How many famous carpenters are out there besides Jesus for the Christian faith? Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States, is another. And, some may not know this, but Harrison Ford began work as a carpenter before he slowly started to get cast in movies.

From carpenter to renowned actor, Ford has been in and seen a lot as the industry has changed. Now he’s finally in the MCU via Captain America: Brave New World as he plays Thunderbolt Ross/Red Hulk. Is Red Hulk one of his greatest roles or are there other movies and characters out there that are better? Let’s go through some of his classics and hidden gems.

8 What Lies Beneath

A Rare Horror Film With Ford

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What Lies Beneath
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PG-13
Drama
Horror
Mystery
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    Harrison Ford
    Norman Spencer
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    Michelle Pfeiffer
    Claire Spencer
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    Diana Scarwid
    Jody
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    James Remar
    Warren Feur
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Release Date
July 21, 2000
Runtime
130 Minutes
Director
Robert Zemeckis
Writers
Clark Gregg, Sarah Kernochan
Main Genre
Horror

What Lies Beneath is a thriller with a supernatural twist uncommon for most Ford movies. He’s more of a secondary character though as Michelle Pfeiffer leads this movie extraordinarily well as a fearful wife, Claire, who is starting to hear things in their house. Is the next-door neighbor hurting his wife? Is there a literal ghost in the house? Is Ford, as Norman, poisoning his wife to hallucinate things? Elaborating any further would spoil things and while it may be slow and drawn out, the finale is Ford at his darkest.

7 K-19: The Widowmaker

An Unlikely Survival Story

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K-19: The Widowmaker
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    Harrison Ford
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    Liam Neeson
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    Peter Sarsgaard
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    Joss Ackland
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Release Date
July 19, 2002
Runtime
138 Minutes
Director
Kathryn Bigelow
Writers
Christopher Kyle
Main Genre
History

K-19: The Widowmaker is based on a true story about the maiden voyage of the titular Russian submarine. Ford, as Captain Alexei Vostrikov, takes over for Liam Neeson, Captain Mikhail Polenin, on this mission. Everything Vostrikov does puts the crew in danger and Polenin lets him know that at every turn. Vostrikov’s luck finally runs out when the reactor core gets damaged, sending the sub into a death spiral. While some of the character turns don’t make sense along with the Russian accents Ford and Neeson are trying, it is a gripping movie and Ford plays a good villain.

6 Blade Runner

A Cyberpunk Detective Story

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Blade Runner
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    Harrison Ford
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    Rutger Hauer
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    Sean Young
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    Edward James Olmos
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Release Date
June 25, 1982
Runtime
118 minutes
Director
Ridley Scott
Writers
David Webb Peoples, Hampton Fancher, Philip K. Dick
Sequel(s)
Blade Runner 2049
Main Genre
Sci-Fi
Budget
$28 million
Studio(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures

Blade Runner is a detective story set in a cyberpunk world that needs little introduction. Ford plays a Replicant Hunter named Rick Deckard in this one, sort of like a detective who specializes in figuring out if a person is a human or a robot.

Deckard is given his greatest case yet when a bunch of Replicants are running around the city killing people, going against mechanical directives. It fits the film noir genre well as Blade Runner is a hazy melodic maze through what it means to be a person or a robot and it may take a few tries to fully appreciate it.

5 Air Force One

Get Off My Plane

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Air Force One
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    Harrison Ford
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    Gary Oldman
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    Glenn Close
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    Wendy Crewson
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Release Date
July 25, 1997
Runtime
124 minutes
Director
Wolfgang Petersen
Writers
Andrew W. Marlowe
Budget
$85 million
Studio(s)
Columbia Pictures
Distributor(s)
Columbia Pictures

Captain America: Brave New World is the second time Ford played a President with the first being Air Force One. Since it debuted in theaters in 1997, it became a cable classic following the home media release. It’s an easily digestible movie that could be likened to Die Hard on a plane. Ford, as President Marshall, gets aboard Air Force One only to have it quickly hijacked by terrorists. He escapes capture and hides in wait, slowly picking terrorists off one by one. The dynamic between Ford and Gary Oldman, who plays the lead terrorist, is not as engrossing as seeing Bruce Willis go against Alan Rickman in Die Hard but Ford and Oldman certainly share an unforgettable epic finale in Air Force One.

