American Reacts to The British Tough Guy Trope!
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- čas přidán 7. 02. 2024
- Let's witness Jimmy The Giant unravel the layers of the British tough guy trope. From iconic movie characters to real-life figures, we'll explore the essence of this quintessentially British archetype.
Original Video: • The British Tough Guy ...
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#BritishToughGuy #AmericanReacts #ToughGuyTrope
This focuses on the modern trend of football hooligan films. Old timers like Michael Caine and Bob Hoskins never get a mention... Bob Hoskins in The Long Good Friday is one of the best British gangster portrayals ever, a massively underrated movie.
My favourite film
Great call
Long Good Friday is such a good film
The character Razor just looks like he could fuck you up, hardly even speaks in the movie
Shhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!! Those guys don't know they're old! 🤫 Nah... Michael Caine said,in an interview; that when he recieved his script of Cider House Rules, he saw that he didn't have many lines...Turned out he was cast as the matureguy and not the love-interest. Yikes😟 That, he said, was when he realised was getting on a bit 🤭 He was very philosophical 🤗
The 1971 Richard Burton/Ian McShane film "Villain" is excellent too, worth a watch.
In my experience real hard men are soft spoken if not totally silent & not given to long winded boastful speeches - but when something happens it happens so fast it will make your head spin.
Totally agree, the softest spoken ones are the most frightening.
Read the accidental gangster you'll like it
silent but deadly, like post hot curry dinner induced farts lol
A British "tough guy" and cult movie i would highly recommend you watch is "Dead Mans Shoes". It's basically a revenge movie, but the tough guy in it is ex military ( played by Paddy Considine). It's a very low budget movie filmed over 8 weeks. The director, Shane Meadows also cast a real champion boxer ( Gary Stretch) in the film to also play a tough guy. It's on a different level to the "Geeza" movies and all the better for it.
Watch the 1971 Michael Caine film "Get Carter". Tough as nails. Or look up the 1978 TV series " Out" with Tom Bell. A classic British Tough Guy TV series.
that is a fucking banger of a film, much underrated imo
Bloody brilliant film, watched it a few times 👍
Ross kemp is an actor and film maker he was with my regiment's 1st Battalion in Afghanistan 1 Royal Irish he went through the same hardship as the rest of the guys and sometimes put his head uo when he should have had it down as I have done myself and heard the wiz of a round going past my ear , he also played a Sgt in the SAS serries called ultimate Force. Please do a reaction to it you will enjoy it
Stanley baker was a working class villain in the 50’s. He broke the mould.
I think there's a difference between James Bond and the usual hardman. Bond was a tough man, able to handle himself, but he was middle - upper class.
To me a British hardman is more working class, not just from London or a football fan. Now before anyone moans at me, I was born and raised working class, I'm still working class and proud of it.
A hardman can also have a soft side, love their wife, parents, be kind to animals and still be tough, yes I love my hardman 😍
Great video and reaction, wishing you well.
The hard man portrayed I films is just fiction, nowt like reality at all.
👍 well said
Good comment. A bit off-subject, but I've noticed it's one thing the Aussies do really well. Hard-line gangsters and heavies in Australian movies are allowed emotional moments and domestic times with chores or helping the kids with homework. Makes for more rounded characters, I think, even when they're otherwise being mental.
Bond also (as written by Fleming) wasn’t British, and was a soldier. And a ptsd ridden mess half the time. Which was totally appropriate given what he was dealing with. He was on active duty pretty much continuously and normally had no backup.
That’s not a hard man setup. It’s something else entirely. The nut job that Daniel Craig portrayed or the sinister Timothy Dalton version one is much closer to Flemings bond than the shiny Connery that fifties cinema wanted to see. They didn’t want to watch more war right then, they’d just lived it.
Although apparently lazenby got cast because he could have real life auditioned to be Bond having a special forces background and they thought it might up the realism, shame that didn’t work out better.
You said Middle Upper Class but I think well educated is probably a more relatable term lol the London type gangster were educated by the streets not the state system.... have you ever met anyone who is referred to as lower upper class, those fractional terms confuse a lot of people who aren't British in my experience and not because they don't get the meaning but more to do with not being able to determine who those people really are when they are in view lol ggod point you make though
On Guy Ritchie movies, The Gentleman was a definite return the Brit grit genre but with a little Hollywood star dust just like Snatch.
Tom Hardy is definitely a model British hard-man... he plays Eddie in Venom. Rough around the edges, heart of gold.
You should watch the original’Get Carter’ with Michael Caine 1971, it’s brilliant!
