Raised by a drug addict single mother. Orphaned after she died from an overdose, lived in multiple foster homes until he was a teen. Made it big through raw talent. Support this man
in every picture he looks like hes wearing a wig sideways.
Also i hated every movie ive seen with him, that one where he poisoned an entire family, then that one where he pretends to be poor so a rich guy will be his friend and e ends up falling in love and murdering him and his sister then steals their mansion... fucking stupid movies.
>>212042392 (OP) I'm not some bitter incel with misplaced aggression and obsession towards actors suspected of "nepotism".
It's the most baseless and unmotivated complaint I regularly see on this website and I have no clue why it's even a thing. I guess when you have no friends and can't get laid the brain gets restless and looks for weird shit to be outraged over.
>At the time of his death, film critic Stephen Hunter said that Bronson "oozed male life-force, stoic toughness, capability, strength" and "always projected the charisma of ambiguity: Was he an ugly handsome man or a handsome ugly man? You were never sure, so further study was obligatory." Hunter said, "he never became a great actor, but he knew exactly how to dominate a scene quietly." Bronson "was the man with the name ending in a vowel ... who never left the position, never complained, never quit, never skulked. He simmered, he sulked, he bristled with class resentments, but he hung in there, got the job done and expected no thanks. His nobility was all the more palpable for never having to be expressed in words."
>>212043884 >According to Walter Hill, Charles Bronson "was in remarkable physical condition for a guy his age; I think he was about 52 at the time. He had excellent coordination, and a splendid build. His one problem was that he was a smoker, so he didn't have a lot of stamina. I mean, he probably could have kicked anybody's ass on that movie, but he couldn't fight much longer than 30 or 40 seconds."