Looking for a vintage horror movie that’s approved by the general public?
Here are the top 10 highest grossing horror movies of the 1970s.
Behold:
10. Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
A still from Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Bryanston Distributing Company – Credit: C/O Bryanston Distributing Company
Total Gross Worldwide:$30,902,270 (The source for all box office numbers in this story is BoxOfficeMojo.com.)
Tobe Hooper’s classic horror movie just turned 50 this year. Following the unfortunate story of a group of young people who take an innocent trip to a remote house in Texas, they have no idea what’s coming to them when they encounter a strange hitchhiker.
This movie marks the beginning of one of the most iconic horror villains ever — Leatherface, who wields a chainsaw in order to murder his victims along with his cannibalistic family.
9. Carrie (1976)
A still from Carrie, United Artists – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide:$33,801,936
Sissy Spacek stars in this unforgettable Stephen King adaptation about a teenage girl who gets pushed to the edge by high school bullies and her abusive, hyper-religious mother.
When she gets invited to the prom by a boy she likes, Carrie gets once last chance at a happy adolescent moment — until someone decides to play a mean trick on her. What they don’t know is that Carrie has supernatural telekinetic powers and she’s about to snap.
8. Halloween (1978)
Jamie Lee Curtis in Halloween, Compass International Pictures, Aquarius Releasing – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide: $47,160,941
Jamie Lee Curtis stars in this classic horror movie featuring iconic villain Mike Myers. Wearing a creepy mask, Myers has a penchant for murdering teenagers, and when he escapes from prison after murdering his sister 15 years earlier, he seeks more blood.
Curtis plays Laurie Strode, whom Myers starts stalking while looking for his next victim.
7. The Omen (1976)
20th Century Studios – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide: $60,922,980
In this classic horror film, a mother’s baby dies suddenly after birth and her husband replaces him with another baby without telling her. They name him Damien, and unfortunately for them, it turns out that baby is the antichrist.
Things get sticky when baby Damien scares animals and violently resists entering a church.
There could be some debate as to whether Young Frankenstein belongs on this list, since its primarily a comedy. But it is considered a comedy-horror film, since it’s a parody of the horror genre, so we argue that it counts. It may not be as scary as the other films on this list, but it is certainly a genre film.
Starring Gene Wilder, this one is as funny as it is spooky.
Based on the experiences of the Lutz family in a house in Amityville, New York that they claim is haunted, The Amityville Horror stars James Brolin and Margot Kidder as a couple whose home is haunted by a demonic entity.
The validity of the story of the haunting at 112 Ocean Avenue has been debated over the years, but there really was a murder spree that took place there in 1974 when Ronald DeFeo Jr. shot and killed his of his family members there. He was convicted of second-degree murder and died in prison in 2021. Whether the haunting part is true or not is unknown, but the Amityville Horror movies are still a lot of fun.
4. Alien (1979)
20th Century Fox Studios – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide:$108,591,169
This classic sci-fi horror film is so popular that it spawned a whole franchise. Starring Sigourney Weaver as Ellen Ripley, a member of the crew of the space ship Nostromo, it follows what happens when they discover an alien presence on board their ship.
It was followed by Aliens in 1986, along with several other Alien films, including the most recent installment, Alien: Romulus this year.
3. Jaws 2 (1978)
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide:$187,884,007
The sequel to the original Jaws may not have been as good as the original, but it still made a lot of money.
Like in the first movie, Sheriff Brody (Roy Scheider) tries to warn Mayor Vaughn (Murray Hamilton) that there’s a shark in the waters off of the touristed beach community of Amity Island.
And, having learned nothing from the horrors of the original movie, Mayor Vaughn again does not listen and innocent people are killed once again by a shark. Surprise, surprise. But this time, as you can see above, the shark catches on fire.
2. The Exorcist (1973)
Linda Blair in The Exorcist, Warner Bros. – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide: $430,872,776
One of the most iconic horror films of all time is The Exorcist, and it’s also loosely based on a true story. It follows an unfortunate young girl named Regan who gets possessed by the demon Pazuzu.
