Crossface: 8 Other WWE Legends Who Deserve A Movie Biopic
3. Bret Hart
Described by WWE themselves as "arguably the most controversial, most jarring moment in the annals of sports entertainment", the Montreal Screwjob was big, big news for wrestling fans at the time, mainly because it involved real life rivalries spilling into the ring. With Bret Harts refusal to lose his World Championship belt to bitter on and off-screen rival Shawn Michaels in his home country of Canada before he left for rival company WCW, Vince McMahon secretly ordered the match officials to ring the bell the second Michaels got Hart in the latters signature move the Sharpshooter, bringing the match to an end without Hart ever having submitted. Hart spat in McMahons face and began to mouth WCW to the camera, spelling the end of him as top dog in the WWE. The eighth child of professional wrestling patriarch Stu Hart, Bret Hit Man Hart was born into yet another famous wrestling family dynasty. As a child, Bret watched his father training future stars like Billy Graham in the household basement known as The Dungeon, the most infamous training room in the world of wrestling and the place that Hart was moulded into a future legend. Entrenched in the world of wrestling since he was old enough to grapple, his father had him hand out fliers to local wrestling shows on his way to school and would practice when he got home. In the 1998 documentary Wrestling With Shadows, Bret revealed the extent of the excruciating submission holds his father would subject him to in The Dungeon, one held for so long that it burst the blood vessels in his eyes. He held no ill feeling towards his dad, however, seeing his harsh training sessions as essential if he was to become the best there ever was, a goal that many believe he achieved. Who Could Play Him: Taylor Kitsch