"Long Good Friday" too
Michael Caine and Bob Hoskins never get mentioned in a vid about British gangster films wtf?
You should watch "Rise of The Foot Soldier." There's some right "geezers" in that. 😂
😂 my nephew had a bit part in the 5th one of them, Origins I think, he’s a bit of a geez!
British people come from other places than England. Vinnie Jones played for Wales. The clue is in the name. Also what about characters like Sharpe. A working class Yorkshire guy who breaks the rules but still works the system. The original video being commented on is very London oriented. For example what about the Glasgow gangster? Get Carter and so on…
I was waiting for an appearance of Begbie from Trainspotting...
Sharpe is a fictional character - in the books, he's from London. It's just the actor who played him who is from S.Yorks.
yeah as a Canuck I'd never mess with a Scots badman....scary!
Also, Yorkshire is in England 😂
@@jamesdignanmusic2765 Was going to mention him myself, that's the real sort of tough guy people are likely to bump into if they visited, a little guy in a pub who is absolutely mental.
Ross Kemp is still making dangerous series, recently he went diving with sharks. Danny Dyer is older now, but he was only asking the questions we were all thinking to provoke a response. Vinnie Jones is a good actor, he has a sense of humour. The toughest guys of all are the Gurkhas plus the SAS.
I can't think of Vinnie without remembering this.. "'Ere's one I made earlier."
czcams.com/video/tD2qTmDsiHk/video.html
Ross Kemp in Ricky Gervais's 'Extras' is amazing, he send himself up so well :-) He even shares the screen with Vinnie Jones season 1, Ep 02!
watching this makes me think of the first Kingsman Movie, you kinda have 2 completely different representations of British hardmen, you have the Geezers in the Pub Then the Kingsmen
If you like watching hard men movies. I'd recommend *"McVicar"* with Roger Daltrey & *"Buster"* starring Phil Collins. Both based on True stories.
The hard man characters was also around little young Tommy in the other Roger Daltrey classic of the same name.
The guy that gives Danny that little tap was actually a Master in one of the MMA halls in my town when this was filmed. His name is Mo. I remember this so well 😂😂😂
That NOT Cockney. It's a mash up of Mockney and Estuary, as taught by the drama schools.
Watch The Gentleman...its great :)
Colin Farrell .......... "Alright, Phuc, calm the fook down" 👌
Here, here!
glad you enjoyed!
The man in the top hat at 25 seconds is Prince Bertie who became King George VI ... he was father of Queen Elizabeth and grandfather of King Charles.
The Wrath of Man came out in 2021, and is a typical all action Jason Statham film, also check out his latest film "The Beekeeper" which was released last month, also has Jeremy Irons in it..
Loved those two films. Hobbs and Shaw was a good one as well.
Pat roach was a wrestler and British gangster. He was in the first 3 Indiana Jones movies
The great Pat Roach RIP always loved for his portrayal of Bomber, in Auf Weidersein Pet 😊
@@RachaelMorgan-om4xw as a person he was a true gentleman but god he was a hard man. My dad was good friends with him for many years as were my uncles
@@brynevans1825 Oooh, that's brilliant, Bryn 🤗
Lenny Montana who played Luca Brasi in The Godfather was a real life mafia enforcer. When you see him practicing his speech at the wedding that was him learning his lines😮😮
Interesting thing about actor Danny Dyer….who always plays tough guys.He is a direct descendant of Henry 8ths Chancellor Thomas Cromwell…one of history’s real tough guys.Though he did end up with his head on the block!
Thomas Cromwell was just a chancer of his time, nothing special in the least.
The real tough guys are the UK military. They have always served with distinction.
SAS, on a scale of 1 to 10... pretty hard yea
@@Kyoto_Ed Special Army Soldiers
@@StarvedForTime I thought it was Secret Army Soldiers
Ain't none tougher than the Gurkhas.
You disrespect them all by comparing them. Grow up.
The pub culture video you mention doesn't say geezers are old, it says they're anything from 25 onwards.
Try Brighton Rock (1948), Hell Drivers (1957), or The Frightened City (1961). There are plenty British hardman movies pre Bond if you look for them. During the time of the Peaky Blinders (a real gang) after WWI in Birmingham, there were gangs in all the major cities. In London you had the Sabini Brothers, followed by Jack Spot, followed by Billy Hill, etc., and movies were made about people of that ilk.
