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The Five Toughest Tough Guys of the 1970s
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The Five Toughest Tough Guys of the 1970s
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The Five Toughest Tough Guys of the 1970s
1.
Clint Eastwood - He had already appeared as a grimacing, wisecracking detective in 1968's urban action pic
Coogan's Bluff. But the 1970s established Eastwood as the decade's definitive tough guy with the first three
Dirty Harry films and
The Gauntlet (my personal favorite). It helps, of course, when your most famous role comes with a classic quote, as when Harry Callahan quips in Dirty Harry: "I know what you're thinking, punk. You're thinking: "Did he fire six shots or only five?" Now to tell you the truth, I forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world and will blow your head clean off, you've gotta ask yourself a question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya, punk?"
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Bronson in Death Wish. |
2.
Charles Bronson - He didn't play a prototypical tough guy in his best-known film of the decade, 1974's
Death Wish. It featured Bronson as a "normal guy" transformed into a vigilante killer by family tragedy. Still, he starred as more conventional tough guys in
The Stone Killer,
St. Ives,
Mr. Majestyk, and
The Mechanic. Indeed, he may have been the decade's busiest tough guy. His best quote is actually delivered as a voiceover when Jan-Michael Vincent finds this note in his car at the end of
The Mechanic: "Steve, if you read this, it means I didn't make it back. It also means you've broken a filament controlling a 13-second delay trigger. End of game. Bang! You're dead."
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Wayne with a big gun in McQ. |
3.
John Wayne - The Duke only starred in two urban action films in the 1970s:
McQ and
Brannigan (which send Wayne to contemporary London to retrieve an American mobster). Neither film was stellar, but it was fun to watch the 68-year-old Duke dealing with urban scum. Plus,
Brannigan features the great scene when Wayne kicks in a door and quips dryly: "Knock, knock."
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Roundtree as John Shaft. |
4.
Richard Roundtree - While other African American tough guys also made an impact (e.g., Fred Williamson, Jim Brown), none could match Roundtree as the super cool John Shaft. Roundtree played the macho private eye in three films and a watered-down CBS TV series. The best of the bunch was the second film,
Shaft's Big Score. Of course, Roundtree's character had something his contemporaries lacked: Isaacs Hayes' hip, Oscar-winning song. It memorably asked: "Who's the cat that won't cop out when there's danger all about?" (The answer is Shaft...can you dig it?)
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Burt Reynolds and his trademark 1970s moustache in Shamus. |
5.
Burt Reynolds - His propensity for lighthearted roles eventually diluted his tough guy image. Yet, for the first half of the 1970s, he played a steady stream of likable, but still macho, types in movies like
Deliverance,
Shamus,
White Lightning, and
Hustle. Best tough guy quote (from
White Lightning): "Only two things I'm scared of. Women and the police."
Honorable Mention: Roy Scheider (
The French Connection,
The Seven-Ups,
Marathon Man).
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