Much horror transpires as priests try to exorcise the demon out of poor Regan.
1. Jaws (1975)
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Total Gross Worldwide:$477,220,580
Of course, topping our list of the highest grossing horror movies of the 1970s is Steven Spielberg’s 1975 horror classic, Jaws. It follows, as mentioned above, the fictional events of the beach town of Amity (also fictional) in which a giant Great White shark torments the waters, eating swimmers and beach goers.
Come for the surprisingly realistic looking shark, stay for Richard Dreyfuss and Robert Shaw, who play scientist Hooper and shark hunter Quint, respectively.
Like This List of Highest Grossing Horror Movies of the 1970s?
How many of these 11 hit movies of the 1970s can you guess from the image? Remember your number, because we’ll tell you how you scored at the end.
1970
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
This was the No. 2 top-grossing movie of 1970, with an all-star cast that included Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin, George Kennedy, Helen Hayes, Jean Seberg and Jacqueline Bisset. It earned more than $106 million at the box office.
Want a hint? Note the background of the shot, and where our stars are.
Ready for the answer? OK. It is… scroll down…
1970 Answer: Airport
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Coming in just behind the top-grossing film of 1970s, Love Story, Airport followed a formula that The Poseidon Adventure, The Towering Inferno, and other 1970s disaster movies would follow:
Take a bunch of A-list stars, put them in peril, and watch the sparks fly.
Burt Lancaster once dismissed Airport as “the biggest piece of junk ever made,” but it inspired three sequels and was later satirized, of course, by 1980’s Airplane.
1971
Warner Bros. – Credit: C/O
This story of a Vietnam veteran, part-Navajo hapkido master was one of the biggest hits to come out in 1971 — especially after its re-release — and even beat Dirty Harry, the first of Clint Eastwood’s five films about San Francisco cop Harry Callahan.
Okay, one more huge hint: It starred Tom Laughlin in the title role, and was known for the song “One Tin Soldier.”
Ready? Scroll down for the answer…
1971 Answer: Billy Jack
Credit: C/O
Warner Bros.
Yes, we know it’s crazy, but Billy Jack really did beat Dirty Harry. Of course, Billy Jack had the advantage of being based on a character audiences already knew: Billy Jack had made his debut in the 1967 outlaw biker hit The Born Losers (above).
Billy Jack remains one of the cult favorite movies of the 1970s.
1972
United Artists – Credit: C/O
Marlon Brando starred in two of the Top 10 movies at the box office in 1972. The first, as you probably guessed, was The Godfather.
Can you guess the second one, in which he starred with Maria Schneider (above)?
Hint: It has a city in its title.
And the film is…
1972 Answer: Last Tango in Paris
Credit: C/O
United Artists
Yep, it’s Last Tango in Paris, a film that has been castigated in recent years because of Schneider’s allegations that she was mistreated by Brando and director Bernardo Bertolucci during a crucial scene involving butter.
This one looks like a classic film from the 1940s, not one of the hit movies of the 1970s, and that’s very much by design.
If you’ve seen this absolute charmer, featuring the star of the biggest hit of 1970 and his real-life daughter, you certainly remember it.
It’s sad, but also an absolute charmer.
Scroll down for its title…
1973 Answer: Paper Moon
Credit: C/O
Paramount Pictures
Paper Moon starred Ryan O’Neal, who also topped the box office opposite Ali MacGraw in 1970’s Love Story. For Paper Moon, a Depression-era story of a con man on a road trip with a cantankerous child who just might be his daughter.
Director Peter Bogdanovich wisely paired O’Neal with his real-life daughter, Tatum, who deservedly won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.
1974
20th Century Fox – Credit: Teri Garr and Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein. 20th Century Studios
1974 was a very good year for Mel Brooks: He released not only the Western satire Blazing Saddles, the top film of the year, but also another comedy, satirizing another genre.
The comedy classic Young Frankenstein was still playing in theaters through 1975, when members of Aerosmith saw it and borrowed one of the best jokes in the film for the title of their hit “Walk This Way,” as we detail in this list of Classic Rock Songs Inspired by Movies We Love.