Richard Attenborough as Pinkie might well have been the first really psycho British hardman! 👍
The Gentlemen was probably Guy Ritchies last Hard Man movie. Apparently there is a series being released
I’m a Hardman quite literally it my surname.. I also used to work on the door and bars and clubs.. if I had a pound for every time someone said are you a Hard-man.. my response was stand around long enough and you’ll find out! 🤣
Lenny McClean's autobiography _The Guv'nor_ is an excellent read. Last page is emotional.
Now to find that video you mentioned on gangsters.
Did you know that the B&W film snippet at 19.47 is the (Then) Duke of York, who ascended the throne after his brother abdicated in 1938 and became George VI ( the late Queens father).
Didn't, but he was obviously a male royal. They all seem to share the same face, somehow....
@@unclenogbad1509compare pics of George V, Kaiser Wilhelm II and Tsar Nicholas at the beginning of WWI. They were cousins but could've been triplets. The interbreeding in European royal familes is crazy 🤣
@@user-nq6ih1nt4w Bizarre, right?
Jason Stalham was nearly in the Olympic games. He participated in the trials for 1988 at the National diving school he went on to represent Great Britain and England. But could not make the cut for the Olympics.
bet he didnt knew GORDEN RAMSEY was a footballer as well
Or Rod Stewart 😂
Unfortunately Glasgow Rangers for Ramsey.
Guy Richie’s The Gentleman was a British gangster, one of my favourite ones
Liked your commentary on this. I've noticed the word 'Geezer' turning up in American TV and films, and like you mention, it seems to have changed meaning a bit in the way words always do. A geezer is like a 'bloke', just with more prominence. That long-standing member of the pub clientelle is an 'old geezer', which seems to be the connotaion that's transferred over. Sorry, but I find that sort of thing interesting. Originally Dutch or Flemish, it got inserted into London slang in the traditional way: a wave of immigration (escaping the religious wars in Europe).
NB - Vinnie Jones was actually a good player, even if never quite making the top flight. He was about the last of the old style, who knew the difference between 'hard' (where you also took personal risks), and 'dirty (where you played for Leeds).
The gentleman is a grate movie definitely recomend.
Check out The Gentlemen, great film, grat cast and an introduction to a new kind of street gangs.
I understand he is young and has to relate to modern culture and film, but there have always been hard men. He is just too young and doesn't know a lot about history. At least he has Danny Dyer nailed.
Not in England.
Lots of Love,
Scotland x
Also never been past the M25.
No disagreement from me there@@roguerebel6297
I’m not sure his age is a good reason, but he probably didn’t want to focus on the longer history to not get bogged down. Probably could have at least mentioned Brighton Rock, Clockwork Orange and Michael Kane though, if only to show quick recognition of a longer and deeper history.
that shot of a clockwork orange was shot 5 minutes from my house. the flats in the background are currently getting torn down.
I think you could argue that Ritchie has pushed on with that juxtaposition, but in a slightly different way: see Hugh Grant in The Gentlemen.
The Danny Dyer clip you didn't get -
Dyer: you're almost, like, in the background aren't you?
Hardman: No, how can you say that, mate, [if] we go down London we'll turn you over
Basically Dyer is saying this Northern firm isn't a big deal and the hardman is saying his gang would beat any London firm
You need to watch the gentlemen. it's an amazing film with a great cast! Love the channel!
I love Jimmy!
The Gentleman is amazing.
Cillian Murphy is Irish and very proud of it.
I never understand why Jason Statham speaks with a Cockney accent, seeing he was born in Derbyshire and brought up in Cambridgeshire 😂
You really should check out some of Ross Kemp's documentaries, they really are fantastic. As for the start of the hard man/tough guy trope that started way before Bond, there is a great black and white film called Brighton Rock from back in 1948 Starring Richard Attenborough (Jurassic Park) where he definitely plays a character that would be considered a "geezer".
Ross kemp on gangs
Fleming based Bond on the hard men he'd worked with in WW2.
Nick love is making a new football hooligan movie. He was the producer for The Football Factory
James Bond: the author of the books knew this sort of person, and even wrote in a few, based upon real people.
Bond himself has been compared to the new men in British Intelligence that arrived with WWII. 'The intelligent thug who can pass as a gentleman when he needs to'.
Compare Nash, who becomes Bond's main adversary in 'From Russia With Love'.
Then compare Paddy Mayne, a founder of the SAS.
The match is not close, but we're talking about hard men here.
Danny Dyers most famous role was Kent Paul in Vice City and San Andreas.
