Craig Fairbrass
Born | January 15, 1964 |
Hometown | London, England |
Net worth | $8 million |
Height | 6'3" (1.91m) |
Spouse | Elke Kellick (m 1987 - present) |
Children | Luke Fairbrass , Jack Fairbrass |
Parents | Jack Fairbrass , Maureen Fairbrass |
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A Violent Man review – hardnut prison drama is guilty as charged
- A Violent Man review – hardnut prison drama is guilty as charged. Craig Fairbrass’s impressive screen presence as a longtime convict carries this shadowy take on life behind bars
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- EntertainmentThe Guardian
Villain review – tough Brit crime thriller shows a bit of class
Villain review – tough Brit crime thriller shows a bit of class. With its brooding atmosphere and a charismatic Craig Fairbrass, this hard-edged drama is a cut above the genre’s usual suspects
Thanks for your feedback! - EntertainmentThe Guardian
Rise of the Footsoldier 4: Marbella review – another round of cheery nastiness
The fourth instalment of the franchise presents a further unedifying parade of guns, geezers and gore. It’s the mid-90s, and the pill supply is drying up at the Essex nightclub run by gangster hardman and newly-minted ex-con Pat Tate (Craig Fairbrass), along with his henchpals Tony (Terry Stone) and Craig (Roland Manookian). Tate toodles over to Spain in search of revenge on past associate Harris (see the last Footsoldier film), only to find his nemesis is no more. Recently risen mobster Terry (
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- EntertainmentHuffPost UK
Leslie Grantham Dead: Ex-‘EastEnders’ Stars Lead Tributes To Soap Actor
'He was a lovely guy who I adored working with.'
Thanks for your feedback! - NewsThe Independent
Why the low-budget British gangster film is in the doldrums: Filmmakers can’t just go on making film after film about the Essex Boys murders
If there is one genre that will never die, it’s the low-budget British gangster movie. Over the years, gangster films (at least those that have made it into cinemas at all) have received some of the most vicious reviews imaginable. “The most sickening exhibition of brutality, perversion, sex and sadism ever to be shown on a cinema screen,” the Monthly Film Bulletin wrote about 1948 James Hadley Chase shocker No Orchids For Miss Blandish.
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