fbpx
Wikipedia

The Harder They Come

The Harder They Come is a 1972 Jamaican crime film directed by Perry Henzell and co-written by Trevor D. Rhone, and starring Jimmy Cliff.[4][5] The film is most famous for its reggae soundtrack that is said to have "brought reggae to the world".[6]

The Harder They Come
Original release poster
Directed byPerry Henzell
Written by
Produced by
StarringJimmy Cliff
Cinematography
  • Peter Jessop
  • David McDonald
  • Franklyn St. Juste
Edited by
  • Reicland Anderson
  • John Victor-Smith
  • Richard White
Music by
Production
company
  • International Films Inc.
Distributed byNew World Pictures
Release dates
Running time
109 minutes[2]
CountryJamaica
Languages
BudgetJ$400,000[3][better source needed]

Enormously successful in Jamaica, the film also reached the international market and has been described as "possibly the most influential of Jamaican films and one of the most important films from the Caribbean".[7]

Plot edit

After Ivanhoe "Ivan" Martin's grandmother dies, he leaves the rural country for the city of Kingston, where he is immediately conned out of all his possessions by a street vendor. Though his mother tells him that city life is hard, she suggests he might find work with a local Christian preacher.

Ivan then meets José, who takes him to see Django, a Spaghetti Western. Excited by urban life, Ivan desperately tries to get a job but is repeatedly turned away. Finally, he turns to the preacher his mother suggested, who offers him only menial jobs under the scrutiny of Longa, an older church worker.

In contrast with his unhappiness about the church jobs, Ivan pursues his romantic interest in the preacher's ward, Elsa. But many of the church members believe the preacher might be raising her to be his own romantic partner, increasing the conflict between him and the preacher.

After building a bicycle from an abandoned frame he finds, he delivers the preacher's recording to Hilton, a prominent record producer, then asks Hilton for a chance to audition. That night, he borrows the key to the church from Elsa so he can practice his secular audition song in the chapel. The preacher discovers the rehearsal, and enraged, fires Ivan then chastises Elsa, jealously accusing her of fornication.

Ivan returns to the church compound the next day to collect the bicycle he built, but Longa claims it as his own. Ivan picks a fight, ultimately slashing Longa brutally with a knife. The police sentence Ivan to a violent whipping, and when he's released, he and Elsa move in together.

Ivan records his song, "The Harder They Come," at Hilton's recording studio. But with Hilton's payola stranglehold on the local music industry, Ivan's only option is to sign Hilton's exploitative $20 contract. However, unbeknownst to Ivan, Hilton decides to play the song only enough to recoup his investment, and not enough to let Ivan become a music superstar.

Meanwhile, Elsa has struggled to find work and, concerned about money, stays home instead of going out to celebrate Ivan's song release. At the club, Ivan runs into José, who offers him a job running marijuana. Ivan complains about the poor pay, concerned that he's being taken advantage of. Not knowing that the drug runners are protected from arrest by José's deal with Detective Jones, a corrupt police official, Ivan purchases a pair of guns for protection.

Ivan learns that a delivery he made was valued at $100,000, and he continues to complain about his meager pay. In response, José and Detective Jones arrange for a policeman to arrest Ivan, but, remembering his earlier whipping, Ivan shoots and kills the officer.

Ivan has a tryst with José's girlfriend, during which the police ambush him. He evades capture by killing three officers. When he returns home, he tells Elsa that, through these crimes, he is finally getting the fame he's always wanted. He then gets his revenge by killing José's girlfriend and making a failed attempt to kill José.

Capitalizing on Ivan's notoriety, Hilton turns Ivan's song into a radio hit. Ivan tries to do the same, taking photos as a two-gun outlaw and sending them to the press.

As Ivan's status rises, the police work harder to catch and kill him. Detective Jones, tasked with capturing Ivan, temporarily shuts down his protection racket to starve the community of their drug money, thereby pressuring the other drug runners to turn Ivan in. He forces the press to not publish Ivan's photos and bans Ivan's song from the radio.

During another shootout, Ivan's shoulder is wounded, and he only narrowly escapes. His closest drug-dealer friend, Pedro, helps him hide out and suggests that he escape to Cuba. But the community grows increasingly desperate without their drug trade money. Elsa, deciding she has no other way to survive, tells the police of Ivan's plans to flee.

