**A PERFECT THRILLER** Duel (1971) Reaction/ Commentary: FIRST TIME WATCHING Steven Spielberg
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- Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
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Finally someone reacted to this! It's such a great flick, and Dennis Weaver does a great job holding down what is basically a one-man show!
There’s literally a dozen other reactions😂😂😂 Like did you even try to search?
This was a tv movie, with all the budget and content limitations that implies, and it STILL kicks ass. Just goes to show that talent really does make a big difference.
I remember i was dressed to go out for the night when Duel came on my TV, it held my attention immediately and the night out was forgotten.
My buddy and I caught this about 15 minutes into it, on TV in the middle of the night this one night when we were about 18 years old in 1995. It is a night I will always remember. We had no idea what we were watching, and we couldn't believe what we were seeing. Great movie. 👍
Bro I have a similar story. Was just me though, was probably 2002, 16 years old just getting into smoking weed, had a shitty crt tv in my room went outside and smoked a joint, came back in this movie was just starting at like midnight. Watched the whole thing in awe. Still holds a spot in my heart. Great flick.
This movie is like JAWS but with a truck. Steven Spielberg said in an interview that "these are two leviathans that would haunt an everyman, like our character played by Dennis Weaver."
I like Duel better than Jaws personally because it feels like it could actually happen as oppose to a Shark seeking revenge since sharks don't act nearly that aggressive all the time. People on the road however can get crazy....
Well, it's not unknown for a shark to enjoy a bunch of teenagers as a tasty meal.
It's not really like jaws at all. In Jaws they go after the leviathan shark, in Duel its a man pursued by someone for no apparent reason.
@@benfisher1376 yeah, however there were many times when David could've Just turned around and went home but he choose to duel the semi truck instead. Amazingly he won
@@henrynegro8397 turn around and have it still follow him??
Writer Richard Mattheson said that so many people came up to him on set saying that they've experienced something like this movie's premise.
In fact Matheson wrote a short story based on his personal experience: he an a friend were tailgated by a huge truck while coming back from a golf game in the very day President Kennedy was murdered.
A made for TV Movie that was so good they added some scenes at re released it in the theaters . It was a classic that showed how good Spielberg was with little to no budget .
Incredible movie. Spielberg is a genius and he was only 24 when he made this!
Yesss, someone reacted to this film! It's literally the movie that showed Spielberg's talent as a thriller director. Before Jaws, there was this.
Great choice. This was a made for TV movie, not a theater release & I saw it at the time. Spielberg said in an interview he had considered setting the truck on fire but decided against it-- he wanted viewers to experience the truck as a menacing monster dying. He also mentioned he wanted the ending to be realistic. After such an experience, the man is alone....It made a huge impression on me back in the day.
I saw this on TV when it premiered, which I think was in November 1971. I was 3 years old. For some reason, when the truck went over the edge at the end of the movie I started laughing hysterically, so much so that my babysitter got scared and had to ask me if I was laughing or crying.
The movie was filmed up in Acton, on the other side of the mountains just north of Pasadena where we lived. The laundromat isn't there anymore, but I believe the restaurant is.
YES! This movie played ENDLESSLY on TV as a kid. One of my favorites.
The fact this was Spielberg's first film is amazing.
I had a trucker driver try to kill me in a road rage incident a lot like this for real. He was high on meth at the time. Chased me for several kms and then tried to run me off the motorway with his trailers. He was charged and plead guilty. Apparently it was his third road rage incident that week that was reported. I was the only one he tried to kill though. When I saw him coming for me I immediately thought of this film. Surreal.
Only a few months ago I had a large truck just move into my lane on top of me without warning. I had to nearly slam the brakes to avoid being hit. I honked and flipped him off, which I felt was justified.
Moved to the left lane and sped up to pass, as I do he looks me dead in the eyes. Then after I get back in front of him (didn't cut him off or flip him off again just normal passing) he goes to the left lane, speeds up, and then does the same thing again this time no question it was intentional, nearly rammed me into the barrier. Don't know wtf his problem was.
Who wrote the screenplay? The legendary Richard Matheson, based on one of his short stories. For more details on his work look him up.
Spielberg started out in TV. He did many episodes of TV shows in the early 70s including the pilot for Columbo. Duel was a made for TV movie and is, technically, his first film. It got theatrical release in Europe but not in America. He did a couple of more TV movies, which I haven't seen. His first theatrical release, in America anyway, was Sugarland Express which you should definitely check out. It's a nifty, little film.
