RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (2024)

Writer’s Note: This essay was one of five essays submitted by the author to Rebeller Media before it’s premature demise in early June 2020. The five essays are being collectively archived between The Ed Blog and Hollywood in Toto with the permission of editor-in-chief Sonny Bunch. This piece was originally published on May 27th, 2020.

WhenDeath Kisswas unleashed in the fall of 2018 upon an unsuspecting world, few knew who Robert Bronzi was. The unknown Hungarian entertainer had not built any sort of reputation outside of his smaller stage acts as a musician, an acrobat and a stunt performer. Among his coworkers and friends, however, he had something of a unique reputation: He bore an uncanny resemblance to the late great Charles Bronson.

His friends and coworkers were not the only ones that noticed his appearance. Bronzi was picked up by an agent who set him up as an actor working with various low-budget genre filmmakers like Rene Perez and Gary Jones. Since his first film in 2017, he has starred in four straight-to-VOD films and has an additional three in postproduction, along with numerous commercials and short films.

Bronzi started catching people’s attention in late 2018 when posters for his second film,Death Kiss,started making the rounds on social media. Being released on VOD roughly half a year after Eli Roth’s underrated remake ofDeath Wishwith Bruce Willis, the film had a certain timeliness to it. When Bronson fans finally got their hands on the film, it was clear that Bronzi was something exciting to behold. While the cinematography and audio quality ofDeath Kiss reflected the film’s cheap production values, his performance of “The Stranger” was an amazing callback to Charles Bronson’s turn as Paul Kersey. The film looks and feels like a late-period sequel to theDeath Wishfranchise: Director Rene Perez uncannily channels the style and feel of Cannon Films action and exploitation of films likeDeath Wish III in the age of digital cinema. While this definitely looks cheaper than those films, it captures the feeling and tone bizarrely well.

RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (1)

Death Kissis a grindhouse action movie, and it owns that fact. It is not holding back its depiction of violence, nudity or vigilantism. In this world, vigilantism is an unquestioned good, as “The Stranger” enacts his own brutal form of justice against a cruel, violent criminal underworld. It is, occasionally, on the nose: Daniel Baldwin shows up as a right-wing shock-jock who preaches the good word of vigilantism and the horrors of political correctness. But there is something almost admirable in the wayDeath Kissis proudly and belligerently obscene by modern action-film standards. While it’s not a technically accomplished film, exactly, Robert Bronzi owns the lead character and injects the film with every ounce of charisma he can provide.

As far as I can tell, Bronzi himself has no political opinions. When I interviewed him last fall, he only said that he plays characters like “The Stranger” out of a fascination for that type of character.

“I like a story of good versus evil. I particularly like a movie where the good guy is flawed. A little rough around the edges. Maybe even a bit of a bad guy himself. A guy who does bad things but for good reasons. I like these characters,” he said.

If Bronzi’s public personality reveals anything, it is that he is a profoundly grateful and down-to-Earth guy who loves the fact that this gift has fallen into his lap. His newfound career path, which has made him a minor celebrity back home, has given him the opportunity to fly around the world shooting films and attending prestigious film festivals like Cannes.

“For this I am glad. This has given me an opportunity to play even more parts and given me much recognition,” he said.

RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (2)

Given the viral success ofDeath Kiss, his subsequent films have gotten a great deal more attention. His immediate follow-up,Once Upon a Time in Deadwood, was similar toDeath Kissin that it gave Bronzi a chance to parody another one of Charles Bronson’s famous movie archetypes, the gunfighters fromBreakheart PassandOnce Upon a Time in the West. Once again, the production design and cinematography reflect the realities of straight-to-VOD filmmaking. Despite apparently being shot on some of the same sets asOnce Upon a Time in the West, the film looks like a student film being shot on a DSLR. It also comes with some of the worst sound effects editing I have ever heard in a movie. Every other effect either sounds generic or is mixed too loudly.

The plot is also nothing to write home about, a simple retelling of the noir classicD.O.A.Robert Bronzi, playing the part of “The Colonel,” is poisoned by a woman in need of a gunslinger who can break into Deadwood and save her sister from a group of hoodlums working for a bartender named Swearengen (yes that one…). In order to survive, he must get to Deadwood and save the day before he dies. As simple and occasionally sloppy as the movie is, it’s another fantastic episode in the Robert Bronzi show! The simple pleasure of watching this genuinely charming Charles Bronson lookalike galivant through western sets on horseback and get into gunfights.Upon a Time in Deadwoodis not quite as fun asDeath Kiss, but it is still pretty solid.

RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (3)

Bronzi’s original starring role,From Hell to the Wild West, was a film I had not watched until I began writing this profile. It was released before Bronzi went semi-viral and had flown below my radar until I realized it was free to stream on VUDU. It had not caught my eye initially since it was not drawing upon any of the archetypes that Charles Bronson had clearly embodied in his career. The movie is not even credited to his stage name, Robert Bronzi, but instead to Robert Kovacz. That said, coming from the director of Bronzi’s two other breakout films, Rene Perez, you see motifs blossom here that would become common in his later films. It’s a lot more fun than I was expecting.

From Hell to the Wild Westis essentially a prototype for Bronzi and Perez’s subsequent films. Of the three, it might be the strongest flick if only because it’s the most nakedly honest. It’s an absurd exploitation/horror/western hybrid and it’s fine with that; instead of carrying pretensions of being a semi-serious-minded action film, it’s a horror movie set in a western town where a demonic 1980s slasher villain is running around abducting scantily dressed women and butchering them. The bad sound effects and action in every Perez film work better here than elsewhere because the movie almost comes off as an intentional comedy. Bronzi plays a Marshall falsely accused of committing several murders who has made it his mission to take out the killer and prove his innocence. He essentially plays the same sort of gunfighter fromOnce Upon a Time in Deadwood, merely facing off against a more over-the-top villain.

The movie has a lot of nonsense baked into it, including a framing device where a college student is studying the events of the film in modern times and figures out the killer’s true (andridiculous) identity. It doesn’t make sense, and the acting in these scenes is so bad it deserves to be dissected by an episode ofMystery Science Theater 3000. Coming in at just more than an hour, though, the film does not overstay its welcome or get boring. The movie consists of a few quick moments of violence, a bit of nudity and some gunfighting before it ends abruptly. Perfect!

RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (4)

In addition toCry Havoc, released earlier this month, Bronzi has three more films coming in 2020. His next,Escape from Death Block 13, is one about which I am stupidly excited. It has an insanely silly title, and the premise sees Bronzi fighting his way through a prison after being wrongly jailed. The trailer footage gives the sense that the production values and editing are a bit better here than in his previous efforts. There’s a good chance this will be one of Bronzi’s strongest films! His most recently completed work,The Gardener,is another I am very excited to see. Production wrapped in March, which explains why there is no trailer available. The premise is certainly enticing as the film scales back the action to a home-invasion thriller set in England. His most outlandish role to date might be in the indie-comedyMat-Rats, where he’s set to play a wrestling instructor in a children’s sports film. Details are somewhat sparse, but it was still in development as of late last year.

Bronzi’s oeuvre definitely isn’t for everyone, but fans of Cannon Films and Charles Bronson owe it to themselves to check outDeath Kissand relive the glory days of hardcore, unironic action films of the 1980s. It’s worth it just to show Mr. Bronzi some support. He has managed to carve out a unique niche as an actor and he does it earnestly and with gratitude for the fans that he has earned along the way. I can’t think of many filmmakers who walk in the footsteps of giants and take pride in it in the way he does.

RECOVERED REBELLER – Charles Bronson Lives! How Robert Bronzi Resurrected the Legend (2024)

FAQs

What ethnicity was Charles Bronson? ›

Bronson was born Charles Dennis Buchinski in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania in the Pittsburgh Tri-State area. During the McCarthy hearings he changed his last name to Bronson as all Slavic names were suspect. He was one of 15 children born to a Lithuanian immigrant father of Lipka Tatar ancestry and a Lithuanian mother.

Was Charles Bronson Native American? ›

Bronson was the 11th of 15 children born to his parents, a Lithuanian-American mother and a Lithuanian immigrant father. In his youth, Bronson worked as a coal miner until he was drafted to serve in World War II.

What was the last movie Charles Bronson made? ›

Bronson's final film roles were as police commissioner Paul Fein in a well-received trio of crime/drama TV movies Family of Cops (1995), Breach of Faith: A Family of Cops II (1997) and Family of Cops III: Under Suspicion (1999).

