With his trademark tweed concealing a calculating criminal mind, Pierce Brosnan commands the screen in 2025 as London gangland patriarch Conrad Harrigan in Paramount+’s MobLand. The role showcases what devotees have long known— beneath the polished exterior lies an actor of remarkable versatility, transcending the tuxedoed spy who made him a household name.
Four additional projects await on the horizon, each seemingly handpicked to further illuminate the depth behind those flinty eyes. This artistic restlessness has defined Brosnan since hisRemington Steele days, when television’s relentless pace taught him to internalize “dialogue, dialogue, dialogue” with the precision he now brings to each brush stroke.
Between Malibu sunsets and Hawaiian retreats, Brosnan disappears into his painting studio, where canvases bloom with what he describes as “brutal, angry, severe” emotional intensity — a striking counterpoint to his public persona.
At 72, splitting time between three continents, Brosnan moves through the world with the unhurried confidence of a man who has mastered the art of reinvention. His most compelling role yet? The painter-actor who continuously defies expectations, one calculated risk at a time


“I WILL FOREVER BE A BOND.”