Ivan swims out to the ship to Cuba, but not having the strength to climb aboard, he passes out. Waking up on the beach, he is ambushed by a police assault team. The police's approach is intercut with the sounds and images of a movie audience cheering Ivan on as if he's a hero character. He emerges from his hiding area, holding his two guns, and is shot to death.

The film ends with a woman dancing to Ivan's song.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film stars reggae singer Jimmy Cliff, who plays Ivanhoe Martin, a character based upon a real-life Jamaican criminal of that name, better known as Rhyging, who achieved fame in the 1940s. Prior to filming, the project had a working title of Rhygin.[10] This then changed to Hard Road to Travel before finally being changed to The Harder They Come, prompting Cliff to write the song of the same name.[10] The story very loosely follows the real Martin/Rhyging's life updated to the 1970s, though the historical Rhyging was neither a musician nor drug dealer.

Cliff's previous acting experience had come from school productions.[10] Other major roles in the film were played by Janet Bartley (Elsa), Basil Keane (Preacher), Ras Daniel Hartman (Pedro), Beverly Anderson (Upper St. Andrew Housewife), eventually married to Michael Manley who became the Prime Minister of Jamaica, Bob Charlton (Hilton), Volair Johnson (Pushcart Boy), and well known comedians Bim and Bam: Ed "Bim" Lewis (Photographer), and Aston "Bam" Wynter (Drunken Husband).[11] Legendary ska musician Prince Buster (DJ at Dance) makes a cameo in the movie, telling the audience to "sit tight and listen keenly!"[9]

Production began in 1970, but "dragged [for the next two years] due to inadequate funding".[3]

Release edit

The film was a sensation in Jamaica due to its naturalistic portrayal of black Jamaicans in real locations and its use of Jamaican Patois, the local creole. According to Henzell, "Black people seeing themselves on the screen for the first time created an unbelievable audience reaction".[7]

The film premiered at the Carib Theatre in Kingston, Jamaica, on 5 June 1972,[1] and was then released in February 1973 in New York City by Roger Corman's New World Pictures to little attention. It became more popular when it was played to midnight audiences nationwide the following April.[12] However, the popularity of the movie was limited outside of Jamaica because the local patois spoken by the characters was so thick that it required subtitles, making it possibly "the first English language movie in history to require subtitles in the United States".[13]

The soundtrack to the film is considered a breakthrough for reggae in the United States.[6]

Critical reception edit

The film received positive reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 90% score based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 7.6/10.[14] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 2 1/2 stars out of 4, writing that the "movie’s ending is an exercise in plot; its beginning and its music deserve better than that".[15] The staff of Variety magazine wrote that the film "has a sharp and racy rhythm, in keeping with the syncopated music of the isle, plus an underlying social theme in the guise of a familiar tale".[16]

Music edit

Music credits listed at the end of the film:

"The Harder They Come" recorded at Dynamic Sounds, Kingston

"You Can Get It If You Really Want" performed by Jimmy Cliff, composed by Jimmy Cliff

"Hold Your Brakes" performed by Scotty, composed by D. Harriot and D. Scott

"Pressure Drop" performed by The Maytals, composed by Frederick "Toots" Hibbert

"Many Rivers to Cross" performed by Jimmy Cliff, composed by Jimmy Cliff

"Johnny Too Bad" performed by The Slickers, composed by D. Crooks, R. Beckford, W. Bailey, T. Wilson

"007 Shanty Town" performed by Desmond Dekker, composed by D. Dares

"Sweet and Dandy" performed by The Maytals, composed by Frederick "Toots" Hibbert

"The Harder They Come" performed by Jimmy Cliff, composed by Jimmy Cliff

"Rivers of Babylon" performed by The Melodians, composed by B. Dowe

"Sitting Here in Limbo" performed by Jimmy Cliff, composed by Jimmy Cliff

Legacy edit

Novelization edit

In 1980, Jamaican-American author Michael Thelwell published a novel based on the film, using the same title. Thelwell inserted many Jamaican proverbs into the novel that were unused in the film.[17]

Digital restoration edit

In 2006, Prasad Corporation digitally restored the film, recapturing its original look by cleaning it frame by frame to remove dirt, tears, scratches, and other artifacts.[18]

