Harrison Ford Movies

Want to know the best Harrison Ford movies?  How about the worst Harrison Ford movies?  Curious about Harrison Ford’s box office grosses or which Harrison Ford movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Harrison Ford movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences and which ones got the worst? Well you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information.  And a lot more on all of Harrison Ford’s movies.

Harrison Ford (1942-) is one of our all-time favorite actors.  He has been a movie superstar for 5 different decades.  We have strong feelings that he is well deserving of a Honorary Oscar®.  Watch our Give Harrison Ford His Damn Oscar Already.  His IMDB page shows over 80 acting credits since 1966. This page will rank Harrison Ford movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information. Television shows, shorts, cameos, bit parts and movies that were not released in theaters were not included in the rankings.

Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones in 1981's Raiders of the Lost Ark
Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones in 1981’s Raiders of the Lost Ark

Harrison Ford Movies Ranked In Chronological Order With Ultimate Movie Rankings Score (1 to 5 UMR Tickets) *Best combo of box office, reviews and awards.

Harrison Ford Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort Harrison Ford movies by co-stars of his movies
  • Sort Harrison Ford movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost
  • Sort Harrison Ford movies by yearly domestic box office rank
  • Sort Harrison Ford movies how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Harrison Ford movie received.
  • Sort Harrison Ford movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score.  UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
  • If you use the search and sort buttons….this becomes a very fun table to play around with

Harrison Ford Adjusted World Wide Box Office Grosses 

Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford in 1977's Star Wars
Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford in 1977’s Star Wars

Possibly Interesting Facts About Harrison Ford.

1. Harrison Ford was born on July 13th 1942 in Chicago, Illinois. He arrived in Hollywood in 1964 and signed a contract with Columbia Pictures that paid him $150 a week.

2. Harrison Ford first 12 years of making movies were filled with many uncredited parts and small quickly forgotten speaking parts. The highlight during this time frame would be his small roles in 1973’s American Graffiti and 1974’s The Conversation…both were nominated for Oscars® for Best Picture but neither movie really helped his career.

3. By 1976, Ford turned towards his carpentry skills to support his family. He was hired by George Lucas to build some cabinets for the Lucas house. Ford was building the cabinets at the same time Lucas was trying to cast actors for his latest movie. One thing lead to another and Ford found himself with a starring role in a little film called Star Wars.

4. Harrison Ford has been married three times in his life. He has two sons from his first marriage to Mary Marquard, he has a son and a daughter from his second marriage to Melissa Matheson and is currently married to actress Calista Flockhart.

5. His second wife, Melissa Matheson wrote the screenplay for E.T. The Extra Terrestrial. Ford actually played the part of Elliott’s teacher but the part was cut at the last minute. Now that is a deleted scene that I really want to see.

6. Harrison Ford has only been nominated for one Oscar® ….Best Actor for Witness. He does have 4 Golden Globe® nominations…those were for Witness, The Mosquito Coast, The Fugitive and Sabrina.

7. In 2000, Harrison Ford proved he could be a hero in real life as well as on the screen. Ford piloted his helicopter to rescue a dehydrated hiker on Table Mountain near his house in Wyoming.

8. Roles Harrison Ford turned down or was seriously considered for: Dragonheart, The Hunt for Red October, Vanilla Sky, Jurassic Park, Syriana, JFK, The Untouchables, Dick Tracy, Proof of Life, Schlinder’s List, The Perfect Storm, Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Alien.

9. Harrison Ford says his favorite movie that he performed in is….. The Mosquito Coast….and the most frustrating film he acted in was …..Blade Runner. Ford says Deckard was human….Ridley Scott the director says Deckard was a replicant….put me on the side that Deckard was human

10. Check out Harrison Ford‘s career compared to current and classic actors.  Most 100 Million Dollar Movies of All-Time.

Our Harrison Ford You Tube Video

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104 thoughts on “Harrison Ford Movies

  1. Harrison Ford is the # 22 most connectible actor of the 1980’s, and the # 71 most connectible actor of the 1990’s.

    The first Harrison Ford, the silent movie one, is the # 82 most connectible actor of the 1910’s.

  2. According to the Oracle of Bacon linkup to Wikipedia, Harrison Ford who has been around a long time appeared with the following actors in a film (these are people I’ve heard of). All have their own articles in Wikipedia if you want to check them out

