“I’m not saying I don’t like those big movies. I’m saying I had not learned yet how to bring myself to those movies,” Ahmed said about his “Venom” takeaway. “Those films teach you stamina, technical craft, and it is a skill to be able to eke out your artistry in that setting. Look at Javier Bardem in ‘Skyfall.’ I just hadn’t developed the skill set at that point to do the technical thing and the emotional thing.”

Ahmed said after “Venom” his interest in acting got recalibrated from shape-shifting into other people to tapping into his own personal experience. The actor wants to find himself in his roles, not lose himself in them like some of his peers. “The idea of making masks and wearing masks is something that came very naturally to me, as someone who grew up code-switching between different cultural environments and class environments,” Ahmed said. “Shape-shifting to fit into other molds. Acting became an extension of that, and more recently what I’ve thought about it is taking masks off. Of course, if you believe on some deep internal level that you aren’t the right type — the right color, shape, size, accent — then you will start instinctively wearing masks. So it’s been a shift in self-perception for me to say, ‘You know what? I am enough. We are all enough.’” Ahmed recently took on the the festival circuit at Telluride and TIFF with his science-fiction drama “Encounter.” In addition to “Venom,” the actor got blockbuster acting experience with a supporting role in “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.” Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.