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Hard Times

  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Charles Bronson and Robert Tessier in Hard Times (1975)
Open-ended Trailer from Columbia
Play trailer2:21
2 Videos
78 Photos
BoxingCrimeDramaSport

The saga of a drifter who turns to illicit bare-knuckle boxing in Depression-era New Orleans.The saga of a drifter who turns to illicit bare-knuckle boxing in Depression-era New Orleans.The saga of a drifter who turns to illicit bare-knuckle boxing in Depression-era New Orleans.

  • Director
    • Walter Hill
  • Writers
    • Walter Hill
    • Bryan Gindoff
    • Bruce Henstell
  • Stars
    • Charles Bronson
    • James Coburn
    • Jill Ireland
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writers
      • Walter Hill
      • Bryan Gindoff
      • Bruce Henstell
    • Stars
      • Charles Bronson
      • James Coburn
      • Jill Ireland
    • 150User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Hard Times
    Trailer 2:21
    Hard Times
    Hard Times (New and Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    Trailer 1:21
    Hard Times (New and Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    Hard Times (New and Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    Trailer 1:21
    Hard Times (New and Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer

    Photos78

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    + 72
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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Chaney
    James Coburn
    James Coburn
    • Spencer 'Speed' Weed
    Jill Ireland
    Jill Ireland
    • Lucy Simpson
    Strother Martin
    Strother Martin
    • Poe
    Margaret Blye
    Margaret Blye
    • Gayleen Schoonover
    • (as Maggie Blye)
    Michael McGuire
    Michael McGuire
    • Gandil
    Felice Orlandi
    Felice Orlandi
    • Le Beau
    Edward Walsh
    • Pettibon
    Bruce Glover
    Bruce Glover
    • Doty
    Robert Tessier
    Robert Tessier
    • Jim Henry
    Nick Dimitri
    Nick Dimitri
    • Street
    Frank McRae
    Frank McRae
    • Hammerman
    Maurice Kowalewski
    Maurice Kowalewski
    • Caesare
    Naomi Stevens
    Naomi Stevens
    • Madam
    Lyla Hay Owen
    • Waitress
    John Creamer
    • Apartment Manager
    Robert Castleberry
    • Counterman
    Becky Allen
    • Poe's Date
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writers
      • Walter Hill
      • Bryan Gindoff
      • Bruce Henstell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews150

    7.213.1K
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    Featured reviews

    louis-king

    Some of the best fight scenes

    Great role for Bronson.

    Compare Bronson's fighting style with almost any other fight movie like Kirk Douglas in 'Champion' or Stallone in the 'Rocky' series. Bronson slips and ducks his opponent's punches like a real fighter does, putting as much effort into not getting hit as he does hitting the other guy. Any fighter taking the hits that most movie boxers take would be unconscious or dead in a matter of minutes, and even sluggers like Rocky Marciano and George Frazier were constantly moving, never offering a good target.

    This depression era movie is similar in flavor to the Lee Marvin Ernest Borgnine vehicle 'Emperor of The North'. Both movies have unsentimental, tough, taciturn heroes who communicate more with glances and gestures.
    10wmjahn

    Just perfect !! Why don't they make 'em like this anymore ??

    Just a few days ago I saw HARD TIMES again, after I had seen it already twice some 10 to 20 years down the road. I did remember that I liked it a lot then, but I was not prepared to see how great it actually is! This is one of the movies that gets better with every viewing (liek THE OUTFIT with Bob Duvall)!! Glorious, just perfect and that in EVERY DEPARTMENT!! The OPENING SCENE is so beautiful, it makes you fall on your knees! A long shot of a slowly arriving train in beautifully landscape and run-down buildings of New Orleans, SUPERBLY shot in first rare camera-work, THE MAN standing framed in the door of one of the trains' wagons, the music (and what music, DeVORZONs probably best score, still unreleased = a shame!) starting slowly and you immediately realize here's a drifter, a taciturn MAN arriving in town. Charlie looks sad, run down, tired, WITHOUT mustache, not having had much luck in live. These are just the first 3 or 4 minutes, but one probably never will forget them. GREAT! Like many of the directors, who started their work in the 70ies, Walter HILL is no exception to the "rule", that most of them (if not all of them) made their BEST picture within their first 3 movies released (Carpenter: ASSAULT, Spielberg: DUEL & SUGARLAND EXPRESS, Coppola: THE CONVERSATION, M. Ritchie: PRIME CUT, John Boorman: POINT BLANK, ...): Wlater HILL made HARD TIMES as his debut and although he made some nice pictures later-on, none of his later pictures (the DRIVER, which is # 2 included) could beat HARD TIMES. It's - like EMPEROR OF THE NORTH POLE - a really beautifully shot study of depression-era America.

    Bronson's muscles are - THE MAN being in his mid-50ies then !! - just unbelievable, slim, trim, knock-out hard, every ounce hardened flesh (check out CHATO'S LAND, too!), his acting is 100% on target (he does not look "bored", how some stupid critics wrote, but the way unlucky-in-life depression-era people would most likely look: sad), he is the ideal man for this role, and that just a year after he made DEATH WISH, which proves he was not out for an easy follow-up movie and certainly far away from getting as type-cast as Golan & Globus made him from Death Wish II (1982) onwards (sigh & weep).

    JAMES COBURN is great, too, maybe slightly overdoing his sleaziness, but great nevertheless. Jill Ireland has her usual bit-part, she's fine & OK, but not outstanding, whereas nearly all the other character parts are just that: outstanding! Nobody plays himself into the foreground, but everybody fits his part 100%. You'll hardly find any other movie, where the whole cast is as great as in this one.