So it isn’t just one of the hit movies of the 1970s — it also helped inspire one of the biggest hit songs of the 1970s.
1975
20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O
This one is a cult hit that still plays in theaters all over the country today.
If you don’t know what it is, please go see it immediately. Preferably at midnight.
And scroll down for the title…
1975 Answer: The Rocky Horror Picture Show
Credit: C/O
20th Century Fox
Yep, it’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show, starring Susan Sarandon, Tim Curry, and many more.
Rocky Horror isn’t just a cult hit, but also a legit hit: It was solidly in the Top 10 movies of 1975, behind hits like Jaws, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, and Shampoo.
All of those movies are terrific, but they don’t inspire midnight singalongs across America.
1976
20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O
We can’t stress enough what a red-hot star Gene Wilder was in the 1970s.
This was the first of his four pairings with one of the greatest comics of all time, Richard Pryor.
Scroll down for the name of the film.
1976 Answer: Silver Streak
Credit: C/O
20th Century Fox
Silver Streak casts Gene Wilder as harried book editor George, who teams up with car thief Grover (Richard Pryor) after George is falsely accused of murder.
Wilder and Pryor would pair up again in 1980’s Stir Crazy, 1989’s See No Evil, Hear No Evil, and 1991’s Another You.
1977
Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O
1977 is of course a crucial year because it was the year of the original Star Wars, a movie that changed forever what type of movies get the green light in Hollywood and was perhaps had the greatest cultural impact of all the hit movies of the 1970s.
The movie above, while less popular, got a lot of attention in 1977, thanks in large part to its female lead.
We’ll give you another hint: It was co-written by Peter Benchley, the writer of the novel Jaws and co-writer of the film.
Scroll down for its title…
1977 Answer: The Deep
Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O
The Deep, starring Jaqueline Bissett and Nick Nolte, is about a pair of divers who uncover treasure and then have to defend it.
The marketing focused heavily on underwater shots of Bissett.
It earned $47.3 million, making it No. 6 on the list of the 10 top movies of 1977, by domestic box office, not adjusted for inflation.
1978
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
This is a very easy one if you were around in 1978. It’s one of the biggest hit movies of the 1970s.
It starred a the Not Ready for Prime Time Player above, who is also one of the subjects of the recent Jason Reitman film Saturday Night.
Scroll down for this very easy answer.
1978 Answer: Animal House
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
This John Landis-directed National Lampoon film was a breakout hit for John Belushi, the Saturday Night Live star who became an instant movie star for his portrayal of the hard-partying Bluto.
In the same year he appeared in Animal House, Belushi also appeared in Goin’ South, which Jack Nicholson starred in and directed.
Belushi felt like he didn’t have enough to do in Goin’ South, which Animal House trounced at the box office.
1979
MGM – Credit: C/O
Margot Kidder starred in both the No. 1 and No. 2 movies at the 1979 box office.
The No. 1 movie was Superman.
Can you guess the No. 2 movie, above?
Scroll down for its name…
1979 Answer: The Amityville Horror
MGM – Credit: C/O
Margot Kidder starred with James Brolin in the Stuart Rosenberg-directed Amityville Horror, based on Jay Anson’s 1979 book of the same name about the Lutz family, who said they endured paranormal activity while living in a home where Ronald DeFeo murdered his family in 1974.
It was one of many films about the Amityville story, which remains haunting today — whether or not you believe the house is haunted.
And that ends the movies of the 1970s. Or does it?
Bonus: 1980
Paramount Pictures – Credit: C/O
We’re adding this one for those of you who contend that a decade ends in its 10th year. And because we’re having fun and don’t want this list of hit movies of the 1970s to end.
Though Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back was easily the No. 1 movie, the film above, directed by Robert Redford, won Best Picture at the Oscars. Can you remember its title?
Scroll down if you like…
1980 Answer: Ordinary People
Paramount Pictures – Credit: C/O
Ordinary People earned a very respectable $55 million in domestic box office in 1980, and cleaned up at the Oscars.
Besides winning Best Picture, it earned Best Director for Robert Redford, a Best Supporting Actor for Timothy Hutton, and Best Screenplay for Allen Sargent.
