
My opportunity to meet….Mr. Charles Bronson.

Charles Bronson, in a sniper position here firing towards a Plexiglass covered camera lens and operator.

Reverse angle as the battle begins…




All the parties have arrived in the Baldwin Hills oilfields. Everybody is -Armed and Dangerous!



No place run -Charles has you in his sight.

The camera captures these final scenes protected from full load blank ammo under a blanket.



We need a bigger gun…

As the sunsets, investigators sort through all the carnage.

All in a days work…


Another fine job by man….Charles Bronson.
THE CRACKDOWN
A day on set…1987
A 5 million dollar budgeted film spun off collective series of successful features, this one is directed by J.Lee Thompson.
I discovered this production while mountain biking up in the oilfields above Culver City.I had just got home from my job at that time as a Tram Driver for Universal’s Studio Tour. I gave four tram tours earlier in the day but nothing going on at Universal today was a cool as this set I rolled up on. Fortunately, I had a camera with me. At first I wasn’t sure what I was watching until I saw all the show cards in the Transportation equipment.
Death Wish 4 is on every dashboard in all the production vehicles. Ironically, this is a MGM Film. We are above the former MGM Lot 3 for these action sequences. As I malinger myself around set I manage to capture a close up of one of my all time favorite stars…Charles Bronson.


I hesitantly approached this man, more clean shaven but, just as mean-if not meaner,
I had to take advantage of my “one minute in the sunshine.” As Charles wondered off alone I pulled up alongside him. “I’m sure glad you survived that chateau assault in the Dirty Dozen. He gave me this stare as I kept rambling on, “that set was on the backlot in the MGM facility in the U.K I believe?” as he responds. “The entire chateau was a set, we destroyed it”. “I’m a huge Lee Marvin fan so you two are quite the pair of survivors.”
” Lee was in The Battle of Saipan, he’s seen a lot of real action.” said Charles.
We happen to be overlooking the City of Culver City but more specifically, the former MGM Lot 3.
“My favorite show ever, I wanted the entire cast to survive, I cried when Jim Brown gets killed, what an ending!” Here I am on a hill top with the baddest dude in film. Next question I always wondered is – ” In the Twilight Zone episode “TWO” where was that New York Street?



I never could figure out this set, it baffled me for decades…
Charles impressed me as he scoured the horizon. He was trying to point it out, but – he became as baffled as me. I then point to Raintree, formerly the MGM Backlot 3. He stares towards Desilu and its grand water tower, then responds, “I don’t see the studio.” Then the bombshell, “It was at Hal Roach Studios.” “That studio was torn down in 1964.”. He is needed on back on set to undoubtedly kill more people, I sit in an afterglow.
No wonder I couldn’t pin it down, I never got inside Hal Roach. The Twilight Zone never filmed there or so I thought. They did it turns out-only this mentioned episode. My moment with Charles was fleeting yet still imprinted in my wonderful life memories forever.
I would find out later…
I did not know I was talking with a W.W. 2 hero himself, Mr. Bronson was a B-29 Superfortress aerial gunner. A Purple Heart was awarded to him for injuries sustained in action over Japan. They don’t make actors like they use too….
Written and lived by…Donnie Norden