I grew up in the 80s and radio was very different then. We may have had less options but more variety. The radio stations that played popular music played all kinds of music not just one genre. I could listen to Prince followed by Depeche Mode followed by Run DMC followed by R.E.M. (and I have no idea if those names mean anything to you). Those radio stations that specialized in a genre would go into deep cuts and DJs had more discretion on what to play. Not to mention the college radio stations. Then in the 90's Clinton deregulated the industry which meant monopolization. I think there is basically one corporation that owns the majority of radio stations now, iHeartMedia, Inc. So there is very little variety regardless of where you're listening from. I stopped listening to radio in the early 2000s when I got an iPod.
Spielberg's episode of Columbo was Murder by the Book, which was not the pilot, but the first regular episode. There were two pilot episodes before that. A few seasons in, a kid in another episode was called "Steve Spelburg" as a homage. 😊
"Never give a trucker an even break" is an episode from the old 70s Incredible Hulk series which uses a lot of footage from this movie which Spielberg wasn't too happy about.
Love this movie. No one ever knows of it. I think it should be more famous love you
I saw this soooo many years ago. I am going to enjoy rewatching this.🙂
MUNICH, from 2005, is a great Spielberg film. Dark, multi-faceted, very mature.
not seeing the driver beyond his arm makes the tuck the monster, no Duel no Jaws...
@07:33 "dehumanizes the truck driver too" Exactly, it could be any driver, any truck, anywhere in the world at any time.
One of Spielbergs best movies.
I love this movie it's very good, Why is Hollywood no longer making good movies like this one?
DUEL is older than Jaws, but it STILL terrifies people! This is a very unconventional thriller, because it takes place in mostly broad daylight, we never see the "killer"/driver, and there's just this sense of tension and paranoia the whole time, it's SO EFFECTIVE!
Duel put Spielberg on the map in a big way for such a small film with a simple premise: motorist gets stalked by truck driver.
"Land of Enchantment" is still the slogan on New Mexico's license plates.
Spielberg's short film "Amblin'" is on UA-cam and he named Amblin Entertainment after it. Also watch "The Sugarland Express" and you have seen the pre-"Jaws" films. IMDB also lists the movies he made with his Super 8 camera as a kid, which you likely saw in whatever Spielberg documentary you watched. J.J. Abrams sort of gave a nod to that with the movie "Super 8."
Finally someone reacts to DUEL! 🙌 Great movie and great reaction!
And yes, I also think the fact the driver was never really shown makes it even more scary. It's like some monster, unknown, pure evil - in shape of a big truck. Also the way it looks, dirty, rusty, all of that.. and yes, the camera work also adds a lot. My family and I used to watch this movie every now and then when it was shwon on TV back then. We also had it recorded on VHS. Good ol' times. :D
I remember seeing this on TV. Dennis Weaver had been playing Chester, the comic relief on Gunsmoke.
31:15 Not showing the driver makes the truck itself the villain and gives it a personality of its' own.
That was really Dennis Weaver in the phone booth as the truck came at him. It wasn't a stuntman. If something went wrong, Dennis would have died. If you rewatch Jaws, at the end as the shark drops down as it dies, you can hear the sound of the truck "dying" mixed into the sound.
Also, the truck is still at the bottom of that canyon to this day. :)
No....the truck and trailer and car were all hauled out with a crane and sent to the junkyard after filming
people just love to think the wreckage is still there - it’s long gone without a trace
I wish more people new about this classic
The studio wanted the truck to explode but he decided against it. He wanted the truck to die slowly.
Whether intentional or not, the fact that the truck *didn't* explode makes the whole situation even more sinister -- was he just driving around in an empty tanker just looking to bump someone off?
@@andygriffith5160..yes...he was a serial killer that was murdering innocent drivers all across the country.
So happy you reacted to this movie. There is so much to love in Spielberg's debut effort as a movie director. I watched the original TV premiere of the movie and thoroughly enjoyed it.
The screenplay was written by Richard Matheson, perhaps the greatest writer of sci-fi and horror short stories of the 20th century, and also one of Stephen King's favorite authors.
I love the fact that the truck never blows up. That hoary movie trope has been done to death, and Spielberg was wise not to give in to such an obvious denouement.