Stage play edit

In 2005, The Harder They Come was adapted into a stage musical by the Theatre Royal Stratford East and UK Arts International in the UK, with a script overseen by Henzell.[19] The show opened on 25 March 2006, boasting the original soundtrack as well as a couple of additions, including "The Ganja Song", written by Geraldine Connor,[20] featuring Rolan Bell as Ivan.[21] The production later moved to the Playhouse Theatre, and was performed in Toronto and Miami.[19]

The Harder They Come, Suzan-Lori Parks' musical adaptation of the 1972 film was staged at New York's Public Theater in early 2023.[22]

Music edit

Punk band The Clash reference lead character Ivan in the hit song "Guns of Brixton".

See also edit

References edit

General edit

  • Bakari, Imruh (20 November 2018). "The Jamaican Gangster Film: Badman, Rude Bwoys, and Dons". In Larke-Walsh, George S. (ed.). A Companion to the Gangster Film. Wiley. ISBN 978-1-11-904166-5. Retrieved 13 May 2022.

Specific edit

  1. ^ a b Bakari 2018, p. 189.
  2. ^ "The Harder They Come (X)". British Board of Film Classification. 4 April 1977. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  3. ^ a b Campbell, Howard (18 April 2006). "ICON: Still harder than the rest". Jamaica Gleaner. p. A5 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Kenner, Rob (2009) "Trevor Rhone, a Writer of ‘The Harder They Come,’ Dies at 69", The New York Times, 21 September 2009, retrieved 11 November 2012
  5. ^ Katz, David (4 December 2006). "Obituary: Perry Henzell". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  6. ^ a b McLellan, Dennis (2 December 2006). "Perry Henzell and Trevor D. Rhone; their movie 'The Harder They Come' brought reggae to the world". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  7. ^ a b Mennel, Barbara, Cities and Cinema, Routledge, 2008, p.170.
  8. ^ Simpson, Dave (20 August 2012). "How we made: songwriter and actor Jimmy Cliff and actor Carl Bradshaw on The Harder They Come" – via The Guardian.
  9. ^ a b "Sit Tight and Listen Keenly". Retrieved 29 April 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
  10. ^ a b c Cooke, Mel (2013) "From 'Rhygin' To 'The Harder They Come' - Movie Changes Names During Production", Jamaica Gleaner, 8 September 2013. Retrieved 8 September 2013
  11. ^ Campbell, Howard (2012) "Cast that made a classic", Jamaica Observer, 15 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012
  12. ^ Salewicz, Chris (2 December 2006). "Obituaries: Perry Henzell, Director of the reggae classic 'The Harder They Come', Jamaica's first home-grown feature film". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  13. ^ Bordowitz, Hank, Every Little Thing Gonna Be Alright: The Bob Marley Reader, Da Capo, 2009, p. 58.
  14. ^ "The Harder They Come (1973)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger (9 February 1973). "The Harder They Comes (1973) – Roger Ebert". Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  16. ^ "Review: 'The Harder They Come'". Variety. 6 September 1972. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  17. ^ Coteus, Stephen. 2011. "'Trouble never sets like rain': Proverb (in)direction in Michael Thelwell's The Harder They Come". Proverbium 28:1-30.
  18. ^ thehardertheycome.com 11 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine, The Restoration.
  19. ^ a b Johnson, Richard (2012), "Keeper of the flame: Justine Henzell protecting her father’s legacy", Jamaica Observer, 11 November 2012. Retrieved 11 November 2012.
  20. ^ Jury, Louise (17 June 2010). "Reggae show The Harder They Come goes global". Evening Standard. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  21. ^ "The Harder They Come", Playhouse Theatre.
  22. ^ Paulson, Michael (5 October 2022). "Suzan-Lori Parks Is on Broadway, Off Broadway and Everywhere Else". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 6 October 2022.