It has aged very well.
How’d You Score?
Fozzie Bear in The Muppet Movie. Disney – Credit: C/O
How many of these hits of the 1970s did you recognize? Here’s how you score:
Here are some stars of the 1970s are still going strong.
Diane Keaton
United Artists – Credit: C/O
After breaking out with The Godfather, Diane Keaton hit icon status with Annie Hall (above) and has never let it go.
After a run of films including Reds, Baby Boom, the Father of the Bride films, and Something’s Gotta Give, she returned in 2023 with the sequel Book Club: The Next Chapter. She was terrific in Mack & Rita, too. She’s terrific in everything.
Say, whatever happened to that guy who played her husband in The Godfather films? What was his name again?
Al Pacino
Credit: C/O
Oh, that’s right. Al Pacino, one of the greatest actors of the 1970s and all time, broke out with 1971’s The Panic of Needle Park (still haunting) before beginning a run of ’70s hits that included not just the first two Godfather films but also Dog Day Afternoon (above), and Serpico.
In the ’80s, he mostly chose his shots carefully, settling on an iconic turn in Scarface. His spectacular ’90s run included an Oscar-winning role in Scent of a Woman — he’s ridiculously only one once, out of nine nominations — followed by Heat, Donnie Brasco, Devil’s Advocate and more.
Recent highlights include Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, The Irishman, and a hilarious role in House of Gucci. Like others on this list, he has finally moved into television (OK, streaming) with Amazon’s Hunters.
Pacino, 84, also appeared last year with Michael Keaton in Knox Goes Away, which Keaton directed, and in Modì, Three Days on the Wing of Madness, directed by his Donnie Brasco co-star, Johnny Depp.
He also just released a new autobiography, and has made so many great movies we can think of at least five you’ve likely never heard of.
After breaking out in 1970s roles including The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight (above) and Bang the Drum slowly, he became a film icon with Mean Streets, The Godfather Part II (for which he won his first Oscar), Taxi Driver, and The Deer Hunter. Next came 1980’s Raging Bull, which earned him his second Oscar.
His too-many to list roles between then and now include Goodfellas, Casino, Awakenings, Silver Linings Playbook, Heat, Jackie Brown, Midnight Run, and the Meet the Parents franchise. He earned the most recent of his Oscar nominations for The Irishman, which again paired him with Pacino and Martin Scorsese, though the film marked the first time he worked with both.
He was also up for an Oscar for best supporting actor last year for his role in Killers of the Flower Moon.
Jamie Lee Curtis
Credit: C/O
The latest winner of the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for Everything Everywhere All at Once may always be best known for her role as Laurie Strode in 1978’s Halloween (above), a role she has repeatedly revisited, including in the latest Halloween trilogy, before vowing that she will never play the character again.
Her other career highlights have included widely varied roles in films from Trading Places to A Fish Called Wanda to True Lies to Knives Out.
She earned raves for her latest, The Last Showgirl, alongside Pamela Anderson, and was one of the first stars to step up and pledge $1 million to support the recovery from the L.A. fires.
Sylvester Stallone
United Artists – Credit: C/O
Despite a breakout role in 1974’s The Lords of Flatbush, Stallone wasn’t happy with the roles he was being offered. So he blacked out his windows to focus and wrote several screenplays, one of which turned out to be Rocky. Then he insisted on playing the title role and became one of the breakout stars of the 1970s.
In the process, he helped invite the modern blockbuster — and franchise — and did it again with the Rambo films. Rocky led to Creed, in which Stallone starred in the first two installments. This year he’s back with the fourth and perhaps final Expendables film.
All that and he decided to give TV a try, playing an ex-con who goes West in Tulsa King (above). He’s remarkably never gotten an Oscar, though Rocky won Best Picture and Best Director for John G. Avildsen.
He’s also the subject of a compelling recent Netflix documentary about his life and career called Sly, and was recently named one of President Trump’s “Special Ambassadors to Hollywood.”
