Olivier Gruner

Olivier Gruner (French: [ɔlivje ɡʁyne] (listen); born August 2, 1960), also named O.G, Оливье Грюнер in Russian, and 奥利弗·古鲁内尔 in Chinese, is a French former naval commando, actor, director, producer, screenwriter, martial artist, and pilot. Born in Paris, France, he moved to the United States in 1988. His career began in 1987 at the Cannes Film Festival, France, where he was discovered.[1][2]

Olivier Gruner
Gruner in January 2011
Born
Olivier Gruner

(1960-08-02) August 2, 1960
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Other namesO.G
Оливье Грюнер
奥利弗·古鲁内尔
OccupationActor, director, producer, screenwriter, martial artist, pilot
Years active1981–1988 (martial arts)
1989–present (acting)
Height6 ft (183 cm)
Children1 son
AwardsKickboxing world champion
DivisionMiddleweight
StyleKarate, Kickboxing
Websitewww.oliviergruner.com
Military career
Allegiance France
Service/branch French Navy
Years of service1978-1981
Unit Commandos Marine

He has since appeared in over 40 films and four television series and is best known for his martial art and science fiction action films. Gruner is regarded as an "action hero" due to his portrayal of Alex Raine in Nemesis (1992),[3][4] Lt. Sean Lambert in the Interceptor Force franchise (2000–2002), and of Dirk Longstreet in The Circuit franchise (2001-2006).[5]

His credits also include urban action movie Angel Town (1989), Automatic (1994), Savate (1995), Mercenary (1996), The white Pony (1999), Kumite (2000), Blizhniy Boy: The Ultimate Fighter (2007), Lost Warrior: Left Behind (2008), One Night (2010), and Beyond the Game (2016).

As a martial artist, Gruner was a full-time kickboxer in France for 8 years from 1981 to 1988. He became France middleweight champion, then middleweight full-contact kickboxing world champion in 1985, and again middleweight kickboxing world champion in 1986.[1]

Early life and education

Gruner was born the second of three sons[6] to a French family of noted surgeons and engineers.[7] As such, he was expected to pursue a traditional academic curriculum.[8][6] Instead, he decided to be the black sheep of the family, with his family's support, and dedicate his life to the arts: martial arts at first, and then the 7th art.[1]

At age 11, he saw a Bruce Lee movie and became captivated with martial arts and inspired by the film industry.[1][7] As he was constantly being bullied at school, this pushed him to learn martial arts in order to defend himself.[9] He began studying Shotokan karate, then boxing, kickboxing, and full contact kickboxing,[5][8][6] which is essentially a mixture of Western boxing and traditional karate.[10]

At age 18, he joined the French Navy, volunteering for their Commandos Marine unit, also nicknamed the Bérets Verts (Green Berets).[5][8] That unit is reputed to be one of the toughest among the NATO Special Operation Forces, with a training attrition rate of 82%. The prospective Commandos in training are constantly under stress and pressure from instructors leaving them no respite.[11]

All activities are timed and scored: marching tens of kilometers with equipment and weapon in all weathers, obstacle courses, and night navigation exercises. The training is punctuated by firearms training and assault tactics, climbing and rappelling, boat handling, sky diving and scuba diving, explosives instruction, and hand-to-hand combat, which is what Gruner learnt.[7] During the training period, any mistake can instantly disqualify the candidates. The ultimate goal of this training is to detect individuals with the physical, intellectual, and psychological potential needed to serve in the Commandos Marine.[11][1] Gruner was operational with the French Commandos Marine in Djibouti and Somalia, where he was involved in active combat, especially anti-piracy operations.[12]

For Gruner, it was the occasion to forge himself the heart of a fighter for a forthcoming professional kickboxer career,[12] and to learn the combat and discipline ropes necessary to be a credible action films actor, director, and producer.[5] When he got out of the service, he had developed a sense of "never giving up" and was feeling in his mind that he was indestructible.[9] This is how he has been capable to reproduce for the screen actual combat and fighting techniques, which he had learnt in real life as a Special Operation Forces Commando. This also explains some strange weapons seen in his movies, which are traditionally used by military special forces only, and therefore not usually shown in the film industry.[13]

