1972 Reggae Classic ‘The Harder They Come’ Ranked Among Best Rock Movies of All Time
1972 Reggae Classic ‘The Harder They Come’ Ranked Among Best Rock Movies of All Time
Madz DizonSun, May 10, 2026 at 1:58 AM UTC
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More than 50 years after its release, The Harder They Come is still being recognized as one of the most important music-driven films ever made.
The 1972 Jamaican crime drama was recently ranked by Ultimate Classic Rock among the best rock movies of all time.
Directed by Perry Henzell and starring reggae singer Jimmy Cliff, the movie became famous for introducing reggae music to many viewers outside Jamaica. The film’s soundtrack featured several now-classic songs, including “The Harder They Come,” “You Can Get It If You Really Want,” “Sitting in Limbo” and “Many Rivers to Cross.”
According to reports about the ranking, reggae music “had barely been known outside of Jamaica” before the film reached international audiences. Alongside Jimmy Cliff’s songs, the soundtrack also included music from The Maytals, including “Pressure Drop” and “Sweet and Dandy.”
The movie follows Ivanhoe “Ivan” Martin, played by Cliff, a poor young man who leaves rural Jamaica for Kingston, hoping to become a music star. Instead, he becomes trapped in poverty, corruption, crime and violence while trying to survive in the city.
The Harder They Come, poster, right: Jimmy Cliff, 1972.Photo by LMPC via Getty Images
The film was loosely based on a real Jamaican criminal from the 1940s known as Ivanhoe Martin, also called Rhyging. Before production, the project reportedly carried working titles including Rhygin and Hard Road to Travel before finally becoming The Harder They Come. The final title inspired Cliff to write the now-famous song of the same name.
The soundtrack became one of the film’s biggest achievements. Many critics and music historians have credited it with helping reggae music break into the United States and other international markets.
The soundtrack included songs from several Jamaican artists, including Desmond Dekker, The Melodians and the Slickers. Songs like “007 Shanty Town,” “Johnny Too Bad” and “Rivers of Babylon” helped introduce global audiences to Jamaican music styles during the early 1970s.
The film itself also became a major cultural moment in Jamaica. It showed black Jamaicans speaking Jamaican Patois and living everyday lives on screen in real locations across Kingston. Reports about the movie’s release said audiences reacted strongly because many viewers were seeing themselves represented in film for the first time.
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When the movie reached the United States, subtitles were reportedly needed because of the thick local patois spoken by the characters. Despite that challenge, the film slowly built a following after midnight screenings in American theaters.
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes currently lists the movie with a 91% critic score. The site’s consensus reads: “The Harder They Come boasts hard-hitting drama and insightful social commentary, all matched beat for beat by a flawless soundtrack.”
Film critic Roger Ebert also highlighted the movie’s musical importance in his review. He wrote that the film became “the first extensive American movie exposure for reggae.”
Over time, The Harder They Come grew into one of the most influential Caribbean films ever released. Critics have often compared parts of the movie to classic crime films and spaghetti westerns because of its outlaw story and antihero lead character.
A review from The Guardian described the movie as existing “between the two moods of its two most famous tracks,” pointing to the hopeful message of “You Can Get It If You Really Want” and the darker warning inside the title song.
The movie’s influence continued long after its original release. In 1980, author Michael Thelwell published a novel based on the film. A stage musical adaptation later opened in the United Kingdom in 2006 before new productions followed in later years, including a 2023 adaptation in New York.
The soundtrack also left its mark on other musicians. English punk band The Clash referenced Ivan in “The Guns of Brixton,” while Big Audio Dynamite sampled dialogue from the film in their music. More than five decades after it first premiered in Jamaica in 1972, The Harder They Come remains a landmark film for reggae music, Caribbean cinema and music-driven storytelling.
Related: 1975 Hit Comedy Film, Famously Ending After Funding Crash, Ranked No. 1 ‘Most Rewatchable Movie of All Time’
This story was originally published by Parade on May 10, 2026, where it first appeared in the Movies section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: “AOL Entertainment”