
Age: 70
male
Branscombe Richmond (born August 8, 1955) is a Native American actor, stuntman and singer who is equally capable of portraying cold-hearted villains on the one hand and warm-hearted, open "good guys" on the other, as evidenced by his huge grin and hearty laugh. The solidly built 6' 3" Richmond has regularly played the bad guy on-screen. He's been on the receiving end of the fists of Arnold Schwarzenegger in Commando (1985), gotten pummeled by Carl Weathers in Action Jackson (1988) and tangled with Steven Seagal in Hard to Kill (1990). Richmond is the son of movie stuntman Leo C. Richmond and first broke into film and TV in the early 1970s with minor roles in shows such as "The Bionic Woman" (1976), "The Rockford Files" (1974) and "Magnum, P.I." (1980). From there he quickly picked up work in numerous made-for-TV movies and was kept busy throughout the 1980s and 1990s with appearances in such A-grade productions as Licence to Kill (1989), Best Seller (1987) and Batman Returns (1992). He even found himself in the children's film Curly Sue (1991). In early 1991 Richmond scored the key role of "Bobby Six Killer" in the bounty hunter-themed TV series "Renegade" (1992) starring alongside Lorenzo Lamas and Kathleen Kinmont. The series was quite successful and ran from 1992 to 1997, turning out over 100 episodes! Additionally, Richmond has starred in plenty of B-movie action films and has become quite a cult figure of the genre. Since the late 1990s, Richmond has remained busy on several fronts. He's continued acting in Hollywood, is the official spokesman for Indian Motorcycles and is the lead singer for the band "Branscombe Richmond and the Renegade Posse". He's also notched up numerous awards, including being voted "Native American Entertainer of the Year" and "Mr Showman" of the year by the Las Vegas Review Journal.

Branscombe Richmond

Bruno “El Tidal” Ferreira TODAY
for Bruno “El Tidal” Ferreira TODAY in The Wave That Changed Everything!
Suggested by filmrepair

Narrator declares this “the most competitive season in surf history In 1996, six wildly different surfers enter the ASP World Tour (today known as WSL) believing they can win it all. By the final event in September, only two remain and everyone involved insists they were the real champion, even if the math, footage, and reality say otherwise. Crazy mocumentary that will show you the dirty background of surf in 1990's. Sponsorship pressure mounts One surfer switches boards mid-heat based on a dream. Another blames jet lag for a contest in his home country. Étienne releases his own “unofficial rankings". Jack claims he’s being targeted by “anti-intuitive judges”. Mock interviews from: Ex-girlfriends, Board shapers who clearly hate them, A beach announcer who barely remembers their names, A “surf psychologist” who admits he made up the term and some of legendary surfers of that time. Movie ends on September 1996 – Final Stop. Only two of the six mathematically remain in contention: Liam O’Connell and Rick “Razor” Delgado. Everyone understands winner takes the title. Razor surfs aggressively, vintage power. Liam surfs effortlessly, accidentally perfect. Judges are tense, commentators over-dramatic Final wave scores come in…RAZOR WINS THE HEAT! RAZOR WINS THE WORLD TITLE! Razor celebrates like it’s 1989. Immediately gives a rambling speech. His ex-wife (wrong name), A sponsor that dropped him, Pain, Comedy Angle, Everyone agrees he won, Nobody agrees he deserved it, except Razor