    Alfred Lunt
    Alma Rubens (died 1931)
    Arthur Hoyt (died 1953)
    Bebe Daniels
    Blanche Sweet
    Carol Dempster (last film 1926)
    Clara Bow (last film 1933 appeared in a short in 1949)
    Constance Talmadge (last film 1929)
    Doris Kenyon (last film 1939)
    Edna May Oliver
    Eleanor Boardman (last film 1935)
    Eugene Pallette
    Franklin Pangborn
    Gene Lockhart
    George K, Arthur (last film 1935)
    Gloria Swanson
    Hedda Hopper
    Heinie Conklin (last film 1959)
    Hobart Bosworth (died 1943)
    Horace B. Carpenter (died 1945)
    J.M. Kerrigan (last film 1956)
    Jack Mulhall (last film 1959)
    James Hall (died 1940 co-starred with Harrison in 1928)
    Julia Faye (last film 1958)
    Ken Maynard
    Leo White (died 1948)
    Lila Lee
    Lillian Leighton (last film 1933)
    Lon Chaney (died 1930)
    Lottie Pickford (Mary’s sister, died 1936)
    Louis Wolheim (died 1931)
    Madge Bellamy (last film 1945)
    Marceline Day (last film 1933)
    Margaret Livingston (last film 1934)
    Marie Prevost (died 1937, subject of a Nick Lowe song, she died a gruesome way).
    Marion Davies (last film 1937)
    Mary Astor
    Maurice Costello (died 1950, great granddaughter is Drew Barrymore)
    Montagu Love (died 1943)
    Natalie Talmadge (Buster Keaton’s ex! retired from films in 1923)
    Noah Beery (died 1946)
    Norman Kerry (last film 1941)
    Olin Howland (last film 1958)
    Paul Panzer (last film 1947)
    Phyllis Haver (last film 1930)
    Raymond Hackett (last film 1931)
    Sally Rand (famous bubble dancer – last film 1937)
    Tempe Pigott (last film 1951)
    Tully Marshall (died 1943)
    Tyrone Power
    Tyrone Power Sr. (died 1931)
    W.C. Fields (are you kidding)
    Wallace Reid (died 1923)
    Zasu Pitts

    1. Lots of this list makes no sense at all. Harrison made some movies in the late 1960s…but nothing before that. Looks like Oracle has some bugs in it. Speaking of Harrison Ford…I watched a You Tube video where he breaks down his career….he looked so bored….it was almost not fun to watch. Good stuff.

      1. The Wikipedia pages don’t distinguish between 2 people with the same name. Those people I listed worked with a different Harrison Ford who was active in the silent era. The IMDB puts numbers behind people to separate different parties of the same name, even if there are 30 people with the same name. For Robert Taylor I chose all people whose careers started after he passed. Glitches they have not fixed.

  3. HI WH

    I appreciate your difficulties and can just hope that you can soon get round to rectifying the errors in your 2004 Annual review which are eschewing my own databases which always more or less follow your stats!

    It would also be nice if JK Simmonscould at last tablest be given his rightful due on the Cogerson main site index – see my July 20 post on the 2001 review page.

    Thanks for fixing ‘Senta Berger’ . My system stores a lot of my flag-ups to Mr Posters so I must have brought back one of them by mistake.

    1. Hey Bob…..I’ll Sleep When I Am Dead should be fixed in a few more minutes. It was made in 2003….but released in 2004……after the website talks to the database it should fix the problem. My power outage has caused some chaos with the connection between my database and the internet….hopefully it is back on track. WoC…..added in all the release dates for the movies…and that caused some movies to show up in two yearly reviews.

      *Added bonus with the latest update….Once Upon A Time In Hollywood will be added to the 2019 Yearly Page, Al Pacino Page, Kurt Russell Page, Margot Robbie Page, Leonardo DiCaprio Page and Brad Pitt Page….when the update is completed. Good stuff.

  4. Just added Steve’s Ford You Tube video to this page. My comment found on his page.

    “The great Harrison Ford is your comeback video. I have seen all of these movies…as he is one of my all-time favorites. His Raiders of the Lost Ark is one of the main reasons I became such a movie fan. So…let’s talk my Top 5 Ford movies. My favorite is Raiders…which you have at number 3. Second would be Star Wars which you have at number 2. Witness is number three for me…and 12th in your rankings. Blade Runner comes in 4th in my mind…and 5th in your rankings. And rounding out my Top 5…is Indy 3…which is ranked 13th by your video. His favorite movie performance is in The Mosquito Coast….which you have ranked 23rd. Good video. Voted up and shared.”

    1. Hi Bruce, I was surprised I took this long to do a Harrison Ford video.

      Our rankings are not too dissimilar. Okay, Apocalypse Now didn’t make your top 5 and The Conversation did, both directed by Coppola. And The Mosquito Coast is even lower on your chart. My favorite Harrison Ford film is the very first Star Wars film (1977), followed by Empire and Raiders.

      Of the 42 films on the video – your tally – all of them (not surprised), mine 31, Flora 10. Thanks for the vote, share and comment, always appreciated.

  5. I don’t know how Senta Berger’s name got mixed up in my previous post about Harrison Ford. Apologies if I pressed a wrong button somewhere.

    1. Hey Bob…I fixed it for you. I was all sit to catch up on comments last night…..when a storm blew threw my area and knocked the power out. Today got some things I have to do….so I will have to catch up later today….but wanted to quickly defend Ford’s highest rated movies on UMR…he has so many movies that got great reviews….that even though A.N. did not crack my Top 5…it is one of the highest rated movies in our entire database. Ford is just so awesome…great movies have to compete against each other. Still…88% is pretty stellar for an UMR review percentage. Good stuf as always.

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