How tall was Charles Bronson? ›

He was 5'9". He was 81 years old when he died. His real full name was Charles Dennis Buchinsky Rectified - Karolis was the 1st name, his parents being from Litva, a Balto-Slavic nation, not Tartar. Born Charles Buchinsky, Bronson changed his last name during his early career in the 1950s during the rise of McCarthyism.

How many biological children did Charles Bronson have? ›

Bronson is the father of four children from his three marriages, Zuleika Bronson, Katrina Holden Bronson, Suzanne Bronson, and Tony Bronson.

What was Charles Bronson jailed for? ›

1974–1987. Bronson was convicted of armed robbery in 1974, aged twenty-two, and sentenced to seven years imprisonment. He was sent to Walton Gaol, and soon ended up in the punishment block after attacking two prisoners without being provoked. He was transferred to Hull in 1975.

Why did Charles Bronson have an accent? ›

Bronson said English was not spoken at home during his childhood like many other first generation American children with whom he grew up. He once recounted that even as a soldier, his accent was strong enough to make his comrades think he was a foreigner. Besides English, he could speak Lithuanian and Russian.

Who was the oldest Native American man to live? ›

Chief John Smith lived his entire life in the Cass Lake area of Minnesota, and was reputed to have been 137 years old when he died of pneumonia. He was known as "The Old Indian" to the local white people.

Did Charles Bronson serve in the military? ›

Bronson was one of 15 children of a Lithuanian coal miner and became a miner himself at age 16. He served in the U.S. Army Air Forces as an aircraft gunner during World War II. After the war he held a series of odd jobs before being hired by a Philadelphia theatre company to paint scenery.

Is the Bronson film accurate? ›

Large parts of the film depict events that never happened; in particular the sequence where Bronson is released 'for being sane' during the 80's (Charlie was declared sane, sent back to prison and subsequently released in 1987), goes to live in a brothel (the 'brothel' is supposed to depict Uncle Jack's flat), starts a ...

Was Charles Bronson a boxer? ›

Bronson's real name is actually Michael Peterson. The 70-year-old changed his name in the 1980s as an alias dreamed up when he went into boxing – something he claims he was encouraged to do by notorious east London gangsters Ronnie and Reggie Kray with whom he said he served time.

Where is Charles Bronson buried? ›

Even though he was an international movie star, his family had him laid to rest at Brownsville Cemetery in West Windsor, Vermont. Bronson lived on Zuleika Farm, a 400-acre property in West Windsor from the 1970s up until his death.

Why did Charles Bronson change his name? ›

This followed his marriage to Fatema Saira Rehman, a woman who had started to write to him during his time behind bars. In August 2014, Bronson announced he was legally changing his name to Charles Salvador, in tribute to the artist Salvador Dali. He took up art and even started a charity art foundation in that name.

Where is Charles Bronson prisoner now? ›

Bronson was first jailed aged 22 in 1974 for armed robbery and wounding. Since then he has only had brief spells outside and he is currently being held at a specialist close supervision centre at Woodhill Prison in Milton Keynes. Over the years he has become notorious for attacks on prison staff and other inmates.

Who is the foreign actor that looks like Charles Bronson? ›

Robert Bronzi, a Hungarian actor who resembles Charles Bronson, has built a movie career based solely on his likeness to the late actor.

Was Charles Bronson a real Boxer? ›

Bronson's real name is actually Michael Peterson. The 70-year-old changed his name in the 1980s as an alias dreamed up when he went into boxing – something he claims he was encouraged to do by notorious east London gangsters Ronnie and Reggie Kray with whom he said he served time.

What was the age difference between Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland? ›

On October 5, 1968, she married Charles Bronson, who was 15 years her senior and still several years away from coming into his own as a leading man.

Were Charles Bronson buried? ›

Even though he was an international movie star, his family had him laid to rest at Brownsville Cemetery in West Windsor, Vermont. Bronson lived on Zuleika Farm, a 400-acre property in West Windsor from the 1970s up until his death. The farm was his peaceful escape from the glitz and glamor (and paparazzi) in Hollywood.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jonah Leffler

Last Updated:

Views: 6017

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (45 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jonah Leffler

Birthday: 1997-10-27

Address: 8987 Kieth Ports, Luettgenland, CT 54657-9808

Phone: +2611128251586

Job: Mining Supervisor

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Electronics, Amateur radio, Skiing, Cycling, Jogging, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Jonah Leffler, I am a determined, faithful, outstanding, inexpensive, cheerful, determined, smiling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.