A couple of fun facts about Duel: The pest control truck that initially looked like a police car was labeled Grebleips Pest Control, Grebleips being Spielberg spelled backwards.
Spielberg had multiple cameras set up the capture the truck going over the cliff, but one cameraman dutifully followed the truck all the way down, and no other camera angles were necessary.
When the truck falls down the cliff, Spielberg wanted a dinosaur roar to accompany the truck driver's defeat. That very same dinosaur roar was used again in Jaws when the shark's fin reappears in the cloud of blood at the end of that film.
Spielberg was only given 10 days to shoot his movie and was told he should use process shots (filming in front of a film clip of the passing landscape to indicate the action on the highway) as opposed to filming on location. But Spielberg was stubborn and filmed on the highway. He went two or three days over budget but got excellent footage, as you saw for yourself.
I really love it when reactors like you dive into not just a director's most famous works but also their beginnings to see how far their talents have led them.
On that same topic, might you be interested in watching John Carpenter's first movie that was filmed when he was a film student? Called "Dark Star," it's a sci-fi comedy he co wrote with Dan O'Bannon, who wrote the screenplay to Alien.
Looking forward to more reactions from you. Keep up the good work.
Dark Star is such a campy spoofy space parody/satire. It makes Red Dwarf look like Masterpiece Theatre.
always enjoyed this movie no matter how many times I watch it, the camera work, the editing, building the suspense
33:49 Mann was totally drained by the end. He was just soaking in the serenity.
I saw this movie in the cinema back when it came out. I was impressed, especially for a new director, and thought to remember Spielberg's name for any other movies that he might make in the future.
I read in another comment that this movie was not released in the cinemas in the USA, only on TV. I saw it in the Netherlands, Europe.
It was a made for TV movie that was part of ABC's "MOVIE of the WEEK" series in 1971. I know because we watched it the night it was on. I was 24 years old and newly married at the time. It wasn't a theatrical release, unless it was shown years later in some theaters. It was on TV reruns for quite awhile after the initial "MOVIE of THE WEEK,
@@patticrichton1135 extra scenes were added for a theatrical release in Europe
I like the little detail showing all the license plates he's collected from other people he's done this to.
Most trucks that travels from state to state would need to have multiple licence plates, at least back then.
Yeah IIRC even Steven Spielberg got that point wrong when he was talking about them being trophies when really it was cos trucks that operated across multiple states had to display valid license plates for each state. I think they just use stickers now.
@@stuartwesthall well considering Steven Spielberg is the Director I’m gonna go by what he says about the truck.
Wow I remember back as a young lady watching thus on the Sunday night movie on channel 7 ABC
Hey, Thor, since you asked, yes, I saw it in the theater in France in 1973, when it first came out, and I was tremendously impressed. "Duel" was the first film I saw solo with the woman who would become my wife. We'd gone to two previous films as part of a group of friends, but this was what we chose for our very first actual date. Make of that what you will! (Fortunately, it acquired no metaphoric weight.) The big screen suited it, and we were gripped and horrified.
I remember the first time watching this movie back when I was still in grade school maybe 2nd or 3rd grade somewhere between 1979 to 1981. I had gotten home from school since school let out at 3PM in the afternoon and it was on television I think maybe the 4 o'clock movie. I was between 8 to 10 years of age and remember being pretty scared by it.
It's based on a story (published in _Playboy_ magazine, which featured a lot of quality fiction at the time) by Richard Matheson, who also wrote the screenplay. Matheson wrote some of the best episodes of _The Twilight Zone_ and _Star Trek_ , among other things. This theatrical release is a longer edit than the one originally made as a network TV movie.
I have some contrarian opinions about a few of Spielberg's popular films, but for overlooked Spielberg I have to plug _Empire of the Sun_ , a WWII drama based on JG Ballard's semi-autobiographical novel about his childhood in Shanghai, abruptly interrupted by the Japanese invasion of China. Starring Christian Bale in his first big role at the age of 12, and some great British and American supporting actors--Nigel Havers and Miranda Richardson as fellow internees, and Joe Pantoliano and John Malkovich as captured American smugglers.
Duel is one of the few things I actually *ahem* read in Playboy (that and a few Shel Silverstein things). It was creepy on paper. Spielberg, before I knew who Spielberg was, made it just as creepy on film. But I buy into your contrarian opinions about Spielberg. He's either hit or miss for me, rather like James Cameron. Empire of the Sun I'll agree is a bit more toward the hit end of the spectrum.
