumental learn. It’s one of the longest parts.

"I’ve started already so Coriolanus is occupying every last brain cell that I have. It’s wonderful though,” he said.

PA

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luludarling:

National Geographic – Darwin’s Lost Voyage – with Tom Hiddleston ♥

“It is interesting to contemplate an entangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each other, in so complex a manner, have all been produced by laws acting around us.”

“There is a grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”

“On the Origin of Species”, Charles Darwin