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  1. During the Great Depression, the mysterious drifter Chaney befriends the promoter of illegal street fights Speed and they go to New Orleans to make money fighting on the streets. Speed is welcomed by his mistress Gayleen Schoonover and invites his former partner Poe to team-up with them.

  2. Hard Times. Charles Bronson (Actor), James Coburn (Actor), Walter Hill (Director, Writer) Rated: PG. Format: DVD. 4.7 2,752 ratings. IMDb 7.2/10.0. Paperback. $15.25. Playback Region 2 : This will not play on most DVD players sold in the U.S., U.S. Territories, Canada, and Bermuda. See other DVD options under “Other Formats & Versions”.

    • German, English, French, Spanish
    • PAL
    • 1 hour and 33 minutes
  3. Writer-director Walter Hill s debut film Hard Times (1975) stars the legendary Charles Bronson as a laconic street fighter who joins forces in Depression-era New Orleans with a fast-talking promoter (James Coburn) and a drug-addicted cut man (Strother Martin) to make some hard-earned cash in the illegal fight game.

    • (2.9K)
    • Drama, Sport
    • Color, Blu-ray, Limited Edition
    • 851.8B
  4. In Depression-era New Orleans, bare-knuckle boxer Chaney (Bronson) teams up with gambler-turned-promoter Speed (James Coburn) to enter a series of illegal prize fights after drifting into town. Chaney's relationship with new girlfriend Lucy (Jill Ireland) suffers under the strain of his fighting career, which is itself hampered by corruption ...

    • (740)
    • Drama
    • PAL
    • 1 hour and 30 minutes
  5. Product details. Charles Bronson demonstrates exactly what tough is in this two-fisted action drama about a drifter suddenly caught up in the fight game during the Great Depression.

    • (8)
    • Sony Pictures Entertainment
  6. Amazon.ca - Buy Hard Times by Charles Bronson at a low price; free shipping on qualified orders. See reviews & details on a wide selection of Blu-ray & DVDs, both new & used.

  7. With its clean narrative, detailed period setting, superb cinematography by Philip Lathrop, and striking action sequences (elegantly edited by future director Roger Spottiswoode), Hard Times is an exhilarating jump-start for one of the 1970s’ most influential filmmakers.

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