Career

1980s: Kickboxing

In 1981 Gruner left the French military with the aim to train full-time in order to compete professionally as a kickboxer.[8] He traveled to the French Alps and began an intensive training regimen.[6] In order to pay for his training expenses, he had to hold down four jobs, as a bouncer, a ski patrol member, a martial arts trainer, and a ski lift operator.[8]

This taught him the financial basics and philosophy of professional fighting. It is a business at the professional level, and winning or losing is not as important as it is for amateurs. For the pros, it is all about money. Sometimes a guy with as many "loses" as "wins", but who fights in an entertaining way, will make more money than an undefeated fighter...[9] this wisdom would be key for him to learn how to manage properly the ups and downs of a film industry career, which is cyclical by nature.[12]

In 1984, he began fighting as a professional kickboxer. On that same year,[2] after 10 professional fights only, he became France middleweight champion.[1][7] By 1985, his successes in the ring were allowing him to train and fight full-time. In 1986, he became World Middleweight Kickboxing Champion.[8][6]

Kickboxing titles

Having achieved in 6 years his dream of becoming a world champion, he retired from professional kickboxing in 1987 and made the leap from athlete to actor.[1][7][9] Gruner perception is that as soon as one reaches the top in a discipline, the only way forward is downwards. So once he had become world champion, he decided it was time to explore something else. Following the lead of Reg Park and Arnold Schwarzenegger, he chose to move on to the movie industry and become a movie star.[7]

In a very pro-active way, he did some serious self-promotion at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival. He plastered posters of himself around Cannes, which caught the attention of a producer. Days later, Gruner was flying to Los Angeles to do some screen tests. He passed those tests with a flying 74% and his next stop was the beginning of a film career.[2]

1990s: Acting

Gruner joined Imperial Entertainment Corporation (Turner Classic Movies - TCM) and began acting in action movies. Along the years, he has developed a reputation as a hard working and disciplined Hollywood actor.[7] During this time, he has been frequently appearing in martial arts magazines, such as Budo Journal, Combat, Impact, Inside Karate, Inside Kung Fu Yearbook and many more.[14]

In 1989 he starred in his first movie; the urban action movie Angel Town.[12] For a first timer Gruner did an admirable job,[2] and was immediately recognized by the critics for his presence, as well as his martial arts abilities, being compared to the likes of Dolph Lundgren,[15] Jean-Claude Van Damme, and Steven Seagall.[6]

In 1992, Gruner starred again as "Alex Raine" in Albert Pyun’s cyberpunk 1992 science fiction thriller Nemesis.[3][16][4] The critics appreciated that Nemesis was filled with amazing stunts, thrilling action sequences, and innovative special effects that were pushing at the time the film industry limits of Blade Runner and Terminator 2.[17] Both Nemesis and Angel town have been extremely popular in video,[18] and Nemesis is one of the movies Gruner is most proud of.[9] In this movie, he offers action, drama, fighting, and gunfights and had to drop down to a 4% body fat to be at his peak physically.[17]

In 2010, Gruner acted as "Corsair Duguay" in Tales of an Ancient Empire, also named Abelar: Tales of an ancient Empire. In this movie, he had the pleasure to be reunited with Albert Pyun, his mentor in Nemesis.[9]