Spielberg paid homage to this film in several of his other films. The gas station with the snakes was used in "1941" and the sound of the truck going off the cliff was used when the shark dies in "Jaws".
Duel was made for TV aka "movíe of the week" sort of thing. The other one that came out on TV as a 2 or 3 parter was "Salem's Lot". Not Spielberg but it is a Stephen King several part "special event".
Oh "back in the day" the only option was the car radio. Not even a walkman. You could try reading in the back seat if you were a kid but would be told it was "bad for your eyes".
Land of Enchantment on a license plate is for New Mexico. Being alone on a highway out west was pretty common back then. I had car trouble in Utah and had to wait till Monday to go to "the foreign car place" for my Toyota 🙂
The Stephen King one is "Christine".
I would have turned around after that first confrontation. Bought a six pack of beer and checked into a cheap hotel. :-)
Omg yes please watch Stephen Kings “killer car movie”. It’s call Christine. It’s a John Carpenter movie too! The score is amazing
I love this movie and it's awesome to see someone react to it. You know, I've always wondered if the older couple David Mann asks for help before the truck begins to back up toward them are connected to the scene in Back to the Future when Marty asks that older couple in their car for help while wearing his hazmat suit and the lady tells her husband "Don't stop, Wilbur! Drive!" I've always wondered if that BttF scene is referencing Duel.
I was this when it was first broadcast and was riveted.
This has been one of my and my Dad's favorite movie since the early 70's. We'd always watch it when it came on TV. It gave me a childhood fear of gasoline tanker trucks, and where I grew up, busy route 1 bisected our little town. Hence, many gasoline tanker trucks to cause me great angst. LOL
Stephen king, "Christine". The car movie, you won't regret it.
Great choice! No one is doing this movie, but they should be!!
Enjoyed your review. So I'm gonna give you something to look at :
Type in : Duel (1971) - A Conversation with Steven Spielberg
In this documentary Spielberg reveals all about how an unknown TV director pulled this masterpiece off ! And also he reveals how much of an ordinary little TV movie it would gave turned out to be in the hands of an 'ordinary TV director' ~ who wouldn't dare to challenge the producers like Spielberg did ~
It's very interesting ! Believe me.
Dennis Weaver was such a great actor back in the day. This is one of my favorite films. The fact that you never see the driver is a plus.
Under rated: "Empire of the Sun".
It's pretty damned good, especially for a tv movie. Another one, much in the same vein as this one is "Road Games" (1981) starring Stacy Keach and Jamie Lee Curtis.
Stacy Keach was also in another great tv truck movie called Revenge On the Highway aka Silent Thunder.
Rarely did a made for television movie of the week get a theatrical release (in Europe and Asia) and get cult classic following for those of us seeing back in the 1970's, either as a re-airing or as a mid-day Saturday afternoon airing on an "Action Theatre" broadcast. This movie allowed Spielberg to cut hit teeth and sharpen them for Jaws a year later. In fact, their is a parallel kinship between the two movies. The demise of the truck and the shark share similar style. And a certain music sound cue used.
Now that you have seen this you have to watch Maximum Overdrive
Thank you for reacting to this movie it's one of my all time favs and nobody reacts to!! 👊 Rumour has it that all the license plates on the front of the truck are from previous people that the truck driver has killed. Also the studio wanted the truck to blow up at the end but Spielberg said find another director to do that, it's not as effective as giving the truck a slow and painful death.
There is a movie called “Christine”about a killer Plymouth fury I believe 😋 classic movie also!
I have always liked ths film and that you never see the driver. Although this is the first time I have realised that the truck has a few different numberplates on the front that are probably trophies from previous kills and shows this is not the first time he has done this.
Multiple license plates on trucks was/is a thing. Basically it's a separate registration to haul freight in different states. I don't know enough about it to say if this is the case with that vehicle, but it is pretty cool to go with the trophy theory.
@@StCerberusEngel I’ve read about the trophy theory. Like notches on a shotgun.
@@rickardroach9075 It does make sense. But I know a lot of freight trucks had multiple plates for different states. Not sure what the intention there was, but it's a nice detail.
Duel movie in November 13,1971. When the David mann was going up the new road hill.
Duel is underrated, he remade it 4 years later, maybe you've heard of it, it's called Jaws
The old couple in the car are the same ones from back to the future. Plus, the end scene was done in one take and the camera shot following the truck was done perfectly. and the part where the tank is twisting around in the dust is just how the movie jaws ends as what's left of the shark as it twists in a cloud of blood. Also, the multiple plates on the trucks reenforced front bumper kind of hints at a long reign of terror. It is a classic of putting you in the Pov. Yes, there is also the movie the car 1977 and Christine.
About the license plates - I keep reading people speculating about whether they're the plates of past victims, when in fact trucks that travelled across multiple states had to be licensed in each of those states and therefore had to display multiple plates. As far as I know those interstate licensing rules still apply today but trucks just display stickers instead.
I was only 11 or 12 when this movie was on tv. I am 61 now so Spielberg must have been just a college kid when he made this.
One of the most interesting and amazing things about Duel is the lack of dialogue througout the piece. I feel it just highlights more the talent of Spielberg's directing even at such a young age. And of course Dennis Weaver's talent of acting since in Duel he had to carry 90 something percent of the movie.
I’m glad to see someone react to this movie. As you can tell from the comments, you’ve made a lot of people happy.
Duel is Steven Spielberg's first major movie he did for Abc movie of the week! Firestone was Steven Spielberg's first movie he did as a kid at 17 with a 35mm camera! No famous actors cost Steven Spielberg 500 bucks to make pretty much a home movie
23:19 it remembers me the back to the future scene when marty travels in 1955 and meet that old couple. "Don't stop, Wilbert, drive!"
I get the feeling this movie is why Jim Cameron used big rigs in both of his Terminator films
A gem.
Did anyone notice that when the truck plunges to its demise, the driver's side door is open?
Like, did the driver jump off of the truck before the cliff?
When I saw this movie as a kid I noticed that and was expecting the truck driver to come up behind the car driver and push him off the cliff.
Okay, you have keen eyes. I didn't notice it when I saw it on the television when I was like, I dunno, 12-13 yrs old.
Absolutely loved it.
I agree with you, now I feel like he would be alive, but the movie makers made us guessing what would happen next...
Yeah, apparently the truck's door is open because the stunt driver literally did jump out before the truck went off the cliff.
I forgot how literally brilliant this movie is. Just watching your video cuts…I was SO into it!!
(The movie used a tag axle 1955 Peterbilt 281, making it looking like a Peterbilt 351, with two rear axles. The truck had a CAT 1674 turbocharged engine with a 13-speed transmission, making it capable of hauling loads over 30 tons and top speeds reaching 75-80 mph.)
The Peterbilt 281 used in the film had a 1673 Cat Engine
When the truck went over the cliff in slow motion the slow sound of the crash sounded like a monster dieing
also the name of the PEST CONTROL was SPIRLBERG spelled backwards
What's unfortunate is how increasingly difficult it is to get the original audio from online. When the truck went off cliff it had a creepier roar sound effect to it.
g o o g l e: internet archive duel 1971 abc television version (original)
"Charlie, Mack, Jack, Joe, Jim" it's basically old time speak for "bro". 😂
I've had far more duels in my day than I care to admit.
Christine is the name of the Stephen King movie about the car -- Its pretty good too --- Did you notice all the different car license plates? -- I know back in the day (and maybe even still) Semi drivers had different plates for different states but on this truck it looked like kill trophy's -- also because the truck didnt explode it means the driver is still out there awaiting the next guy with a new truck --- Another Spielberg masterpiece is The Color Purple -- Its wonderful
You see the driver's blood dripping in the truck. Definitely dead since the idea is that he's one w/ that vehicle.
Maximum overdrive is a must, Christine,also
I genuinely love that throughout the movie we are expecting the "Flammable" truck to explode, and then at the end...it doesn't. Normally that would be anticlimactic, but here it's a refreshing subversion of the cliche.
Good point. Having "Flammable" on it makes the truck more intimidating. I imagine that that's all that mattered to Spielberg.
Not sure if it was mentioned before but there's the theory that the many different license plates on his front bumper indicate that the truck driver is a serial killer and the license plates are the trophies from his previous victims he ran off the road.
So it seems that it wasn't road rage but a serial killer hunting down his newest victim.
Love that you made a connection with Jeepers Creepers lol. I watched this in the 70s and of course the connection wasn't possible. But yes the truck in Jeepers Creepers reminded me of Duel. I wonder if it was influenced by Duel.