Sally Field
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
We like her, we really like her. Sally Field, a two-time Best Actress Oscar winner for 1979’s Norma Rae (above) and 1984’s Places in the Heart, is also a 1960s star, thanks to her appearances on Gidget, starting in 1965, and the The Flying Nun.
In roles from Sybil to Smokey and the Bandit to Mrs. Doubtfire to Forrest Gump to Lincoln, she demonstrated exceptional range, and mastery of award-ceremony speeches — her “You like me, right now, you like me” speech for Places in the Heart still holds a place in the heart of anyone who’s seen it.
Last year she stood out in 80 for Brady, proving she’s still got comic chops — and a love of hot wings that took everyone by surprise. We also loved her in HBO’s Winning Time as Jessie Buss.
Meryl Streep
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Perhaps the greatest actress, period, Meryl Streep was already highly respected when she earned the first of her 21 Oscar nominations for her role in 1978’s The Deer Hunter (above), alongside a stellar cast that included Robert De Niro, and established herself in the process as one of the most promising stars of the 1970s.
She has won an Oscar three times, once for Best Supporting Actress in Kramer v. Kramer, and twice for Best Leading Actress in Sophie’s Choice and The Iron Lady.
Her endless list of films includes Out of Africa, Sophie Choice, Doubt, The Hours, the Mamma Mia films, The Devil Wears Prada, and The Post, for which she received her most recent Oscar nomination. She stole the show as pitiless President Janie Orlean in Don’t Look Up, and appeared recently in the Apple TV+ drama Extrapolations and Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building.
Jodie Foster
Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O
One of our all-time favorite actors — and a two-time Best Actress Oscar winner for The Accused and Silence of the Lambs — Jodie Foster broke into the industry with a Coppertone ad at age three.
She quickly established herself as a powerhouse with astonishing range, starring in Freaky Friday and Taxi Driver in 1976, when she was barely a teenager, making her one of the youngest stars of the 1970s.
She was back in crime-solving last year as the star of HBO’s True Detective: Night Country, and was up for an Oscar for best supporting actress for her role Nyad. She also just won a Golden Globe for Night Country.
As for her Silence of the Lambs co-star…
Anthony Hopkins
20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O
Anthony Hopkins broke out in 1960s roles including The Lion in Winter (1968) and Hamlet (1969), then found success in the 1970s with films like A Bridge Too Far (1977) and Magic (1978). He entered the next decade with The Elephant Man (1980).
But things really took off with Silence of the Lambs (1991) — for which he won a Best Actor Oscar with just 16 minutes of screen time. From there he went on to star in films liike Nixon (1995), Amistad (1997), Hannibal (2001), The Human Stain (2003), Alexander (2004) and Hitchcock (2012). Along the way he’s also dropped into the Thor, Transformers and Mission: Impossible Franchises.
But perhaps his best work of all was for 2020’s The Father, in which he earned his second Best Actor Oscar for his role as an octogenarian losing his faculties. He does almost everything in a role that an actor can do. His long list of awards includes four BAFTA Awards and an Olivier Award, as well as being knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.
Hopkins, 86, was also excellent as an immigrant grandfather in 2022’s underseen Armageddon Time. His latest work includes Freud’s Last Session, in which he plays Sigmund Freud, and he just starred in Netflix’s new film Mary as King Herod.
Clint Eastwood
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Remarkably, Clint Eastwood isn’t just a star of the 1970s who is still going strong — he was a star in the 1950s, when he broke out in 1950s films including Francis in the Navy, The First Traveling Saleslady and Ambush at Cimarron Pass.
The 1960s brought a steady role on the TV show Rawhide, and he became one of the most iconic stars of the 1960s in Sergio Leone’s “Man With No Name” trilogy: A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly (1966).
He loomed large in the 1970s with the Dirty Harry franchise, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, and Escape from Alcatraz, but he also notably launched his directing career in 1970 with 1971’s Play Misty for Me, in which he also starred (above).
His stunning filmmaking career includes two Oscars each for directing and producing The Unforgiven (1993) and Million Dollar Baby (2005). His other outstanding films include Mystic River (2003), Letters From Iwo Jima (2006) and American Sniper (2014).
