I'm nothing like my Peaky Blinders character, says Cillian Murphy

Cillian Murphy appears at a red carpet event. He smiles at the cameras and is wearing a blue striped shirt and black waistcoatImage source, Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images
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Murphy won an Oscar last year for his leading role in Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer

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Actor Cillian Murphy has said he is nothing like his Peaky Blinders character Tommy Shelby, because he is not a "psychopathic gangster".

Murphy, 49, told BBC News playing the violent patriarch for a quarter of his life "has been a gift and a privilege".

A Peaky Blinders film will be released soon by Netflix, although Murphy said the plot line is still under lock and key.

It comes as the Irish actor promotes his new film, Steve, which follows his titular character's attempt to turn around a 1990s reform school for troubled boys.

Teasing the Peaky Blinders film, which has been written by the show's creator Steven Knight, Murphy said: "I think it's better to keep it under wraps, keep it a surprise."

Viewers have seen Murphy lead the Shelby organised crime gang with tortured efficiency since 2013 and across six series

The actor said the length of time he has played Shelby has been "defining" for him.

"To grow older with a character, you don't really get to do that, and that is the joy of long-form television," he said.

"We never anticipated that the TV show would have that impact, would be so adored and have that longevity. It is defining."

Sine the original series concluded in 2022, Murphy has also starred in Small Things Like These and won an Oscar for his leading role in Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer.

Discussing the key to Peaky Blinders' success, Murphy said it is a sort of "magic". "Mostly the writing, I think, but also it was a moment in time."

He added: "The beauty of that show is that I have gone off and done other things in the meantime and played lots of other characters."

Cillian Murphy in character as Tommy Shelby, wearing the iconic hat and dressed in smart clothingImage source, BBC Studios
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Murphy's Tommy Shelby will be on the big screen soon, Netflix has said

Among them is Steve, the headteacher of a reform school in 1996, battling the emotions and behaviour of the teenage boys living there as well as his own personal demons.

The new film chronicles a single day at the school where what can go wrong, does go wrong.

A documentary crew with questionable morals is filming, a local MP is visiting and both Steve (played by Murphy) and Shy (Jay Lycurgo), one of the pupils, receive devastating news.

Both characters are pushed to the brink, taking the audience on an emotional and often heartbreaking journey.

Murphy described the film as a love letter to teachers, as they are "custodians of next generation."

Cillian Murphy as headteacher Steve at the front of a group of boys who are all in various poses. Steve holds a tennis ball to his face and has his hands over his ears.Image source, Netflix
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Steve is set in a 1990s reform school for boys

The similarities between Shy and Steve are apparent throughout - even if they are at different stages of life.

"It's a flip-side of a coin what these characters are experiencing and they just can't reach each other," Murphy explained.

The film's themes touch on education in challenging circumstances, men's mental health and adolescent violence.

Even though it is set 30 years ago, "It is just demonstrating that this stuff is always there," he added

"The conversations are kind of manifold and different," Murphy said of the reaction to the film so far. "Everyone sees it through the prism of their own life experience".

Steve was based on the 2023 novella, Shy, written by Max Porter. The author has adapted the story for the screen.

He and Murphy previously worked together on the play, Grief Is the Thing with Feathers, also based on an original book by Porter.

As for Lycurgo, he will also appear in the upcoming Peaky Blinders film, but followed Murphy's lead in keeping the details secret.

Steve is in cinemas now and will be released on Netflix next month.