technology trends | January 15, 2026

Benedict Cumberbatch compares himself to Michael Fassbender: weird or OK?

Is anyone else getting kind of obsessed with Benedict Cumberbatch’s mouth? I know his beautiful almond-shaped eyes are wildly popular amongst the Cumber Collective, but we need to start making his beautiful lips into a thing. Anyway, Star Trek Into Darkness opens in the UK tomorrow, but American Cumberbitches won’t get to see it until next weekend (CB promised to go with me!). So, we still have another week full of Cumbertastic interviews, although I swear that some of you are already over him. This is a marathon, Cumberbitches, not a sprint. Eat a power bar, take a nap and then obsess, obsess, obsess. Some interesting highlights from Cumby’s latest Time Out interview:

He’s a Star Trek agnostic: ‘Yes, very much agnostic, that would be the term. I didn’t reject it. I’m not Richard Dawkins. I’m not a “Star Trek” atheist! I got a sentimental kick during the reboot, though, so there must have been something there. I think because it was on BBC Two before the six o’clock news. But as far as escapism went, “Star Wars” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark” got more under my skin. I’ve got a respect for “Star Trek” now. I remember even at the time thinking these were quite tight morality plays and it wasn’t just about the fastidiousness and endless detail that people can obsess over in the Trekkie universe. Which is great…’

Working on The Hobbit: ‘Working on “Star Trek”, you can marry your role slightly to real-life experiences but, playing Smaug in “The Hobbit”, it’s impossible to do that – he’s a 400-year-old firebreathing worm who lives on top of a pile of gold and likes eating doors. Obviously, I’m personally a biped rather than a serpent, so the motion-capture element is limited. I was mainly on my belly on the floor playing at being a dragon. It was like being a kid: no marks, no make-up, no continuity, no worries about camera positions. It was so much fun.’

On playing Julian Assange in The Fifth Estate: ‘I didn’t want to hang him out to dry, I wanted to give a fair account of him. It’s a living story, and the moral responsibility was very much part of the job. I tried to reach out to him, to communicate with him, and he was having none of it as far as a meeting goes. He felt that a meeting would condone a film he felt was too poisonous an account. He got hold of an old script and all sorts of issues blew up when we were filming. He tried to attack it and in his position I’d do the same, probably. We had a discussion, though, which was good. If Julian is feeling that way, politically, he’s right not to let [a meeting] happen, because it would be like a blessing.’

His rising level of fame: ‘Yes, everyone’s saying that… “It’s going to go to another level”, “Benedict blasts off”, “It’s going to go into warp drive”, and all those terrible puns! But I go: “Well, yeah, I know James McAvoy, and he’s okay. Michael Fassbender, I know a little bit, and he’s doing fine.” It’s possible to remain grounded. It’s all a bit of an adjustment. I can’t be anything but flattered because of the attention towards the work.’

On being his ‘Sexiest’ title: ‘It’s very nice. As you can see, I’m okay-looking. I don’t really get it.’

[From Time Out]

When I first read this, it kind of bugged me that Cumby is comparing himself – again! – to Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy and Tom Hardy (that was in the last interview). But when you think about it… he pretty much IS at the same level. It’s not like he’s comparing himself to Daniel Day-Lewis or something. At the age of 36, Cumby IS around the same age as Fassbender (36), Hardy (35), and McAvoy (34), and as far as the work goes… much like Fassbender in particular, there’s a slow-burn quality to Cumby’s career. Cumby has been working for years and it wasn’t until Sherlock that he suddenly became a real celebrity. And 2013 is The Year of Cumby, much like 2011 was The Year of Fassbender. But… Cumby name-drops his contemporaries so often, and he compares himself publicly to those guys so often, it does seem… Goopy. He should just let other people praise him and do the comparisons, you know?

Oh, and Cumby also has a new piece in USA Today – it’s mostly a snooze, just stuff we’ve already heard before. But at the end, Cumby is asked about his Star Wars love, and he goes off on a wonderful tangent:

Immersing himself in sci-fi, though, is a bit of childhood wish fulfillment. While he enjoyed the morality tales of the original Star Trek reruns he watched over biscuits and tea in the early evening, he grew up adoring Star Wars — along with Indiana Jones, Han Solo was one of “the coolest, most aspirational heroes of my childhood,” he says.

Ask Cumberbatch if he’s available for Abrams’ upcoming Star Wars: Episode VII, and he lets loose an impressive Wookiee roar in return.

“Where’s Chewbacca in all of this? You want little baby Ewok-sized Chewbacca and a whole family of Chewbaccas,” the actor says, fan-casting a subplot to the upcoming movie. (If you play a dragon in a movie, you can probably also play a furry co-pilot who growls a lot.)

“It’s safe to say that J.J. knows my work and has my number. It would be great fun. Just promise me you won’t have a banner headline where it goes, ‘USA TODAY exclusive: Cumberbatch wants in with Star Wars director J.J. Abrams,’ ” he adds, laughing. “The worst way to try and get a job I think is to tout it in a national newspaper.”

[From USA Today]

I want to hear Cumby’s Chewbacca roar. RAWR!! You know he turned everything into a whooshing light-saber when he was a kid. LOL, Cumby is such a geek. I love it.

Oh, and Cumby was on The Late Show last night. I haven’t watched the whole thing yet, but here’s the video:

Photos courtesy of PR Photos.