External links edit

harder, they, come, other, uses, disambiguation, 1972, jamaican, crime, film, directed, perry, henzell, written, trevor, rhone, starring, jimmy, cliff, film, most, famous, reggae, soundtrack, that, said, have, brought, reggae, world, original, release, posterd. For other uses see The Harder They Come disambiguation The Harder They Come is a 1972 Jamaican crime film directed by Perry Henzell and co written by Trevor D Rhone and starring Jimmy Cliff 4 5 The film is most famous for its reggae soundtrack that is said to have brought reggae to the world 6 The Harder They ComeOriginal release posterDirected byPerry HenzellWritten byPerry Henzell Trevor D RhoneProduced byPerry Henzell Uncredited Chris BlackwellStarringJimmy CliffCinematographyPeter Jessop David McDonald Franklyn St JusteEdited byReicland Anderson John Victor Smith Richard WhiteMusic byJimmy Cliff Desmond Dekker The Slickers The MaytalsProductioncompanyInternational Films Inc Distributed byNew World PicturesRelease dates5 June 1972 1972 06 05 Kingston Jamaica 1 1972 1972 VIFF 8 February 1973 1973 02 08 United States Running time109 minutes 2 CountryJamaicaLanguagesJamaican English Jamaican PatoisBudgetJ 400 000 3 better source needed Enormously successful in Jamaica the film also reached the international market and has been described as possibly the most influential of Jamaican films and one of the most important films from the Caribbean 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Critical reception 5 Music 6 Legacy 6 1 Novelization 6 2 Digital restoration 6 3 Stage play 6 4 Music 7 See also 8 References 8 1 General 8 2 Specific 9 External linksPlot editAfter Ivanhoe Ivan Martin s grandmother dies he leaves the rural country for the city of Kingston where he is immediately conned out of all his possessions by a street vendor Though his mother tells him that city life is hard she suggests he might find work with a local Christian preacher Ivan then meets Jose who takes him to see Django a Spaghetti Western Excited by urban life Ivan desperately tries to get a job but is repeatedly turned away Finally he turns to the preacher his mother suggested who offers him only menial jobs under the scrutiny of Longa an older church worker In contrast with his unhappiness about the church jobs Ivan pursues his romantic interest in the preacher s ward Elsa But many of the church members believe the preacher might be raising her to be his own romantic partner increasing the conflict between him and the preacher After building a bicycle from an abandoned frame he finds he delivers the preacher s recording to Hilton a prominent record producer then asks Hilton for a chance to audition That night he borrows the key to the church from Elsa so he can practice his secular audition song in the chapel The preacher discovers the rehearsal and enraged fires Ivan then chastises Elsa jealously accusing her of fornication Ivan returns to the church compound the next day to collect the bicycle he built but Longa claims it as his own Ivan picks a fight ultimately slashing Longa brutally with a knife The police sentence Ivan to a violent whipping and when he s released he and Elsa move in together Ivan records his song The Harder They Come at Hilton s recording studio But with Hilton s payola stranglehold on the local music industry Ivan s only option is to sign Hilton s exploitative 20 contract However unbeknownst to Ivan Hilton decides to play the song only enough to recoup his investment and not enough to let Ivan become a music superstar Meanwhile Elsa has struggled to find work and concerned about money stays home instead of going out to celebrate Ivan s song release At the club Ivan runs into Jose who offers him a job running marijuana Ivan complains about the poor pay concerned that he s being taken advantage of Not knowing that the drug runners are protected from arrest by Jose s deal with Detective Jones a corrupt police official Ivan purchases a pair of guns for protection Ivan learns that a delivery he made was valued at 100 000 and he continues to complain about his meager pay In response Jose and Detective Jones arrange for a policeman to arrest Ivan but remembering his earlier whipping Ivan shoots and kills the officer Ivan has a tryst with Jose s girlfriend during which the police ambush him He evades capture by killing three officers When he returns home he tells Elsa that through these crimes he is finally getting the fame he s always wanted He then gets his revenge by killing Jose s girlfriend and making a failed attempt to kill Jose Capitalizing on Ivan s notoriety Hilton turns Ivan s song into a radio hit Ivan tries to do the same taking photos as a two gun outlaw and sending them to the press As Ivan s status rises the police work harder to catch and kill him Detective Jones tasked with capturing Ivan temporarily shuts down his protection racket to starve the community of their drug money thereby pressuring the other drug runners to turn Ivan in He forces the press to not publish Ivan s photos and bans Ivan s song from the radio During another shootout Ivan s shoulder is wounded and he only narrowly escapes His closest drug dealer friend Pedro helps him hide out and suggests that he escape to Cuba But the community grows increasingly desperate without their drug trade money Elsa deciding she has no other way to survive tells the police of Ivan s plans to flee Ivan swims out to the ship to Cuba but not having the strength to climb aboard he passes out Waking up on the beach he is ambushed by a police assault team The police s approach is intercut with the sounds and images of a movie audience cheering Ivan on as if he s a hero character He emerges from his hiding area holding his two guns and is shot to death The film ends with a woman dancing to Ivan s song Cast editJimmy Cliff as Ivanhoe Ivan Martin 8 Janet Bartley as Elsa Carl Bradshaw as Jose Ras Daniel Heartman as Pedro Basil Keane as The Preacher Elijah Chambers as Longa Bob Charlton as Hilton Volier Johnson as Pushcart Boy Winston Stona as Detective Ray Jones Lucia White as Mother Leslie Kong as Recording Engineer Prince Buster as DJ at Dance 9 Beverly Anderson as Housewife Clover Lewis as Market Woman Ed Bim Lewis as Photographer Bobby Loban as Fitz Joanne Dunn as Barmaid Adrian Robinson as Editor Don Topping as DJ Karl Leslie as Freddie Sandra Redwood as Girl Aston Bam Wynter as Drunk Alton Ellis as Ivan s Double Ulla Fraser and Carol Lawes as Elsa s FriendsProduction editThe film stars reggae singer Jimmy Cliff who plays Ivanhoe Martin a character based upon a real life Jamaican criminal of that name better known as Rhyging who achieved fame in the 1940s Prior to filming the project had a working title of Rhygin 10 This then changed to Hard Road to Travel before finally being changed to The Harder They Come prompting Cliff to write the song of the same name 10 The story very loosely follows the real Martin Rhyging s life updated to the 1970s though the historical Rhyging was neither a musician nor drug dealer Cliff s previous acting experience had come from school productions 10 Other major roles in the film were played by Janet Bartley Elsa Basil Keane Preacher Ras Daniel Hartman Pedro Beverly Anderson Upper St Andrew Housewife eventually married to Michael Manley who became the Prime Minister of Jamaica Bob Charlton Hilton Volair Johnson Pushcart Boy and well known comedians Bim and Bam Ed Bim Lewis Photographer and Aston Bam Wynter Drunken Husband 11 Legendary ska musician Prince Buster DJ at Dance makes a cameo in the movie telling the audience to sit tight and listen keenly 9 Production began in 1970 but dragged for the next two years due to inadequate funding 3 Release editThe film was a sensation in Jamaica due to its naturalistic portrayal of black Jamaicans in real locations and its use of Jamaican Patois the local creole According to Henzell Black people seeing themselves on the screen for the first time created an unbelievable audience reaction 7 The film premiered at the Carib Theatre in Kingston Jamaica on 5 June 1972 1 and was then released in February 1973 in New York City by Roger Corman s New World Pictures to little attention It became more popular when it was played to midnight audiences nationwide the following April 12 However the popularity of the movie was limited outside of Jamaica because the local patois spoken by the characters was so thick that it required subtitles making it possibly the first English language movie in history to require subtitles in the United States 13 The soundtrack to the film is considered a breakthrough for reggae in the United States 6 Critical reception edit The film received positive reviews from critics On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 90 score based on 41 reviews with an average rating of 7 6 10 14 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film 2 1 2 stars out of 4 writing that the movie s ending is an exercise in plot its beginning and its music deserve better than that 15 The staff of Variety magazine wrote that the film has a sharp and racy rhythm in keeping with the syncopated music of the isle plus an underlying social theme in the guise of a familiar tale 16 Music editMain article The Harder They Come soundtrack Music credits listed at the end of the film The Harder They Come recorded at Dynamic Sounds Kingston You Can Get It If You Really Want performed by Jimmy Cliff composed by Jimmy Cliff Hold Your Brakes performed by Scotty composed by D Harriot and D Scott Pressure Drop performed by The Maytals composed by Frederick Toots Hibbert Many Rivers to Cross performed by Jimmy Cliff composed by Jimmy Cliff Johnny Too Bad performed by The Slickers composed by D Crooks R Beckford W Bailey T Wilson 007 Shanty Town performed by Desmond Dekker composed by D Dares Sweet and Dandy performed by The Maytals composed by Frederick Toots Hibbert The Harder They Come performed by Jimmy Cliff composed by Jimmy Cliff Rivers of Babylon performed by The Melodians composed by B Dowe Sitting Here in Limbo performed by Jimmy Cliff composed by Jimmy CliffLegacy editNovelization edit In 1980 Jamaican American author Michael Thelwell published a novel based on the film using the same title Thelwell inserted many Jamaican proverbs into the novel that were unused in the film 17 Digital restoration edit In 2006 Prasad Corporation digitally restored the film recapturing its original look by cleaning it frame by frame to remove dirt tears scratches and other artifacts 18 Stage play edit In 2005 The Harder They Come was adapted into a stage musical by the Theatre Royal Stratford East and UK Arts International in the UK with a script overseen by Henzell 19 The show opened on 25 March 2006 boasting the original soundtrack as well as a couple of additions including The Ganja Song written by Geraldine Connor 20 featuring Rolan Bell as Ivan 21 The production later moved to the Playhouse Theatre and was performed in Toronto and Miami 19 The Harder They Come Suzan Lori Parks musical adaptation of the 1972 film was staged at New York s Public Theater in early 2023 22 Music edit Punk band The Clash reference lead character Ivan in the hit song Guns of Brixton See also editList of hood filmsReferences editGeneral edit Bakari Imruh 20 November 2018 The Jamaican Gangster Film Badman Rude Bwoys and Dons In Larke Walsh George S ed A Companion to the Gangster Film Wiley ISBN 978 1 11 904166 5 Retrieved 13 May 2022 Specific edit a b Bakari 2018 p 189 The Harder They Come X British Board of Film Classification 4 April 1977 Retrieved 18 March 2016 a b Campbell Howard 18 April 2006 ICON Still harder than the rest Jamaica Gleaner p A5 via Newspapers com Kenner Rob 2009 Trevor Rhone a Writer of The Harder They Come Dies at 69 The New York Times 21 September 2009 retrieved 11 November 2012 Katz David 4 December 2006 Obituary Perry Henzell The Guardian London Retrieved 12 April 2011 a b McLellan Dennis 2 December 2006 Perry Henzell and Trevor D Rhone their movie The Harder They Come brought reggae to the world The Los Angeles Times Retrieved 13 April 2011 a b Mennel Barbara Cities and Cinema Routledge 2008 p 170 Simpson Dave 20 August 2012 How we made songwriter and actor Jimmy Cliff and actor Carl Bradshaw on The Harder They Come via The Guardian a b Sit Tight and Listen Keenly Retrieved 29 April 2021 via www youtube com a b c Cooke Mel 2013 From Rhygin To The Harder They Come Movie Changes Names During Production Jamaica Gleaner 8 September 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Campbell Howard 2012 Cast that made a classic Jamaica Observer 15 November 2012 Retrieved 17 November 2012 Salewicz Chris 2 December 2006 Obituaries Perry Henzell Director of the reggae classic The Harder They Come Jamaica s first home grown feature film The Independent London Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 13 April 2011 Bordowitz Hank Every Little Thing Gonna Be Alright The Bob Marley Reader Da Capo 2009 p 58 The Harder They Come 1973 Rotten Tomatoes Flixster Retrieved 10 August 2022 Ebert Roger 9 February 1973 The Harder They Comes 1973 Roger Ebert Retrieved 3 February 2017 Review The Harder They Come Variety 6 September 1972 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Coteus Stephen 2011 Trouble never sets like rain Proverb in direction in Michael Thelwell s The Harder They Come Proverbium 28 1 30 thehardertheycome com Archived 11 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Restoration a b Johnson Richard 2012 Keeper of the flame Justine Henzell protecting her father s legacy Jamaica Observer 11 November 2012 Retrieved 11 November 2012 Jury Louise 17 June 2010 Reggae show The Harder They Come goes global Evening Standard Retrieved 12 April 2011 The Harder They Come Playhouse Theatre Paulson Michael 5 October 2022 Suzan Lori Parks Is on Broadway Off Broadway and Everywhere Else The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 6 October 2022 External links editOfficial website archived The Harder They Come at IMDb nbsp The Harder They Come at AllMovie The Harder They Come at Metacritic nbsp The Harder They Come at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp The Harder They Come at the TCM Movie Database The Harder They Come essay at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Harder They Come amp oldid 1218170288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.