One scene, one of the most important monologues in the film, and you will likely never show your full face on camera. He's leaving - zipping a bag, looking for his keys - and on his way out he delivers a diagnosis of who Ellie is about to become if nothing changes. He's not wrong, and he's not a villain; he loved her, tried to, and watched her sabotage it in real time, and now he's naming it out loud on his way out the door. This is a voice-and-presence role more than a face role - protecting Ellie's POV by design - which means everything has to land in how you say it, not how you look saying it. An actor who can deliver a real, sustained speech with conviction and restraint - this scene lives or dies on tone, not coverage.
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