Ron Howard and Harrison Ford have been one of Hollywood’s most quietly celebrated friendships for over fifty years — two young men who found each other on the set of American Graffiti in 1973 before either of them had fully become what they were going to become, who watched each other’s extraordinary careers unfold from the particular vantage point of people who were there at the beginning and who have never, in five decades of public life, said anything about each other that was anything other than warm, considered, and carefully within the boundaries of what a genuine friendship requires when both people involved are famous enough that every word gets examined.
That consistency, maintained across fifty years and every imaginable shift in circumstance and fortune and the inevitable complications that come with two people living very large lives in very close proximity to the same industry, is either the most natural thing in the world between two people who genuinely love each other or the most disciplined piece of long-term image management in Hollywood history — and the story that is now finally beginning to come out suggests that the truth, as it so often does, lives somewhere in the complicated, human, deeply interesting space between those two possibilities. What really happened between Ron Howard and Harrison Ford — the full account of a relationship that has been presented to the public in one carefully maintained form for half a century and that turns out, in the way that all long and genuine human relationships turn out when someone finally tells the complete version, to be richer and stranger and more worth knowing than the official story ever quite managed to convey — is the kind of thing that changes not just how you see these two men but how you see everything they built, separately and together, across one of the most remarkable parallel careers the entertainment world has ever produced.