Film: The Mechanic (1972)
Stars: Charles Bronson, Jan-Michael Vincent, Keenan Wynn, Jill Ireland
Director: Michael Winner
Oscar History: No nominations
Snap Judgment Ranking: 3/5 stars
Each month, as part of our 2026 Saturdays with the Stars series, we are looking at the men & women who created the Boom!-Pow!-Bang! action films that would come to dominate the Blockbuster Era of cinema. This month, our focus is on Charles Bronson: click here to learn more about Mr. Bronson (and why I picked him), and click here for other Saturdays with the Stars articles.
For the first six months of our seventh season of Saturdays with the Stars, we're going to talk about the prototypical and pioneering stars of the action genre who made it possible for the last six months' stars to dominate during the genre's heyday from the late 1970's through the early 2000's, when action films regularly were the dominant force during the summer blockbuster season. Charles Bronson was one of the pioneers of that in part because of what he did in the early 1970's: he proved that action blockbusters had built-in insurance policies in the international box office. Bronson, by 1972-73, despite not having had a success that was as big as, say, what some of his contemporaries like Robert Redford or Ryan O'Neal had had in the domestic box office at that time, was still commanding $1 million a picture, and that was because while his films would not be a huge presence at the domestic box office, they played super well internationally, particularly in Europe. This would become critically important for this genre in the decades to come, especially as bloated budgets (and bloated salaries) of aging action stars in the 1990's were justified because even a break-even performance in the United States could be translated to huge returns overseas. Charles Bronson is really the first action star of this nature to discover this phenomenon, and it made him a multimillionaire.
(Spoilers Ahead) Today's film was a pretty standard expectation from Bronson come 1972, and not just because it's another stoic tough guy commanding the screen with a violent attitude. It was also a film that he made with Michael Winner, who teamed up with United Artists as his most common director collaborator of the era. The Mechanic shows the artistry that you could find between the two, even if the film itself is not as fascinating artistically as last week's outing with Rider on the Rain (or the more conventionally excellent films that Bronson made in the 1960's). The film follows Bronson as a contract killer named Arthur Bishop, who has killed a wealthy man named Harry (Wynn), and then inexplicably takes Harry's son (who has no knowledge of his father's death), Steve (Vincent) under his wing and begins to train him as a killer-for-hire. The two butt heads, but seem to be in sync as Steve's sadistic tendencies fit the killer motif like a glove.
The film is, I'm going to be honest, quite dull. Much of the middle is repetitive & predictable. But there's a lot of intrigue in the bookends. The beginning of the film in a lot of ways feels like a precursor to the David Fincher film The Killer decades later-largely wordless, meticulous character introduction through Bronson's Arthur going through the motions of a murder. It's fascinating, and also something you don't see much in cinema (maybe why this didn't resonate with American audiences). And the ending is really extraordinary-a twist where a sociopathic Steve (picked for this job in part because he's a sociopath) murders Arthur for little reason other than he wants to...all the while dooming his fate as Arthur's set up a booby trap to kill Steve as well in case he is betrayed. It's like a sandwich with nothing impressive inside but with great bread, and it honestly made it hard to judge.
The Mechanic would be, though, the last film of this era to really test Bronson as an actor. Up until this point, Bronson (as I've said) would make a lot of good movies, and when he wasn't, they were at least experimental films. Next week, we're going to talk about the most important film (or at the least the film was most-associated with) of Bronson's career, and I'm fascinated to see how I respond (I haven't watched it yet), because up until now it's very clear that these films have a true perspective to them (and have made me become a proper fan of Bronson's if I wasn't already), but if you look at the critical reviews of his upcoming films, they crater pretty quickly...just in time for American audiences to absolutely fall in love with Bronson and make him one of the biggest domestic stars (not just international) in the country for a time. Next week, we will finally get to Death Wish.