I really enjoy watching your channel. I love that you're willing to agree or disagree and to learn. I think we should make you an honorary Britt 😀
actually, the wrath of man and the gentleman are exactly that style of movie. also looking forward to his new one, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.
World heavyweight boxing champion is from MANCHESTER, WE brits are still tough!
The scene at 6:54 is Rotherham where I live. I thought I recognised the buildings haha. Did some investigating and found that it was from the film I.D - a film about police going undercover to infiltrate a gang of hooligans
"Get Carter" with Michael Caine in the lead role, made in 1971 is worth seeing: dark and atmospheric.
I'm wondering how the Kingsman fits into all of this
Old geezer, geezer and diamond geezers constitute the geezer family tree.
"I cannot understand a single word he said" 🤣
Jason Statham. A proper geezer, still looking chipper at 56, having just made one of his best films, The Beekeeper.
That accent is a shocker though 😂
Cillian Murphy would be a bit pissed off to be described as British.
To be fair, he qualified by playing a tough nut Brummie.
Maybe stop playing British characters then?
He was playing a British character
@@cachinnation448 He has never managed a believable accent, though.
@@oufc90 Yeah he was playing a character, he's not actually a british hardman, some of you aren't grasping this.
The Gentleman by Guy Ritchie is an interesting film as it has old school gangsters but also makes references to the new breed, the roadmen that were referenced in the vid. If you haven't seen it, The Firm with Gary Oldman is a classic of the football hooligan genre and anything with Oldman is worth watching anyway
You need to check out 'The Essex Boys'. There are more movies and documentaries about them than any other modern criminals.
One day this guy might discover the M25 has exits and it's possible to actually leave the confines of the London area.
Tough guy documentaries- wasn't there one before Ross Kemp with a Northern Irishman? I can't remember his name but I vaguely recall him going in with gangsters and criminals in the UK?
The gentleman is a bit of a London gangster film well worth a watch
Reason Guy Richie cud hang with hard men on set, was cus although he came from a fairly wealthy upper middle class background he is pretty tough himself, and was attracted to the more tougher working class gangster life thru movies, and got involved in a few proper scrapes himself! He re-thought this path in life when he got slashed across his cheek with a Stanley Knife, a much used fearsome face slashing weapon amongst gangsters n criminals!! The scar has faded over the years n is barely noticeable, but if you look closely, especially when his face blushes or goes red in certain situations or questions etc you can still just about see the thin scar line on his cheek flare up slightly....he must have got proper slashed as the scar is from ear to mouth......the classic side of face Stanley knife slash! 😮
The early 007 films show Bond as a gentleman spy, he doesn’t become a tough and rough assassin until the late eighties
Connery's and even Roger Moore's Bond often made questionable moral decisions, killed coldly with zero emotion - even pleasure it was sometimes implied, and openly beat women for example.
It was questionable even in the 80's and 90's
The books came first. The later films, with Dalton & Craig, tried to become closer to how he was originally written. Read the original say, of From A View To A Kill, or The Spy Who Loved Me.
Missed out the film "Sexy Beast", as well as the "Rise of the Footsoldier" series of films. And how about Ray Winstone acting as a tough guy?!
Oi! Did you say a _geezer_ was an 'older man'? Now, mark my words, Sunshine (are you listenin'?): a Geezer, may be - and usually is - over 25, it's true, but that's only 'cos it takes a little time for him to become 'established', as it were. Now, you better adjust your epistemology, my Son (as we say down in 'Ackney), or I might just have to get one of Mr Richardson' boys to come over and administer a bit of a slappin'! Are we sorted, now? Good! 😉
Danny dyers episode of Who Do You Think You Are is one my favourites.
I feel that very often we can't make up our minds (eg between 1:23 and 1:26 he says Bri-ish then Bri-Tish) there's an almost unspoken knowledge of when to say which and not to over-use one or the other. It used to be one way or the other but these days many folks will say both Ouses and Houses within the same sentence talking about the same houses! This might be strange on foreign ears but to us it's all part and parcel of the language.
Vinne's "[Being a hard man] is about not flinching during a tackle!
So true, as you re-stated half way through this.
Oh and poor Vinnie losing his wife a few years back, if you look up some news of it, he was totally crushed. When a tough guy shows (albeit not by choice) a sensitive side, that makes a tough guy a tough man.
Cheers for the reaction Guv!
'Bri-ish' is Cockney/Estuary. Like 'water' it depends where you are from, how you say it. The UK is not just SE England, although they'd like to think so.
Guy Ritchie will forever regret not completing a trilogy. I doubt Madona was worth that mistake.
