I love the fact that as a parent, part of your responsibility is to know when to teach and when not to teach, when to lecture, when to engage, when to ask questions, when to listen, when to be affected by what you're hearing.Īs Antón, I hear Diego say, “I like this girl. I want you to feel a father's disappointment that his son doesn't understand why he has to follow in his footsteps - what lineage means, the process of educating and empowering someone to be in a position to take your place and rule responsibly, or not. ![]() I want you to feel the love of a father for his son. What do you want players to feel from Antón’s scenes with his son, Diego? This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. In an interview with Inverse, Esposito shares the unique challenges of motion capture, the childhood memories that shaped his portrayal of the Far Cry 6 villain, and weighs in on debates surrounding the game’s politics. He’s also one of the most enthusiastic actors in the business, approaching every role with a scholarly seriousness and childlike wonder, precisely the balance the Far Cry series aims to strike. And for good reason: he’s an incomparably charismatic baddie. ![]() Though Esposito has a rich and varied resume spanning from Do the Right Thing to the mysterious narrator of Dear White People, he’s best known for playing villains on smash-hit shows like Breaking Bad and The Mandalorian. ![]() ![]() “I certainly have some experience in that with the characters I've played! ” “I liked the master manipulation of people, getting them to do what you need them to do,” Esposito tells Inverse. During our conversation about his role as dictator Antón Castillo in Far Cry 6, out October 7, we chatted at length about Far Cry 5’s canny depiction of mind-control tactics that go beyond mere violence. Much like myself, Giancarlo Esposito isn’t much of a gamer.īut we share a deep love for the Far Cry series.
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