
Cillian Murphy: Acclaim, Advocacy, and the Art of Meaningful Storytelling
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Cillian Murphy is having one of those rare moments where both critical acclaim and pop culture collide. In the past few days the biggest headline is his leading role in the new Netflix film Steve which has set social media ablaze and generated a flood of think pieces. On CBS Saturday Morning he discussed the leap from pure acting to producing and spoke about the pressure and privilege of his career after his Oscar win for Oppenheimer last year. Murphy’s performance in Steve is being widely praised, with FlixChatter and others highlighting the movie’s harrowing realism and his devastating portrayal of a reform school teacher pushed to the edge in 1990s Britain. He was joined by Tracey Ullman and Jay Lycurgo in a film that's as topical as it is intense. The Big Issue caught up with him in London, where he didn’t shy away from the film’s political undertones and growing frustration about ongoing social inequality in the UK. Far from chasing blockbusters, Murphy’s creative choices are more about tackling hard social realities and collaborating with trusted partners like author Max Porter and director Tim Mielants, who’d worked with him before on Peaky Blinders and Small Things Like These. Steve has also made waves among educators and mental health advocates, both for its unvarnished honesty and for Murphy’s nuanced performance.
The Peaky Blinders movie The Immortal Man remains a hot topic. Creator Steven Knight recently teased a release update is coming soon, though nothing new has dropped yet. Murphy himself gave fans hope, saying the production wrapped over a year ago and promising Tommy Shelby’s return in a high-stakes WWII mission with an all-star cast including Rebecca Ferguson and Barry Keoghan. Yet, the anticipation lingers unresolved and fans are watching Netflix for that long-awaited date.
Meanwhile, Murphy is also trending in the meme world as the internet embraces his “disappointment face”—a harmless viral fad he’s said he finds amusing. He remains a rarity in Hollywood for largely ignoring social media, relying instead on high-profile interviews, events, and the work itself to keep his name at the forefront. Even his older films are seeing renewed attention; the psychological thriller Red Eye just cracked Starz’s top five most-streamed and is also drawing a new audience on Paramount Plus and Amazon MGM+. Ultimately, Cillian Murphy is leveraging his post-Oscar spotlight to take meaningful risks as both actor and producer, and it’s solidifying his role not just as a screen icon, but as a significant voice in contemporary storytelling.
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