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L'eroe della strada

Titolo originale: Hard Times
  • 1975
  • T
  • 1h 33min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
13.141
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Charles Bronson and Robert Tessier in L'eroe della strada (1975)
Open-ended Trailer from Columbia
Riproduci trailer2:21
2 video
78 foto
BoxeCrimineDrammaSport

Le avventure di un vagabondo trasformato in lottatore illegale durante l'era della depressione a New Orleans.Le avventure di un vagabondo trasformato in lottatore illegale durante l'era della depressione a New Orleans.Le avventure di un vagabondo trasformato in lottatore illegale durante l'era della depressione a New Orleans.

  • Regia
    • Walter Hill
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Walter Hill
    • Bryan Gindoff
    • Bruce Henstell
  • Star
    • Charles Bronson
    • James Coburn
    • Jill Ireland
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    13.141
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Walter Hill
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Walter Hill
      • Bryan Gindoff
      • Bruce Henstell
    • Star
      • Charles Bronson
      • James Coburn
      • Jill Ireland
    • 150Recensioni degli utenti
    • 68Recensioni della critica
    • 69Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video2

    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

    Foto78

    Visualizza poster
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    + 72
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali36

    Modifica
    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
    • Regia
      • Walter Hill
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Walter Hill
      • Bryan Gindoff
      • Bruce Henstell
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti150

    7,213.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    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")
    ttbrowne

    Hard To Beat

    A depression era drifter (Bronson) gets involved in the world of street fighting for big bucks. Good vehicle for Bronson who, like Eastwood, can say more with a look than with 20 words. He's the epitome of a hard edged, down but not out, tough guy. James Coburn plays his seedy, gambliholic, money hungry, 'manager' to the hilt. If you're looking for an actor who can make it look easy, watch Coburn in this film. Strother Martin plays a mulatto, hop-head Doctor (kicked out of Med school) they hire to treat Bronsons wounds. This is a man's movie. And the grit is captured perfectly by Director Walter Hill who would go on to direct 48 HRS. Throw in love interest (and Bronson wife) Jill Ireland, New Orleans and The Mob and you've got one hellava film. Don't look for any phony special effects which would have to be included for today's audience, just good acting, plot and grit.
    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.
    9Dan1863Sickles

    Not Only Brilliant, But Honest and Authentic In Every Way

    A desperate hobo boxes to make some extra money in the Depression. No love story, no cute little kids, no happy ending, no redemption. Just a hard man doing what he has to in order to survive. But on his terms.

    To understand why HARD TIMES is a masterpiece, compare it to other films from around this time.

    BONNIE AND CLYDE, THE STING, and PAPER MOON were all massive box office hits, set in the Depression. All three movies "strain" for a sense of desperate characters in a dog-eat-dog world, but every one of them cops out with Hollywood glitz and glamor. Here's giggly Warren Beatty pretending he knows what it's like to be poor. And here's Faye Dunaway, the dead-end girl, wearing scrumptious couture while she robs banks. Here's Robert Redford, the ultimate preppy blonde pretty boy, delicately hobnobbing with down-to-earth "Negroes" and glowing with his own virtue. Here's Ryan O'Neil, tough as nails and a real fighter, but hey, it's okay -- he's got a cute little girl along for the ride! One close up of Charles Bronson's face takes you to a place no other Depression picture dares to go. The ugly violence and the hopelessness in this film are so real that they actually build up the character even more than Bronson's natural authority and physical presence. It's the perfect vehicle for the perfect star.

    Bronson is enough -- but there's so much more. James Coburn as the manager Speed, so dishonest yet completely likable and in his own way a real hero. Maggie Blye and Jill Ireland, both sexy and authentic as Depression women -- Jill too sickened by failure to ever love again, Maggie too aware of how short life is to ever let a minute go by without a laugh. Either one of them could wipe the floor with "Bonnie" from Bonnie and Clyde. Strother Martin as Poe, the dope addict cut man who adds his own humor, sadness and resignation to a movie utterly packed to the brim with memorable characters.

    This is the most powerful and honest movie ever made about hard times.
    9Bogmeister

    The Original Fight Club? More In-Between

    With this, his first directing job, Walter Hill showed his tendency for archetypal characters (see the later "The Driver" - where the characters didn't even have proper names - and, of course, "The Warriors"). Here, Bronson is 'The Fighter'...Coburn is 'The Hustler'...Martin is 'The Addict-Medic'...and so forth. Bronson's final opponent is simply named 'Street' while the big guy who damages The Hustler's automobile with a big hammer is just called 'Hammerman.' They all present striking, impressive figures; you don't easily forget any of them. They stride or shuffle through a page of history, in this case Depression-era New Orleans, nicely atmospheric as shown here. Times are hard. People need to be hard, as well. One way to make good money is in pick up fights, street fights in warehouses, on docks or, in one case of rich atmosphere, in the bayou.

    Chaney, aka The Fighter, as played by Bronson, true to director Hill's method of archetypes, first appears on a slow moving train from places unknown. We never learn anything of his past history, even though there's about 50 years worth there. We learn only of his incredible hitting ability in the current time frame of the story's progression. In a way, Bronson was born to play this role: he's certainly not a young man here but he looks so tough we have no trouble believing he can wipe out men 20 years his junior. With the archetype of The Fighter, the story plays out like some Depression times fable, the tale of a mystery man or warrior arrived in a city to astonish all the onlookers with his formidable fighting abilities. The fights themselves are quite memorable; the viewer has the good fortune to witness these with the shouting hordes of betting men from the safety of a couch at home. We're a part of the spectacle, a guilty participant in a brutal spectator sport, a much more gritty version of modern boxing, and we wouldn't have it any other way.

    The rest of the cast is super: Coburn was never better as Speed 'The Hustler' and Chaney's front-man/manager. It's mostly through him that we hear all the phrases and quips common to those places & times, and Coburn delivers them all with a gusto & panache few are capable of. You really believe he was born as the 19th century was ending, grew up in the twenties and adjusted to the Depression accordingly. You'll always remember his retorts to the bayou residents and his last insult about fish to Gandil, the bigshot. Speed and Chaney need each other and their relationship is another strong point; Speed is all about the money, sure, but you sense he has a strong admiration for Bronson's power and quiet nobility (this is confirmed at the end). As Poe, Strother Martin created & added another indelible character to the long list on his resume. Other actors would've been saddled with some of the odd dialog he has to deliver, but he just breezes through it like a song. Glover (Crispin's dad) is also very good as a loan shark, as is McGuire as the rich Gandil. Mention should also be made of the top two fighters (Tessier & Dimitri). The film needed characters who could pose a threat to Chaney and these two looked just as tough. Now if only Chaney would explain more about those 'in-betweens'... but he doesn't say much.

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      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.
    • Blooper
      Dollar bills Chaney waves around at oyster bar are contemporary currency.
    • Citazioni

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

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Behind the Action: Stuntmen in the Movies (2002)
    • Colonne sonore
      Hard Time Blues
      (uncredited)

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

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 13 agosto 1975 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Sito ufficiale
      • arabuloku.com
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Hard Times
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Claridge Productions
      • Major Studio Partners
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 2.700.000 USD (previsto)
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 33min(93 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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