When we propose an acting, always try to find ways that the character expresses his emotions for the viewer understands that happens, but sometimes, the character his own emotions swallow can I be more effective even to convey what he feels. Not all the time we get to the outside what we feel, in fact, most of the time we internalize our feelings to protect our privacy. Do the same with the character of our scene give you a good dose of natural and believable realism that will get our scene. In the video below we see a great performance by Eduard Fernandez in which the character has his rage and jealousy in public, thus transmitting more strongly the frustration felt inside to see how they put the horns in front of their noses.
In the video you see below is part of the series Breaking Bad. In Gus Fring we see the mob boss in a scene where containment of emotions plays a key role. On one hand we have Gus Fring with the coldness that characterizes him. Keeping his face muscles makes virtually immovable able to transmit all their iniquity much more power. Across, Hector Salamanca, Don Juarez Cartel, suffers a stroke that prevents you from moving the muscles in his face freely. However, We can read in his face all the rage that's inside.
Finally we have a video that belongs to the Little Miss Sunshine movie in which the young actress Abigail Breslin plays Olive, a chubby and bespectacled girl who wants to win a beauty contest. His brother in fiction is Dwayne, a troubled young man who has sworn to keep silent until it became test driver. Dwayne has just learned that is colorblind and will never be a test pilot. His frustration makes him out of the van and refuses to continue. While his mother fails in the attempt to convince, Olive manages to persuade his sister with a simple gesture of affection. Once again, achieved with the minimum express the maximum.