Gruner has also played roles in Automatic (1994), Savate aka The Fighter (1995), Mercenary (1996), Savage (1996), Mars (1997), T.N.T. (1997), Mercenary 2:Thick & Thin (1998), Interceptor Force (1999), Velocity Trap (1999), The White Pony (1999), Crackerjack 3 (2000), Kumite (2000), G.O.D. (2001), Extreme Honor (2001), The Circuit (2001), Power Elite (2002), Interceptor Force 2 (2002), The Circuit 2: The Final Punch (2003), Deadly Engagement (2003), SWAT: Warhead One (2004), Crooked (2005), The Circuit 3: the street Monk (2006), Blizhniy Boy: The Ultimate Fighter (2007), Lost Warrior: Left Behind (2008), Skorumpowani (2008), Brother's War (2009), One Night (2010), Tales of an Ancient Empire, also named Abelar: Tales of an ancient Empire (2010), Re-Generator (2011), Cyborg: Rise of the Slingers (2013), Sector 4: Extraction (2014), EP/Executive Protection (2015), The whole World at our Feet (2015), Assassin X also named The Chemist (2016), Beyond the Game (2016), Showdown in Manila (2016), Darkweb (2016), Iron Cross: The road to Normandy (2018), and Amour (2019).

Gruner has been announced as "Jagger" in Escape from Paradise (2019), and as "Duguay" in Cyborg Nemesis: The dark Rift (2019), as well as in The Target (2019).

2000s: Television

Already in 1999, Gruner appeared as "Dieter Vanderval" in the episode titled Wildlife of a television series named Martial Law.

In 2001, he appeared multiple times as "Tawrens" in 26 episodes of the television series Code Name: Eternity.

In 2005, NBC contracted Gruner for producing a TV series named The Pros, a way of life. This was a project that Gruner himself had started in videos since 2003. It shows what happens behind the scene, and the life, training, and discipline of professional athletes.[12] He had already done episodes on boxers, surfers, and MMA fighters,[9] when NBC finally decided to shelve the TV series, and it was never published by them.[7] A video published by Gruner is available.

He was also contracted to play "Ivan" in the television series Seven Days published in 2019.

2010s: Directing

Gruner first involvement as a director was in 2002 with Interceptor Force 2.

In 2011, he premiered his first feature film as a screenwriter, a director, and an actor,[7] entitled Re-Generator. This name is the re-titling of a film previously called One Night, on which Gruner had been working since 2010.[19]

In 2014 he featured as a director in Sector 4: Extraction, a direct-to-video release.

In 2015, Gruner released one more film as a director, a producer, a screenwriter, and an actor: EP/Executive Protection.

Film producing

Rather early in his career, Gruner got involved in the production of some of the films in which he was appearing as an actor. This is the case for Savage (1996), Mercenary (1996), Mercenary 2:Thick & Thin (1998), Interceptor Force (1999), The Circuit (2001), and Crooked (2005).

But it is only starting from the 2010s, at the exception of Interceptor Force 2 in 2002, that he cumulated his involvement both as a producer, as an actor, and as a director in One Night (2010), Re-Generator (2011), Sector 4: Extraction (2014), and EP/Executive Protection (2015).

He has also been involved as a producer only in Frontline (2015). And he was both an actor and a producer in Iron Cross: The road to Normandy (2018).

Screenwriting

Amazingly, Gruner has had quite a taste for screenwriting and co-writing the stories of some of the movies in which he appeared as an actor.

He wrote the stories of T.N.T. (1997), Interceptor Force 2 (2002), Crooked (2005), One Night (2010), Re-Generator (2011), and EP/Executive Protection (2015).

He also co-wrote the story and the screenplay of Lost Warrior: Left Behind (2008), and co-wrote the story of Sector 4: Extraction (2014).

Business activities

Gruner has always been involved with a number of other business activities, which also take part of his time. He actually considers that it is wise to keep various sources of revenues generation, when one is involved in the film industry, which is very cyclical. This has allowed him to compensate for financial down times, when he was not actively involved in a movie as an actor, director, or producer.[12]

Bodyguarding

Gruner occasionally does bodyguarding for celebrities. This is more comfortable for some clients to have a fellow star, who understands stardom's pressure and demands, that also fulfills the role of a bodyguard. Gruner indeed not only has got one of the highest special forces military training one can receive,[12] but also provides bodyguarding training at his academy. One of such bodyguarding clients is the famous Canadian singer Celine Dion.[20][21][22]

Training videos

Gruner has been producing training videos for martial arts, combat skills, bodyguarding, and survival techniques since 2012.[6] He commercializes those under the various brands of "Gruner Tactical Training Academy" and "O.G Training". More recently, he has been producing a survival reality show video series under the name "Survival X" in 2018.[23][24]

Personal training

Gruner has always kept a side activity as a personal trainer in various martial arts such as kickboxing and mixed martial arts.[12][7] He usually dedicates this personal training time to competing martial artists, as well as retired champions.

