Charlie Hunnam Movies
Fair-haired, hunky British performer
Charlie Hunnam began life in Newcastle, England, and moved to Hollywood at the age of 19 (around 1999) in a quest for movie and television stardom. He found it almost instantly as homosexual character Nathan on the first two seasons of the groundbreaking Showtime series drama
Queer as Folk (1999-2001), then signed on to work for executive producer
Judd Apatow and others with a role as a college student in the short-lived but critically worshipped situation comedy
Undeclared (2001).
Hunnam's feature film contributions began shortly thereafter and witnessed him specializing in intense, angry, often psychotic characterizations; memorable assignments included a portrayal of the nasty villain in
Anthony Minghella's period drama
Cold Mountain (2003) and a gold-toothed, dreadlocked psychopath in the dystopian saga
Children of Men (2006). The role that truly rocketed
Hunnam to acclaim, however, cut closest to his British roots: a scarily accurate evocation of a thuggish English footballer in the gritty drama
Green Street Hooligans (2005). In 2007,
Hunnam signed on to star in director
Christopher McQuarrie's hotly anticipated psychodrama
Stanford Prison Experiment, based on the titular sociological incident of the same name. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide