Charles Bronson/Filmography
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This is a partial list of film and television productions that featured Charles Bronson during his acting career from 1951 to 1998.
release | title | role | notes |
---|---|---|---|
1951 | The Mob | Jack, a longshoreman | Debut role. Bronson (uncredited) is in two waterfront scenes. In the first, he speaks briefly to Broderick Crawford about the labour situation. Later, he is seen unloading cargo onto the wharf. |
1954 | Apache | Hondo | Bronson's first Western. Credited as Charles Buchinsky, he plays an Apache who is Burt Lancaster's love rival for Jean Peters. |
Vera Cruz | "Pittsburgh" | In his last movie as Charles Buchinsky, Bronson is part of an ensemble cast as a violent American mercenary involved in the Second Franco-Mexican War of the 1860s. | |
Drum Beat | Kintpuash (aka Captain Jack) | In his first film as Charles Bronson, he plays the real life Modoc chief Kintpuash as a murderous renegade. This was Bronson's first movie with director Delmer Daves. Bronson made a real impact in this film. | |
1956 | Jubal | Reb Haislipp | Bronson's second film with Delmer Daves. He had a strong part as the close friend of Glenn Ford who played the title character. |
1957 | Run of the Arrow | Blue Buffalo | |
1958 | Machine-Gun Kelly | Machine Gun Kelly | A B-movie but the first in which Bronson played the lead role. |
1958–1960 | Man with a Camera | Mike Kovac | Television crime drama which ran for 29 episodes. Bronson played the lead as a photographer whose images assist the police in crime solution. |
1960 | The Magnificent Seven | Bernardo O'Reilly | A significant role for Bronson as one of the "Seven". The film is among the most famous of the Western genre. |
1962 | Kid Galahad | Lew Nyack | An Elvis Presley movie with "The King of R&R" as a singing boxer and Bronson as his trainer. |
1963 | The Great Escape | Flt. Lt. Danny ("Tunnel King") Velinski | The claustrophobic tunneller was another significant role. Bronson, James Coburn and John Leyton are the three who achieve "home runs" following the escape. |
1963–64 | The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters | Linc Murdock | TV Western series in which Bronson played a wagon master. |
1965 | Guns of Diablo | Linc Murdock | Feature-length cinema spinoff from The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters. |
The Sandpiper | Cos Erickson | Bronson had fourth billing behind Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Eva Marie Saint. | |
1967 | The Dirty Dozen | Joseph Wladislaw | A strong part as the only member of the actual dozen to survive the mission. |
1968 | Guns for San Sebastian | Teclo | Bronson was unusually cast as a villain. |
Once Upon a Time in the West | Harmonica | Bronson's most powerful role as the enigmatic gunfighter on a quest for revenge. The film is widely rated the greatest-ever Western and director Sergio Leone praised Bronson as the best actor he ever worked with. | |
1969 | Twinky | Scott Wardman | |
1970 | Rider on the Rain | Col. Harry Dobbs | |
1971 | Cold Sweat | Joe Martin | |
Someone Behind the Door | The Stranger | ||
Red Sun | Link Stuart | A Western with a multinational cast. Bronson, a member of the Magnificent Seven, teams up with Toshiro Mifune of the Seven Samurai. | |
1972 | The Valachi Papers | Joe Valachi | |
Chato's Land | Pardon Chato | ||
The Mechanic | Arthur Bishop | Bronson as an experienced hitman teaches a novice the tricks of his trade. | |
1973 | The Stone Killer | Lou Torrey | |
1974 | Mr. Majestyk | Vince Majestyk | |
Death Wish | Paul Kersey | First in the series of Michael Winner's films about a vigilante. | |
1975 | Hard Times | Chaney | |
Breakheart Pass | John Deakin | Based on the Alistair MacLean novel of the same title. As undercover agent Deakin, Bronson famously states: "I am not a man of violence". |
|
1976 | St Ives | Raymond St Ives | |
1978 | Telefon | Major Grigori Bortsov | |
1979 | Love and Bullets | Charlie Congers | |
1982 | Death Wish II | Paul Kersey | |
1983 | 10 to Midnight | Leo Kessler | |
1987 | Assassination | Jay Killion | |
1991 | Yes Virginia, There Is A Santa Claus |
Francis Pharcellus Church | TV family film in which Bronson is cast against type as the real life writer of the famous Santa Claus editorial. |
1999 | Family of Cops 3 | Paul Fein | TV crime drama. Bronson's final role. |