Athletic fashion brand

He has also created his own "O.G" trademark athletic fashion brand. Several collections were produced, including "The Lone Operator" collection, and the "Pro Series" collection in 2018.[23][24]

Helicopter piloting

Gruner is a licensed helicopter pilot, which allows him to mix this activity with film producing requirements at times. For example, he worked for ABC News in Los Angeles where he did many chase videos, and saw a lot of damages and lethal encounters.[12] Moreover, he was also the helicopter co-pilot in the 1999 movie Storm.[25]

He regularly flies helicopters and considers it a big part of his life. For Blue Hawaiian Helicopters, he regularly flew tours on Hawaii Big Island. For Maverick Helicopters, he also flew tours over the Grand Canyon.[12]

Personal life

Gruner lives in Santa Monica, California and Las Vegas, Nevada. He has one son, whom he takes care of, and is rather discreet about his family.[7] He does like to spend quality time with friends and family. The best way to follow his tracks is on Facebook,[23] Twitter,[24] and on his official website,[8] where he sometimes shares liberally about his most recent activities.

Otherwise, Gruner is a high energy person, who likes outdoor hobbies that require a lot of physical activity. He is frequently hiking, climbing, skiing, surfing,[8] ballooning,[26] sky diving, and scuba diving.[24][8][6] As a perfectionist,[7] he likes to practice what he shows in his movies, so his acting flows naturally, as he can show that he is actually doing the "real thing".[7]

He has been regularly maintaining his karate, boxing and kickboxing training, which he has been completing with Brazilian jiu-jitsu, wrestling and mixed martial arts.[23][7] He does enjoy regularly practicing 3 to 4 hours per day with the UFC guys, as it also makes him conversant in most martial arts, and keeps him fit.[9] Gruner considers that this allows him thereafter to be a better actor and director in his movies, as far as such martial arts are concerned.[7]

He has been regularly practicing at the shooting range or in remote nature,[6] and he is a licensed NRA instructor.[23] This keeps his shooting skills sharp for both his body-guarding activities, and his training videos. Moreover, he has been a volunteer fireman since 2015,[23] and has enjoyed the training there as well as the charitable giving-back to society.

Gruner does appreciate the lessons and wisdom of discipline. He practiced it through his military training and career, and his kickboxing training and career. He nowadays constantly practices it through his acting, directing, producing, as well as through his martial arts training, helicopter flying, and revenue sources diversification.[12]

