Benicio del Toro on the art of acting, his most iconic roles, and why winning an Oscar 'changes nothing'
There are movie stars, and then there are actors who operate on a completely different frequency. For thirty years, Benicio del Toro has proven he's the latter. With that signature rasp, those heavy-lidded eyes that can switch from menacing to mournful in a heartbeat, he doesn't just play characters—he inhabits them so completely you forget you're watching a performance. And while awards chatter inevitably flares up whenever his name is in the mix, del Toro himself remains famously unfazed. A while back, when the Oscar buzz was reaching fever pitch, he basically shrugged it off with a line that sums up his whole approach: winning or losing changes nothing. For a bloke who's already got one of those gold statues on his mantelpiece for Traffic, it's not arrogance—it's just the truth. The work is what counts.
And what a body of work it is. Del Toro has a rare gift for finding the human pulse in larger-than-life figures. Take Dr. Gonzo in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. On paper, it's a cartoon—a 300-pound Samoan attorney on a bender of biblical proportions. But del Toro found the sweaty, desperate, strangely vulnerable soul inside the chaos. He made the monster feel real, which is infinitely harder than playing him as a joke. Then there's Jack Jordan in 21 Grams. If you haven't revisited it since the 21 Grams (Blu-ray) re-release, do yourself a favour. His portrayal of an ex-con searching for God, only to have his world shattered again, is a raw nerve of a performance. It's a masterclass in what acting students reverently call The Art of Acting—the kind of immersive, physical transformation that leaves scars. You can feel the weight of that man's grief in every frame.
The guy doesn't chase glory. He chases truth. Whether he's tackling a historical figure like Padre Benito del Toro or bringing quiet gravity to a smaller indie, he treats every role with the same respect. He's talked about his own sensei, the masters he learned from, but the end result is pure him. You never catch him performing; you catch him being.
If you're mapping out his essential work, these are the ones that define the craft:
- Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998): The definitive gonzo performance. Unhinged, hilarious, and somehow deeply human.
- 21 Grams (2003): A brutal, heartbreaking dive into guilt and redemption. Essential viewing.
- Traffic (2000): His Oscar-winning turn as Javier Rodriguez. A lesson in doing more with a look than most actors can with a monologue.
At the end of the day, Benicio del Toro remains Hollywood's favourite outsider—a star who seems perpetually uncomfortable with stardom. When the Oscars roll around, you won't find him working the room. He'll be somewhere else, probably already lost in the next character, doing the only thing that's ever mattered. Just acting.