This is a filmmaking masterpiece that used a very simple premise, and made me remember it over 40 years later. Dennis Weaver is awsome in this movie. I don't need to say how awsome Spielberg is as everyone knows already.
This was an ABC move of the week. The next day in high school this movie is all anyone wanted to talk about. Many directors in the 1970s cut their teeth on television’s movies of the week.
The sound Effects are amazing and sinister i had the same reaction you have when i first saw the movie in 1978 i was 12 years old my father let us stay up to watch it i thought the movie was so funny😅😂😮 especially the close up scenes of Dennis Weaver in the car when it starts to loose gas and the engine starts to smoke and the car slows down and dennis try to force the car to speed up like he is pleading with the car to speed up and the look on his face is priceless 😀 those face shots is hilarious 😂 one of the best scenes in the movie and of course the ending still waiting for duel 2 steven i know you cant mess with perfection. I this this move was somewhat a true store that Matteson saw as an short story in a magazine he decided to make a movie based on that article.
"Is that him? Is that him? Are we finally going to see him?" You focused on the truck driver more than any reviewer or critic I've ever heard/read. Ironic, because most people saw DUEL as a monster movie, especially near the end. The truck driver's existence was nearly superfluous. One of the main reasons Spielberg decided to take on JAWS was that the reminded him of DUEL, with an evil truck instead of a shark.
This was a staple of 1970s TV, the "made-for-TV movie." Basically someone realized that if you added a few more minutes to an hour-long TV episode -- you had a movie, for a fraction of the budget. It is a genre in itself, and whole books have been written about TV movies. Some of my favorites are THE NIGHT STALKER, THE NIGHT STRANGLER, GARGOYLES, ISN'T IT SHOCKING, DON'T BE AFRAID OF THE DARK, TRILOGY OF TERROR and others -- many scripted by Richard Matheson. The "theatrical" version of DUEL released in Europe was 90 minutes or so long, compared to 73 minutes for the TV slot. The interaction of Mann with his wife was one of the added scenes.
In the original novelette by Richard Matheson, it is hinted that the local people of the small town and restaurant know perfectly well about the killer truck driver --- and protect him in a conspiracy of silence. Why, we don't find out.
All sorts of material has been written on this movie; you'd think it WAS the biggest movie hit of all time instead of an over-long TV episode filling a Tuesday night slot. That it was "Machismo vs. 'Mechanismo'," that Mann is a wimpy product of modern civilization who starts "Manning up" at last (Dennis Weaver himself complained that the role made him look like a milquetoast); that it shows how an intelligent [i.e., civilized] person can outwit and defeat the most powerful foe; and the opposite, that David Mann practically devolves back to the jungle, capering above the wrecked truck like a caveman who's killed a woolly mammoth . . .
In some versions of the film, the truck crashes in relative silence (except crashes and clangs). Others dub in the same "dinosaur roar" heard at the end of JAWS (when the remains of the blown up shark glide down into the depths). Again, the truck itself is the antagonist, killed at last by the hero; going out, not with a bang, but with a whimper.
It's not Spielberg, but another taut thriller set on the road in the desert is 1997's Breakdown, with Kurt Russell. It's a good, somewhat forgotten movie that no one has reacted to, if you want to be the first.
you should watch his columbo episodes.. He uses many of his future camera techniques in them.
You know, I was one of the many expecting the truck to explode as it went over the cliff, but I think the way they did it with the slow and painful decent was far better. You see Spielberg belived it was better to show the truck painfully dieing in this way so we could have a sense of payback, given that the truck had spent the whole movie attacking David Mann. The network executives however were not satisfied with the truck's decent so they did request Speilberg to re do it with the truck exploding, but Speilberg fought them back and the ending was kept as it was. Good thing too!
Also I heard in the movie's documentary that the movie was inspired by an event in reality when the original author and his friend were chased and tailgated by a huge truck on their way home from a golfing club. There were also instances where other people experienced similar events on the road, for instance there have been times where truck drives waved cars past when other vehicles were coming from the opposite directions. There was apparently an incident where a bycicle almost waved me past him on a corner when an oncoming car was coming.
Before this originally made for tv movie Duel and I think his first theatrical release movie was The Sugarland Express Steven Spielberg directed television shows like Columbo and Night Gallery. Night Gallery was created by Rod Serling which ran on television mostly in the very early 70s between the pilot episode that aired in Nov. 1969 through the series beginning in Dec. 1970 through May 1973. As a matter of fact he was probably directing Columbo and Night Gallery when he directed Duel. I think however the movie that really put him on the map was peobably Jaws since that's the movie he is probably mostly known for.
