Harrison Ford is one of the most recognizable names in modern film history. For many, he is Han Solo. He is Indiana Jones.
So as his career entered its later chapters, a narrative formed online: that Ford became “lazy”, that he stopped caring about cinema, that he withdrew from blockbusters because he no longer had energy for them.
His son says this idea is false.
Ben Ford — a prominent chef and restaurateur — has pushed back on that stereotype, saying that the core factor was not lack of determination, but a change in values.
According to Ben, his father did not step away from huge productions because he was uninterested in acting — he stepped away because scale was no longer the way he measured value. The deciding factor became “script quality, joy in working.”
In Ford’s most commercially dominant phase — the era of Witness , The Fugitive , Star Wars , and the original Indiana Jones films — he was one of Hollywood’s most bankable performers. After that period, the pattern he chose is clearly different: smaller roles, sometimes supporting parts, and work that is more character-driven.
Examples are easy to point to:
Mike Pomeroy in Morning Glory (2010) — a part where nuance was the draw, not spectacle.
Dr. Paul Rhoades in Apple TV+’s Shrinking (2023) — television, not tentpole action.
The later returns to Han Solo and Indiana Jones — which the family describes as motivated by story reasons, not external pressure.
The Off-Screen Chapter People Forget
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