Give him time...
10:21 Lenny Mclean was a real hard man, both on film and off.
Craig Fairbrass is the man, and as somebody has already suggested, watch Rise Of The Footsoldier.
Gary Oldman, The Firm, is excellent..
dr no was the start of the tough guy thing that wasnt the norm back then and not the norm now,ah the memories of the times when we only had to look forward.
Islanders are always tough tbh, I guess a comparison would be alaska people in US.
Hey you need to check out...the gentlemen....sweet film with twists....
Why no mention of 1971 Michael Caine film "Get Carter" ?. Watch. They don't come any tougher.
You need to check out 'The Essex Boys'. There are more movies and documentaries about them than any other modern criminals. Violent drug dealers how were murdered.
James Bond wasn't quite the beginning of the trope, but it was the big breakthrough. Earlier movies like "Brighton Rock" and "Hell Drivers" had set the stage for it, but the bad guys always lost before Bond. It's odd that he skipped straight from James Bond to Lock, Stock... without dealing with any of the hard man films in between. Ray Winstone had been playing this sort of character for years before Vinny, starting with 1979's "Scum" and including the hilarious and dark black comedy "Sexy Beast" (well worth watching!). Ross Kemp... either very brave or very stupid - either way, compelling television.
Surprised no mention of Michael Caine in "Get Carter" - considering when it was made, the portrayal of violence was really disturbing.
"Geezer" is simply London slang for guy or dude. However, if it is said with emphasis it means "top geezer" or "diamond geezer" i.e. someone who acts decisively or commands respect. (It doesn´t mean old man, like it does in the USA!)
Vinnie always angry unless he is saving heaghogs on his farm
You should take a look at the Ross Kemp "documentaries" (sic), clever man with balls of iron, it wasn't something which I had an interest in, but what little I did see didn't disappoint and I think that you would appreciate it too.
That video was pretty spot on. My OH is the son of a Richardson gang member, with Kray Twins connections. Suffice it to say his dad spent a long time in prison. My OH has a lot of stories to tell.
The gentlemen and wrath of man are two great guy Ritchie films
James Bond went to that well known working class school...*checks notes*...Eton
Just to let you know bud in case you’re not sure but vinny jones wasn’t a hooligan he was actually a professional footballer but he was a kind of hooligan on the pitch which although entertaining it was a bit of a shame because he could actually play a bit but the way he approached the game rather than the way he played is the overriding memory. My apologies if you did actually know this, it’s 11.20pm and I’ve taken painkillers lol
They weren't urinating on him, he was taking the piss.
ID is based on an operation to lock up the hooligans from my football team. I was still at school at the tiime and a few people didn't turn up the one day because their doors had been kicked down and they got taken in alongside their older brothers. I knew a few hooligans then and more of them now they are over 50 and they are almost all really nice guys. It's completely at odds with how you think things should be. They also knew who was up for a fight, who would fight if cornered and who wasn't interested at all and we regularly got tipped off where not to be at a particular time because they didn't want lads in the latter two categories getting caught up in something they didn't want to be involved in.
And there I was thinking it was "Geezer" all these years
What about Robert Newton in the original Oliver Twist film playing Bill Sikes 1948. Proper hard man. As opposed to Sean Connery as James Bond in Dr No 1962.
Craig Fairbrass is my favourite, but he says cnut every 5 seconds. 😃 Check out "Rise of the foot soldier"
If anybody thinks the British Gangster / hard man only appeared in the 1950's, youre deluded!
When Ross kemp was described as a theater kid it made me laugh 😅 he was in the para’s before he got in to acting 🤣 “parachute regiment of the British army the equivalent of the USA’s green berets” 🤣. The lad doing this video seems to have a basic grip on it but I think his age has a lot to do with his lack of depth of knowledge on the British hard man. For him it seems to be lack of experience and more based on a small number of films and where he is from “I’d guess London or the surrounding area”. But it’s a good video for the basics 🤣👍🏻.
So was Billy Connolly.
Danny Dyer does not belong on any list that has the words "hard man" in it
i guess a reaction to ross kemp has to be on the cards
the gentleman is a kinda gangster movie good story and cast
I feel like the Uk military help in the creation of the tough guy, 30 or more years ago the Uk military would be move from a military base to other all around the country. So every couple of years or so, a new lot of soldiers (squadies) would move in on the local talent (girls/ladys) which would inevitably lead to pub fights. Not sure exactly when that ended, but for many years now the military are based in the same places all over the country an do not move ever couple of years any more.