Home grown actors who make it big internationally…….

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The UK might be a small island but wee’v got some of the biggest home grown talent like Tom Hiddleston, Tom Hardy, Eddie Redmayne, Felicity Jones and Daisy Ridley currently leading the charge on the international market.

However the UK is not the only small nation producing Award-winning talent and with Operation Chromite opening here on Boxing Day which boasts a cast including A-lister Liam Neeson it also stars South Korean national (and set to be global) stars Lee Jung-jae and Lee Bum-soo (yes that really is his name), we take a look at film actors who having been successful in their own countries broke out to become stars on a global stage.

Lee Jung-jae and Lee Bum-soo

Starring alongside Liam Neeson (Schindler’s List, Taken) as General MacArthur, Lee Jung-jae (Assassination) plays South Korean Navy Lieutenant Captain Jang Hak-soo, with Lee Bum-soo (The Beauty Inside, TV’s The Return of Superman) as North Korean Defence Commander Lim Gye-jin. Both Jung-jae and Bum-soo are major stars in their native South Korea. Jung-jae is also well known as a fashion model, having started out in this career before he was spotted for film and TV roles.

Irrfan Khan

Born in Jaipur and acting since 1987, Irrfan Khan had his big break on a global scale in 2008’s phenomenal hit, Slumdog Millionaire, playing the hard-nosed Police Officer tasked with quizzing Jamal (Dev Patel) on how he answered his million dollar questions. Following the Oscar-winning success of the film, Khan went on to star in two major American blockbusters; The Amazing Spider-Man and Life of Pi (as adult Pi), both in 2012. More recently, Khan played Masrani in last year’s Jurassic World, cementing his position as a respected actor and well-known face around the world.

Jackie Chan

Jackie Chan was born Kong-sang Chan in Hong Kong, 1954. He emmigrated to Canberra, Australia, at a very young age and it soon became clear that his talents lay in acrobatics, singing, martial arts and bonkers mad bone crunching stunts where he just about survives if the out takes are anything to go by. Starting off in a string of low-budget martial arts films and stuntman opposite Bruce Lee in 1972’s Fist of Fury and 1973’s Enter the Dragon, Chan’s reputation grew across the Kung Fu scene. Surprisingly, given his ubiquity by this point, he didn’t earn his big break on an international stage until 1998’s Rush Hour, the first film in the franchise. Along with films such as Shanghai Knights and The Karate Kid, this catapulted Chan to become a household name, with his trademark moves becoming synonymous with mainstream martial arts. This year it was announced that Chan was to be bestowed with an Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award at 2017’s Academy Awards. Proof, if ever it were needed, of how far he has come.

Stellan Skarsgård

Stellan Skarsgård is a Swedish actor who is the very definition of a break-out star. Starting early, Skarsgård rose to fame in his teens through the titular role in leading Swedish TV show, Bombi Bitt och jag (Bombi Bitt and I). This was followed by a string of TV and film appearances in his native Sweden, making him one of the country’s most recognisable (and busy) faces. Despite causing ripples on the indie scene with Lars Von Trier’s Breaking The Waves, his first break on a global stage came in 1997, playing Professor Gerald Lambeau in the Oscar-winning Good Will Hunting. This was followed shortly by a role in 1998’s Ronin, before taking a darker turn in 2004’s bloody awful ‘Exorcist: The Beginning’ whih turned out to be the end for that franchise. With his global career continuing apace, Skarsgård starred in the acclaimed Mamma Mia! and The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (as sinister character Martin Vanger), before becoming a fully paid up member of the Marvel universe; starring in Thor (2011), The Avengers (2012), Thor: The Dark World (2013) and Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015).

Mads Mikkelsen

A relative latecomer to the acting world, Copenhagen-born Mads Dittmann Mikkelsen started out in life as a gymnast and ballet dancer before turning his attentions to a different kind of limelight. Mikkelsen’s debut acting role came in Nicolas Winding Refn’s ‘Pusher’ in 1996, when he was 31 years old. The film was a hit, and with it Mikkelsen’s profile grew and the film spawned two further instalments. Mikkelsen went on to gain recognition in King Arthur – a commercial, if not critical, success. However his big break came in 2006 when he starred as bleeding eyed Bond villain, Le Chiffre, in Casino Royale; a role he apparently won with alarming ease, having fitted the filmmaker’s vision for the part so precisely. Mikklesen is undoubtedly a true screen talent, earning him a Best Actor Award at Cannes Film Festival in 2012 for his role in The Hunt. Over on the small screen, his reputation as a first rate villain was cemented in TV’s Hannibal, playing the titular role of Dr. Hannibal Lecter.

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