The British Tough Guy Trope, Explained

319,062
0
Published 2024-01-26
Head to squarespace.com/jimmythegiant to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code JIMMYTHEGIANT

The British "Hardman" broke traditional notions of what british men were like and has now become an icon in cinema, from ross kemp to danny dyer, tom hardy to killian murphy today we will explore this phenomena.

👉 Subscribe for more content
youtube.com/jimmythegiant?sub_confirmation=1

👉Support on Patreon www.patreon.com/JimmyTheGiant

🎵 My Music is now on Spotify! 🎵
open.spotify.com/artist/18FePoDgXxMD8cADCHHbuD

Instagram @JimmythegiantUK

Discord:
discord.gg/suZC9G8akF

All Comments (21)
  • @WeyounSix
    Danny Dyer naming his daughter Dani Dyer is the funniest shit
  • @tehhotline4225
    Ross Kemp asking that guy with an AK-47 if he's going to kill him while grabbing off him and finishing off with a "Nobody's going to kill me" was probably the hardest thing in this whole genre
  • @chefrowlet
    "I'm a man of the people" immediately speaks latin good lord if a script writer put that in a movie people would say it was too unrealistic of a satire
  • @Overlord99762
    Fuckin' hell, here I was a non-Brit seeing Ross Kemp's documentaries in Afghanistan and other parts thinking he was a journalist, I am now finding out he's an actor first.
  • Regarding the trope of everyone British in films being posh solidified the RAF's image too. Soldiers and sailors were known for being working class, but in the 30s and 40s airmen had no stereotype so the fifteen million posh actors all piled into RAF films, and everyone decided it was the posh branch. My grandad had a Yorkshire accent, and his pilot had an East Glaswegian accent and downed half a bottle of whiskey before getting in a balsawood plane and taking photos of Nazi industry. If they made a film about them they'd sound like the Eton common room.
  • Jimmy never fails to rip my limb apart one by one as I scream in excrutiating pain and agony meanwhile my consciousness slowly fades away
  • @rfcfanj7911
    He’s not talking about Cillian Murphy as in who he actually is but how his performance as Tommy Shelby has changed the hard man stereotype. Fun fact Tom hardy isn’t actually the cray twin but he played them in a movie
  • It's such a shame that the cockney accent is a rarity nowadays as someone who's granddad had the accent and mannerisms of a geezer when he was younger, I love listening to him talk whenever I get the chance to speak to him, he has such a way with his words and how he speaks and it's one of the main reason I have a very southern accent as someone who grew up in the north east
  • @benyere
    Really hope you could cover the rudeboy/skinhead of British/Jamaican culture as its heavily controversial from its two main groups as seen in like movie like "This is England" and also maybe a video covering punks/mods its really good to see a dive into British subcultures
  • @chriskjo1611
    Hmmmm talk about English tough guys without ever mentioning Ray Winstone. He's the original unstable confrontational brawling English houlihan. My favorite movie of his is 'Nil By Mouth' directed by Gary Oldman.
  • @connorriley7511
    Surprised you didn’t talk about “Essex Boys” or “The Rise Of A Foot Soldier” which is about a football firm that ran a huge ecstasy ring and the main members (the Essex 3) ending up getting murdered in the case known Rettendon triple murders amongst other popular monikers. Exact example of hard men transcending film into real life.
  • The thing i like about "Hardmen" is that they're real, there's plenty of examples of people that are just like you've seen in movies like snatch. In some regards they're toned down compared to their movie counterparts. Shaun Smith is a prime example, the man basically invented drug terrorism in Ireland and the UK, you could easily write a movie just based on his experiences and it would look like fiction.
  • @pyrho1
    I'm American and I love the British Hardman trope. Especially Tommy Shelby and Daniel Craig's 007.
  • @ZP1993
    I'd also like to mention The Long Good Friday. Bob Hoskins playing an English gangster was a good example of an English hardman,I wouldn't be surprised if his role inspired some of the characters in later British gangster movies like Lock, Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels and Snatch.
  • @Yuuna..Yuuki.
    Your videos make me proud as punch to be English. My dad used to say "Adam England's amazing kiddo. An island so small it can be fit into the corner of californa with an empire and whats the most spoken language in the world. English. People speak english not American. "
  • @StephenRyan1951
    Love these breakdowns of British culture. It was your chav video that made me subscribe.
  • @OofHearted
    You forgot about Begbie from Trainspotting.
  • @pyrho1
    The variety of have accents in Britain always astounds me, considering the entire island is relatively small.