Saw this in our 9th grade English class back in the 80s as well as Cool Hand Luke. We were discussing Symbolism in film. Whenever I drove to the river or Vegas I would always think about this movie. By us not seeing the driver, it was way more terrifying.
At first I thought this was the movie Trucks. It was a good horror movie. But this gave off such great suspension and dread of what could happen.
Seen this classic a few times and know the ending, STILL sat here with sweaty palms watching, that's how good Spielberg is
The driver of the truck is Cary Loftin a renowned stuntman
I saw this when it first aired on TV. Spielberg was a young man who was directing the odd TV episode here and there. They gave him a chance, with a small budget and a tight schedule. He used multiple cameras to cover every shot. Much of the chase was done on one section of road up and back with 3 (I think) cameras. That's 6 camera angles to work with. Most of the tension comes from the editing of those shots into short clips with quick cuts. My favorite shot in the whole movie is when he comes around the bend and stops in the middle of the road, and then the camera pulls back to reveal the truck's undercarriage.
What a movie debut!! Introducing Steven Spielberg. He never lets up, keeps the tension ratcheted up. We never get to see the villain. The tanker doesn't blow up because it was empty. The villain just plays with Dennis Weaver's head to no end. You had mentioned another Spielberg movie or movie about demonic car. There is Stephen King's Christine but there's also a James Brolin movie called The Car from 1979 I think. You should check that one out. Nice reaction.
I'll have to bookmark and finish this later. I checked this out of curiosity but dang I am so impressed at how much story you can tell with a few basic elements. I think someone already mentioned Jaws and that's exactly what I was thinking of as well. It's amazing how much tension and suspense you can build when you can't see something clearly or information is withheld from the character/ audience. Most of the tension is built up from David's paranoia, his perception that he is in danger. We're following him but it's POV, so for me, there is that undercurrent of doubt of whether his perception of the situation is real or whether his fear has taken over...but that's all part of the fun. At the core, it feels like a character driven film (so far) and I'm pleasantly surprised by that. I look forward to finishing the highlights :) EDIT: Seeing you get as paranoid as David is turning this film into a comedy for me haha "Grab a rattlesnake...throw it in the window or something"...desperate times, right? 😂...and I'm so curious to see if the message of the film is something along the lines of, we are the creators of our fear/ anxiety. Maybe it's all real but the truck feels so metaphorical...like it continues to haunt David because he keeps looking out for it or expecting the worst...I dunno.
One of the greatest movies Ever!
Suspense building at it's best. Do you listen to talkback radio? - GenX here.. I started listening to talk balk only when trying to understand the economics system to get an idea of how interest rates would swing before buying a house (I lived through 18% in the 80's). As a sales rep on the road who had my own 'duels', I listened to talback/news for detailed discussion of major events, or before going into appointments where my brain needed to be more switched into logical mode, music the rest of the time and before good/easy customers. Driving a compact red car in a road rage incident being harassed, I tried to lose him in a shopping center carpark, found a gaggle of half a dozen compact red cars all parked together with a spot right in the middle, so parked in the middle of them and waited for the person to go after they couldn't figure out which car it was. Close one! FYI my sales territory included the region Mad Max was shot in.. good thing the road rager was slightly lower key lol Side note, Spielberg would reuse the faceless threat with 'Keys' in ET, but then does the face reveal when he needs to rapidly de-escalate the threat. A master of the craft
Not as well known as it should be. Great movie.
This was an original made for TV movie that was never meant to go to the theater despite later they did release it in the theaters. It was made on a shoe string budget that was shot within approx. 1 month. The sound the truck made while falling down the cliff was reused by Spielberg for his Jaws movie when it was finally killed by the compressed tank explosion and sank into the depths but Spielberg altered that sound for the Jaws movie. This movie was so good it keeps you on the edge of your seat through it's entire length.
It was debut film by Steven Spielberg
I loved your reaction my mom and me love this film Dennis Weaver is so funny his emotions in this movie really crack us up this is a Awesome movie the sound of the truck going over the edge of the cliff is the same sound Spielberg used in Jaws when they blow up Jaws at the end. Carey Loftin was the truck driver Hollywoods big stuntman