4 Clear And Present Danger

The Return Of Jack Ryan

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Clear And Present Danger
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    Harrison Ford
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    Willem Dafoe
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    Joaquim De Almeida
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    Henry Czerny
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Release Date
August 3, 1994
Runtime
141 Minutes
Director
Phillip Noyce
Writers
Steven Zaillian, John Milius, Donald Stewart
Main Genre
Action
Budget
62000000.0
Studio(s)
Paramount, Mace Neufeld Productions, Robert Rehme Productions
IMDb ID
tt0109444
TMDB User Rating
6.6

Ford first portrayed the Tom Clancy character, Jack Ryan, in Patriot Games which is also a good movie. However, while there are some pacing issues like a slow start and focusing on too many characters, Clear and Present Danger is the better of the two movies. It begins with CIA analyst Jack Ryan trying to uncover a plot involving cash obtained from Columbian drug dealers. The government wants to keep it but this proves to be a bad idea. Multiple powers are vying for the cash behind the scenes and only a clear mind like Ryan’s can see through the muck. The cast is great and the last forty minutes will have viewers rooting for brotherly love between military men like no other movie could.

3 The Fugitive

I Didn’t Kill My Wife

The Fugitive
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    Harrison Ford
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    Tommy Lee Jones
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    Joe Pantoliano
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    Jeroen Krabbé
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Release Date
August 6, 1993
Runtime
131 minutes
Director
Andrew Davis
Writers
David Twohy, Jeb Stuart, Roy Huggins
Sequel(s)
U.S. Marshals
Budget
$44 million
Studio(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures

The Fugitive is exciting from top to bottom as Richard Kimble, Ford, is accused of killing his wife. He claims a man with one arm did it but U.S. Marshall Gerard, played by Tommy Lee Jones, does not believe him. Ford escapes lock-up, going between forests and sewer ducts to evade the law.

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8 Best Courtroom Scenes In Movies

Courtroom movies usually burn slowly for most of the runtime, but there is usually one triumphant scene that creates a memorable cinematic moment.

Most people have probably seen the iconic moment when Kimble yells at Gerard in a drainpipe followed by a dive into the dam below. If not in The Fugitive then in other pieces of media including The Simpsons. It’s a good movie to get that adrenaline pumping in a desperate struggle for the truth.

2 Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back

A Love Frozen In Carbonite

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Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
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    Mark Hamill
    Luke Skywalker
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    Harrison Ford
    Han Solo
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    Carrie Fisher
    Princess Leia
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    Billy Dee Williams
    Lando Calrissian
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Release Date
May 20, 1980
Runtime
124 minutes
Director
Irvin Kershner
Writers
Lawrence Kasdan, Leigh Brackett, George Lucas
Producers
Gary Kurtz, George Lucas, Howard G. Kazanjian
Prequel(s)
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones, Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, Solo: A Star Wars Story, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope
Sequel(s)
Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi, Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens, Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi, Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker
Franchise(s)
Star Wars
Main Genre
Sci-Fi
Budget
$30.5 Million
Studio(s)
Lucasfilm
Distributor(s)
20th Century

Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back is thought to be the best movie in the overall film series with this initially being the dark middle chapter in the original trilogy. Ford returns as Han Solo who gets more of a central role in the plot. Viewers get to see his ties to the underworld unravel via Jabba the Hutt and his sacrifice saves his friends by being lowered into Carbonite. For theatergoers in 1980, this must have been one heck of a cliffhanger. Han Solo is one of Ford’s most iconic roles and this movie has to be the best portrayal of this outlaw.

1 Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade

Ride Off Into The Sunset

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Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
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    Harrison Ford
    Indiana Jones
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    Sean Connery
    Professor Henry Jones
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    Denholm Elliott
    Marcus Brody
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    Alison Doody
    Elsa Schneider
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Release Date
May 24, 1989
Runtime
127 Minutes
Director
Steven Spielberg
Writers
George Lucas, Philip Kaufman, Jeffrey Boam, Menno Meyjes
Producers
Arthur F. Repola, Frank Marshall, George Lucas
Prequel(s)
Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
Sequel(s)
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
Franchise(s)
Indiana Jones
Main Genre
Adventure
Budget
$48 Million
Studio(s)
Lucasfilm
Distributor(s)
Paramount Pictures

Next to Han Solo, Indiana Jones is another iconic role for Ford which some value more. It can be hard to pick a favorite film in the franchise between the original, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and the original trilogy’s finale, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Raiders of the Lost Ark is darker, bloodier, and raw whereas Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is more fit for the whole family. It works better for the character to see him deal with his dad, played by Sean Connery, and how Indiana got to be the way he is. While lighter in tone, the film is full of adventure and action along with heart. This series should have ended with Indiana and his father riding off into the sunset which Ford will one day do as well, leaving fans with a lifetime of memories to cherish.

Captain America in Captain America The Winter Soldier and Sam Wilson in Captain America Brave New World
Every Captain America Movie And TV Show, Ranked

From his MCU debut to an overlooked 90s adaptation, these are all the live-action adventures of Captain America, ranked.