    The STORY is simple but true! I just can't stand those fancy elaborated twist-here twist-there stories , straight forward simple but high-crafted storytelling, one of THE craftsmanship's of US cinema in the 40ies to 60ies (Ford, Mann, Huston) is brought here to another peak! The Camera-work is outstanding, too,a s is Barry DEVORZON's superb bluegrass/jazz/hillbilly score (release it, please!), which is probably just half an hour of music, but certainly deserved a full or at least half-CD release.

    In short: BREATHTAKING and certainly one of Charlies best movies of the 70ies (when he made all of his best movies), truly at the same level as MECHANIC & CHATO'S LAND, beating (a little) BREAKOUT and MR. MAJESTYC.

    10 out of 10! Go and see yourself!
    7claudio_carvalho

    The Mysterious Street Fighter

    During the Great Depression, the mysterious drifter Chaney (Charles Bronson) befriends the promoter of illegal street fights Speed (James Coburn) and they go to New Orleans to make money fighting on the streets. Speed is welcomed by his mistress Gayleen Schoonover (Maggie Blye) and invites his former partner Poe (Strother Martin) to team-up with them. Meanwhile Chaney has a love affair with the local Lucy Simpson (Jill Ireland). Speed has a huge debt with the dangerous loan shark Doty (Bruce Glover) and borrows money to promote the fight of Chaney and the local champion Jim Henry (Robert Tessier), who is managed by the also promoter (Michael Mcguire). Casey wins the fight, they make a lot of money but Speed is an addicted gambler and loses his share in the dice table. But Doty wants his money back and Speed's only chance is Chaney accepts to bet his own money that he is saving and fight a winner that Gandil brought from Chicago. Will he accept the challenge?

    "Hard Times" is a good film by Walter Hill with the reconstitution of the period of the Great Depression in New Orleans. Charles Bronson and James Coburn have top-notch performances in the role of a mysterious street fighter and a promoter of illegal fights respectively. The character Chaney is not developed and his origins and plans are not disclosed. Did he learn to fight in the prison? The question is not answered and the viewer only knows that he is an outstanding street fighter and loyal friend. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Lutador de Rua" ("Street Fighter")
    9Fella_shibby

    This film n Charles Bronson sure was something man.

    I first saw this when i was a kid in the late 80s on a vhs. Had heard a lot about this movie from my grandfather and was dying to revisit this film for a long time.

    Revisited it few days back.

    To see Bronson in such a remarkable physical condition is truly inspiring. He was about 54 that time.

    The film has a western n country feel to it, soothing n without the hustle and bustle. The music too is simple.

    A man named Chaney (Charles Bronson) arrives somewhere in Louisiana during the Great Depression. We don't kno whether he is a hobo, an ex convict, a deserter or an asylum seeker but he sure is a freighthopper n a very good fighter.

    He comes upon a street fighting competition n after observing a bare knuckled fight, he approaches the manager (James Coburn) of the losing fighter n asks the manager to set a fight for him but cautions the manager that he needs only enough money to fill a few in-betweens before moving on.

    Before his first fight the opponent finds our hobo a little too old to be participating in such kinda fights to which our hobo responds to him with his knockout punch.

    In one of the competition in the bayou side, our hero is cheated n not given his winning amount.

    This one is replicated in Christian Bale's Out of Furnace where Woody Harrelson's character doesn't give the winning amount to Casey Affleck's character.

    A bad image of the Southern sportsmanship.

    Our hobo gets to fight Jim Henry (Robert Tessier) a well built, grinning, head-butting skinhead.

    The film has good fights minus the blood.

    The elaborate period recreations is top notch.

    Inspite of the Great Depression, the debts n the gambling habits, James Coburn's character is seen sitting in his open balcony with his feet upwards.

    Now that is something so relaxing n carefree attitude.
    9Peach-2

    Great Bronson flick.

    Hard Times is one of Charles Bronson and Walter Hill's best films. This movie is rugged and has a great feel. Bronson looks in great shape in the film and the direction from Hill is terrific. In the genre of street-fighting pictures, this one ranks as one of the best.

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    Related interests

    Sylvester Stallone and Carl Weathers in Rocky (1976)
    Boxing
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill in Moneyball (2011)
    Sport

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The most grueling filming was the climactic match between Charles Bronson's character and the fighter promoted by Michael McGuire's character. Shooting took more than a week because of the fight's complicated movements. It was filmed in a riverfront warehouse on Tchoupitoulas Street, a very rough area of New Orleans. Bronson and Nick Dimitri spent days squaring off under the hot lights, watched intently by McGuire and his hoods, James Coburn, Strother Martin, and a few dozen cameramen, technicians and crew members. To create the illusion of being a seafood warehouse, several Styrofoam oyster bins were stocked with real, very smelly oyster shells. An attempt to cloak the fumes with a commercial disinfectant made the smell worse.
    • Goofs
      Dollar bills Chaney waves around at oyster bar are contemporary currency.
    • Quotes

      Speed: Well, you know Chick, like old momma said, next best thing to playing and winning is playing and losing.

    • Connections
      Featured in Behind the Action: Stuntmen in the Movies (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Hard Time Blues
      (uncredited)

      Written by Julius Farmer, Alfred Roberts, Percy Randolph & Ed Stanall

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Hard Times?Powered by Alexa
    • The Jazz band- who are they?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 13, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • arabuloku.com
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Street Fighter
    • Filming locations
      • French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Claridge Productions
      • Major Studio Partners
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,700,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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