Filmography

Films

Year Title Involved as Notes
Director Producer Writer Actor Role
1989 Angel Town Yes Jacques Montaigne First lead and movie,[12][2][15]
1990 Lionheart Received thanks for facilitating access to Somalia photos used in the film via Gruner French military connections[4]
1992 Nemesis Yes Alex Raine [3][16][17]
1994 Automatic Yes J269 Fight choreographer,[4]
1995 Savate aka The Fighter Yes Joseph Charlegrand Video, Fight choreographer
1996 Savage Yes Yes Savage / Alex Verne Associate producer
1996 Mercenary Yes Yes Capt. Karl 'Hawk' May Video, Associate producer, Fight choreographer
1997 Mars Yes Caution Templar
1997 T.N.T. Yes Yes Alex Girard
1998 Mercenary 2:Thick & Thin Yes Yes Capt. Karl 'Hawk' May TV movie, Co-executive producer
1999 Velocity Trap Yes ED Officer Raymond Stokes
1999 The White Pony Yes Jacques
1999 Storm Video, Helicopter co-pilot
1999 Interceptor Force Yes Yes Lt. Sean Lambert Producer
2000 Crackerjack 3 Yes Marcus Clay
2000 Kumite Yes Michael Rogers
2001 G.O.D. Yes Adrian Kaminski
2001 Extreme Honor Yes Cody
2001 The Circuit Yes Yes Dirk Longstreet Executive producer
2002 Power Elite Yes Captain
2002 Interceptor Force 2 Yes Yes Yes Lt. Sean Lambert TV movie
2003 The Circuit 2: The Final Punch Yes Dirk Longstreet Video, Executive producer
2003 Deadly Engagement Yes Paul Gerard
2004 SWAT: Warhead One Yes Luc Rémy Video
2005 Crooked Yes Yes Yes Phil Yordan Also named Soft Target
2006 The Circuit 3: the street Monk Yes Dirk Longstreet Video, also named The Circuit 3: Final Flight
2007 Blizhniy Boy: The Ultimate Fighter Yes FBI Agent #1
2008 Lost Warrior: Left Behind Yes Yes Nash Daniels Video, Co-writer story and screenplay
2008 Skorumpowani Yes Montenegro
2009 Brother's War Yes Anton
2010 One Night Yes Yes Yes Yes The Beast Director
2010 Tales of an Ancient Empire Yes Corsair Duguay Also named Abelar: Tales of an ancient Empire
2011 Re-Generator Yes Yes Yes Yes The Beast Director,[19]
2013 Cyborg: Rise of the Slingers Yes Duguay
2014 Sector 4: Extraction Yes Yes Yes Yes Nash Executive producer, Co-writer
2015 EP/Executive Protection Yes Yes Yes Yes Max Webber
2015 The whole World at our Feet Yes Tony
2015 Frontline Yes Co-producer
2016 Assassin X Yes Ronus Steele Also named The Chemist
2016 Beyond the Game Yes Nash Daniels
2016 Showdown in Manila Yes Ford
2016 Darkweb Yes Stanislas
2018 Iron Cross: The road to Normandy Yes Yes Anton
2019 Amour Yes Robert Post-production. Short film
2019 Escape from Paradise Yes Jagger Film announced
2019 Cyborg Nemesis: The dark Rift Yes Duguay Film announced. Duguay role is rumored only.
2019 The Target Yes Film announced.
Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1999 Martial Law Dieter Vanderval Wild Life (1999) ... Dieter Vanderval
2000 Code Name: Eternity Tawrens - The Shift (2000) ... Tawrens

- All Fall Down (2000) ... Tawrens
- Chameleon (2000) ... Tawrens
- Underground (2000) ... Tawrens
- The Box (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Not a Bite to Eat (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Dark of Night (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Project Midas (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Laura's Story (2000) ... Tawrens
- All the News (2000) ... Tawrens
- Sold Out for a Song (2000) ... Tawrens
- Fatal Error (2000) ... Tawrens
- Deep Down (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- 24 Hours (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Lose Your Dreams (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Thief (2000) ... Tawrens
- Bounty Hunter (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Death Trap (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Making Love (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Tawrens (2000) ... Tawrens
- Never Go Home (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- The Watery Grave (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- The Long Drop (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- The Hunter (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- The Mission (2000) ... Tawrens (credit only)
- Ethaniel's Story (2000) ... Tawrens

2005 The Pros, a way of life Himself Documentary TV Series partially produced and published by NBC before being shelved, video
2019 Seven Days Ivan - Episode #1.1 (2019) ... Ivan

Documentaries

Year Title Role Notes
2012 Tales of an Ancient Empire: Behind the Scenes Himself Video documentary
2019 Chinese Hercules: The Bolo Yeung Story Himself Video documentary. Film announced.