Now 93, he continues to star in and direct films — his latest was 2021’s Cry Macho, and last year he released his latest film, Juror #2.
Jane Fonda
United Artists
Jane Fonda broke out in 1960s hits like Cat Ballou, and buoyed her reputation with films like Barefoot and the Park and They Shoot Horses, Don’t They before the decade was over. (She also ended up on a lot of dorm walls thanks to 1968’s Barbarella.)
But she owned the next decade, becoming one of the leading stars of the 1970s — and most acclaimed.
In 1971, she won her first Best Actress Oscar for a daring turn in Klute, and won her second for 1978’s Coming Home (above), in which Fonda, one of Hollywood’s most outspoken progressives, acted opposite Jon Voight, who in recent years has become one of Hollywood’s most outspoken conservatives. It gives the movie and added layer of curiosity.
She was nominated for four additional Oscars in a stellar career that also included 9 to 5, On Golden Pond (in which she starred with her father, Henry Fonda), The Morning After, Stanley and Iris, and Luck.
Jane Fonda seems somehow busier than ever: She recently starred with Sally Field in 80 for Brady and Diane Keaton in Book Club: The Next Chapter, and just wrapped up a long TV run on Grace and Frankie.
Steve Martin
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
Steve Martin seems like he hasn’t aged since his hair turned prematurely grey — and because his frantic comic energy seems boundless.
After years of struggle, Steve Martin scored a Saturday Night Live hosting gig in October 1976 that finally won mass audiences over to his absurdist comedy. From there he packed arenas and made his first film, 1979’s The Jerk (above), a huge hit despite many critics’ failure to recognize its brilliance.
From there he went on a run of hits that continues to this day, including Three Amigos (1986), Roxanne and Planes, Trains and Automobiles (both 1987), Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988), Parenthood (1989), Bowfinger (1999) the Father of the Bride films, the Pink Panther films, and It’s Complicated (2009).
Now 79, he’s currently starring with his Three Amigos pal Martin Short on Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building, and will appear this weekend on NBC’s SNL 50: The Anniversary Special.
Michael Caine
MGM
The 91-year-old winner of two Oscars, for 1986’s Hannah and Her Sisters and 1999’s The Cider House Rules, broke out in the 1960s with films including Zulu, Alfie, and The Italian Job, and kept in stride throughout the 1970s with classics including Get Carter and A Bridge Too Far.
Decades later, the dashing actor gained a new generation of film fans in Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy — an experience he discusses in the new memoir Don’t Look Back, You’ll Trip Over: My Guide to Life, on sale March 25 from Mobius. You can read an excerpt of it here.
His most recent film was 2023’s The Great Escaper.
Jacqueline Bisset
Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O
British star Jacqueline Bisset broke out in 1968 with roles in The Detective, Bullitt, and The Sweet Ride, for which she received a Golden Globe nomination as Most Promising Newcomer. She spent the 1970s decade making good on that promise, starring in films including Airport — the second highest-grossing film of 1970 — as well as Murder on the Orient Express, St. Ives, and The Deep, one of the biggest hits of 1977, a crucial year for film.
She also earned a Golden Globe nomination as Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical in Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe, and made the ageless masterpiece Day for Night (1973), which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and feels as fresh today as it ever did.
She has never stopped working, and thriving, in both film and television. Her latest film is the new Western Long Shadows, in which she stars with Dermot Mulroney.
Harrison Ford
Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O
You knew this one was coming, right? After breaking out in The Conversation and American Graffiti (above), he wasn’t yet one of the biggest stars of the 1970s. But Harrison Ford legendarily snagged the role of Han Solo in Star Wars while agreeing to run lines with actors auditioning for the film.
Soon he was starring in Blade Runner, Working Girl, two Jack Ryan movies and of course the Indiana Jones films, the latest of which, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, opened last year. Ford promises he’s done with the whip and fedora, but given his seemingly boundless energy, who can say?
Ford also stars on the hit Yellowstone prequel 1923, and, as we mentioned, appears this week in Captain America: Brave New World, playing the president of the United States… who turns into a red Hulk.
Like This List of 15 Stars of the 1970s Who Are Still Going Strong?