Three the Hard Way


1h 33m 1974
Three the Hard Way

Brief Synopsis

Three martial arts experts take on a racist group out to destroy the African-American race.

Film Details

Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Action
Adventure
Crime
Release Date
1974
Production Company
Goldwyn Sound Facility

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 33m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Synopsis

A secret white racist organization plans to poison the water supplies of Detroit, D.C., and L.A. with a serum that exterminates blacks, but not whites--that is until a karate chopping, soul brother trio gets hip to what's going down.

Film Details

Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Action
Adventure
Crime
Release Date
1974
Production Company
Goldwyn Sound Facility

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 33m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Articles

Three the Hard Way


Sold to moviegoers as "the biggest black action picture ever made," Three the Hard Way (1974) was a bid by Allied Artists to form a Blaxploitation super-group in Jim Brown from Slaughter (1972), Fred Williamson from Hammer (1972), and Jim Kelly from Black Belt Jones (1974). With a higher than average budget and location shooting slated for Los Angeles, Chicago, New York City, and Washington, D.C., Three the Hard Way was entrusted to Gordon Parks, Jr., son of Shaft (1971) director Gordon Parks, whose own feature film directorial debut, Super Fly (1972), had earned $25 million back from an investment of $500,000. The script keeps its protagonists on the side of righteousness - solid citizens all (a record producer, an entrepreneur, and a martial arts expert, all accustomed to the finer things in life) who must pool their resources to oppose a maniacal white supremacist (Jay Robinson) poised to taint the nation's water supply with a toxin lethal to Afro-Americans. Upping the ante of automatic weapon fire, explosions, and car chases, Three the Hard Way remains raw enough to preserve its street cred; though the film made back its $1.8 million budget during its first week in cinemas, the film was less a harbinger of bigger things than a turn on Blaxploitation's downward arc. Brown, Williamson, and Kelly would reunite one more time, albeit in Spain, for the Euro-western Take a Hard Ride (1975).

By Richard Harland Smith
Three The Hard Way

Three the Hard Way

Sold to moviegoers as "the biggest black action picture ever made," Three the Hard Way (1974) was a bid by Allied Artists to form a Blaxploitation super-group in Jim Brown from Slaughter (1972), Fred Williamson from Hammer (1972), and Jim Kelly from Black Belt Jones (1974). With a higher than average budget and location shooting slated for Los Angeles, Chicago, New York City, and Washington, D.C., Three the Hard Way was entrusted to Gordon Parks, Jr., son of Shaft (1971) director Gordon Parks, whose own feature film directorial debut, Super Fly (1972), had earned $25 million back from an investment of $500,000. The script keeps its protagonists on the side of righteousness - solid citizens all (a record producer, an entrepreneur, and a martial arts expert, all accustomed to the finer things in life) who must pool their resources to oppose a maniacal white supremacist (Jay Robinson) poised to taint the nation's water supply with a toxin lethal to Afro-Americans. Upping the ante of automatic weapon fire, explosions, and car chases, Three the Hard Way remains raw enough to preserve its street cred; though the film made back its $1.8 million budget during its first week in cinemas, the film was less a harbinger of bigger things than a turn on Blaxploitation's downward arc. Brown, Williamson, and Kelly would reunite one more time, albeit in Spain, for the Euro-western Take a Hard Ride (1975). By Richard Harland Smith

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1974

Released in United States 1995

Released in United States on Video June 29, 1989

Released in United States on Video November 23, 1987

Released in United States 1974

Released in United States 1995 (Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "Blaxploitation, Baby!" June 23 - August 10, 1995.)

Released in United States on Video November 23, 1987

Released in United States on Video June 29, 1989 (Victory)