Stunts

Year Title Involved as Role Notes
1994 Automatic Fight choreographer J269
1995 Savate aka The Fighter Fight choreographer Joseph Charlegrand Video
1996 Mercenary Fight choreographer Capt. Karl 'Hawk' May Video, Associate producer

See also

References

  1. "Olivier Gruner", Kick'em in the Ghoulies (KITG), Accessed on December 23, 2018.
  2. "Bullet Points: Angel Town", Chris the Brain, Bulletproof Action, Published on October 17, 2015.
  3. "Test Blu-Ray: Albert Pyun - Nemesis + Mean Guns", Mickaël Lanoye, Critique Film, France, published on April 20, 2017.
  4. "Bey Logan interview with Olivier Gruner", Bey Logan, ReelEastHK (EELE), Published on August 08, 2012.
  5. "Before and after 7 action actors from the 80's who became world icons" (in Portuguese) / "Antes e depois de 7 atores de ação dos anos 80 que se tornaram ícones mundiais", Cesar Nascimento, Guilherme Rodrigues, BlastingNews, published on August 2, 2017.
  6. "Olivier Gruner", Tong Po, Česko-Slovenská filmová databáze (CSFD), Accessed on January 1, 2019.
  7. "Olivier Gruner: the action movie Star", Alan Mercer, Alan Mercer's Profile, Published on July 9, 2010.
  8. "Olivier Gruner official website", Olivier Gruner, Olivier Gruner.com, Accessed on December 25, 2018.
  9. "Interview: Olivier Gruner", Jason Rugaard, Movies Mavericks, September 23, 2010.
  10. "Trying to Reignite Kickboxing in the USA", Sascha Matuszak, Fightland - Vice, Published on February 22, 2016.
  11. "14 new marine Commandos" (in French) / "14 nouveaux commandos marine", Jean-Marc Tanguy, Le mamouth, France, published on June 6, 2016.
  12. "Olivier Gruner the Real Thing", Interview by Erik Paulson at the CSW 2008 Camp in Fullerton, Martial Arts & Action Entertainment, Published on August 5, 2014.
  13. "Olivier Gruner can be seen using the following weapons in the following films", imfdb, Accessed on December 29, 2018.
  14. "Olivier Gruner", Ma-Mags, Accessed on January 2, 2019.
  15. "'Angel Town' misses the Mark", Kevin Thomas, Movie Review - Los Angeles Times, published on February 23, 1990.
  16. "'Nemesis' a provocative, sleek Thriller", Kevin Thomas, Movie Review - Los Angeles Times, published on January 29, 1993.
  17. "Behind the scenes: the Making of "Nemesis" (1992)", Albert Pyun, Olivier Gruner, Imperial Entertainment, Published on March 4, 2011.
  18. "Olivier Gruner", Terrence Allen, pp. 57, Black Belt, January 1, 1996.
  19. "Review: Re-Generator (2013)", BZ Film, published on May 14, 2013.
  20. "Céline Dion : Olivier ne la quitte plus?!" (in French) / "Celine Dion: Olivier doesn't separate from her anymore?", Pierre-Marie Elstir, France Dimanche, published on August 30, 2017.
  21. "Céline Dion honors Olivier Gruner on his birthday" (in Portuguese)/ "Céline Dion homenageia Olivier Gruner em seu aniversário", Luiz Campos, Action News, published on August 7, 2017.
  22. "Celine Dion: Warm greetings and hugs with her bodyguard" (in French)/ "Céline Dion : Voeux festifs et accolade chaleureuse avec son garde du corps", Purepeople, August 3, 2017.
  23. "Olivier Gruner Facebook page", Olivier Gruner, Facebook, Accessed on December 25, 2018.
  24. "Olivier Gruner Twitter account", Olivier Gruner, Twitter, Accessed on December 25, 2018.
  25. "Storm", IMDb, Accessed on 20 December 2018.
  26. "Olivier Gruner & Steven Dell go Ballooning", Rob Freeman, Olivier Gruner.com, Published September 11, 2012.
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