I've never seen a car chase so reminiscent of GTA before, from the civilian cars getting in the way all the time to the car jackings and wacky acting of the pedestrians. Just gold.
The stunt driver who piloted the '70 Thunderbird and the '73 Chrysler was amazing. The Chrysler mus have weighed 4700 pounds - even modified, to drive it that well was almost a miracle. The T-Bird too.
Yea ok I know the 73 Chrysler New Yorker is the star of this video, but the real treat here is seeing the 70-71 Thunderbird!!! That's a real nice personal luxury performance Coupe!! Now I've had these birds in my family, new back in the 60's when my grandmother would buy a new one every two years! That was after her Mercury with the power rear window that I remember as a kid. But the cars I really remember was a beautiful all black 69 4dr, with alligator vinyl landau top! That my dad bought when she bought a new 71 4dr, that was nice but in metallic green, inside and out, but the black one was beautiful! That was the first car I ever drove even though I had no license, my dad let me drive it around his trucking co terminal area! Until he caught me doing donuts!!! But Kate on, in the early nineties I found and bough a 71, 4 Dr, the same colors as the Coupe in this video! It only had 48,000 miles and was totally rust free! Up here in New England that's saying something about these cars! Cause that black beauty I mentioned above? Ended up in the hands of my dads best friend, a Judge in town, that had sons that were friends of mine! I remember going out cruising with in the black beauty as we all called it! That car was fast! No to mention we beat the crap out of it! But it ran great and never broke down, but what did end up happening? Is a rusted chassis! Not so much in the body, but the chassis got so bad, you could not open and close the rear doors!!! So it was parked, till someone with a Mustang he was rebuilding needed a powerful engine and trans. But those two generations Of Thunderbirds were amazing cars!! Much nicer that the Mark they were built on!
I do love how much life seems to be in these massive street scenes. People gawking at fights or bystander's verbally responding to the car accidents gives it a more realistic tone despite the corny 70's aesthetics.
Those cars did exactly what they were designed to do they weren't designed to be stunt cars or sports cars they were designed to be slow luxurious straight line yachts. What they're doing is the equivalent of taking an aircraft carrier and putting it in a boat race
@@sludge8506 nah most of em had disc brakes by the early 1970s. Drum brakes actually stopped well, until they got too hot, thats where discs shine, they dissipate heat much better.
Ah, nothing says 1970's America like slamming through piles of old metal garbage cans in a big ass four-door with a crushed velvet interior, all to a disco beat. If you aren't squealing tires and spinning out, you aren't driving fast enough!
greaseitandsqueezeit that's because a 1980s car would be totaled if it hit a metal garbage can. Cars from the era this movie was made in could knock down a brick wall and just need a few scratches compounded out.
They had a fucking lion in the bar . I'll say it again . They had a fucking lion in the bar. Great car chases , cool dudes , cool dialogue , great fight scenes , hot chicks and a guy with an enormous stick ( big cock analogy ? ). But I still can't forget that fucking lion . Even if it was probably pumped with a gallon of tranquiliser it's still a fucking lion.
i had a baby blue 70 t-bird in 1979. 429 thunderjet ...premuim fuel only 11to1 compression. replaced it with a 69 roadrunner 383 stick. those were the days !...i still have the roadrunner to this day!
I had a black 73' Chrysler newport with a big block 400 before I got my license. I'd pull it out front of the house and do insane burnouts. I pulled out once and this boat hit the tree acrossed the street because it got sideways. Story goes the car ended up getting a small ding in the bumper and killed the tree. Miss that beast!
These were just used cars in the early 1970s. Dealer lots were full of them. Muscle cars too since there was gas rationing, etc. The 1970s sucked after around 1972.
Same director as The Gumball Rally (1976), the one and only Charles Bail, who was also a hell of a stunt co-ordinator as evidenced in Freebie and the Bean (1974). Chuck got into network television directing in the 80's and 90's and directed 7 episodes of "CHiPs", 4 episodes of Knight Rider, and among other things directed 22 episodes of Dragnet in the late 80's and early 90's. Eddy Donno was the stunt co-ordinator in this movie :)
The editing was so bad back then that sometimes the number of people in the car changes in the middle of a chase. Maybe they fell out, ran to catch up and got back in....lol
Back then; those were just old cars, especially in SoCal.................today: most of them would be worth some serious coin. Too; I also miss the music and clothing/hair styles from that era.
Most of these were 4 doors worth little to no value today. That 2door t-bird with some nice magnum 500 rims/white letter fatties heavy duty suspension in the rear for some lift and that 429 thunderjet under the hood with minor engine mods would be a terror.
Now that's what you call a real American made cars right there love that big boy 73 Chrysler good ass cars back then compare to this crap on the road today go Chrysler
@@rexjolles and Stellantis owns Chrysler and all of the Chrysler divisions so they aren’t an independent American automaker anymore. Stellantis is a merge between Fiat, Chrysler’s former parent and Peugeot.
Erm ..Ford did make them for the American market you know?? .. They also had Chevettes , Cavaliers , Hillman Avengers (Crickets i believe they were called ) , Talbot Horizons (Plymouth Horizon) and VW Rabbits (Golfs) ... Car models can be available in other countries you know... the Mk1 Cortina was not just a British only car.
Absolutely. Those cars would ride up on the curb and would absorb all the shock, you would barely know you ran over a curb. Today's cars, even the so called luxury ones, your head will go through the ceiling if you roll over a speed bump.
@@RustOnWheels Actually, the roads were better then. They went to shit in the 90's because the politicians realized they could keep the sheeple paying into their "funds" by endless promises to fix the roads that never got fixed.
@@muziklvr7776 thank Reaganism for that. He single-handedly destroyed gvt, media, wages, the middle class and democracy and let America slowly bleed to death for over forty years. He even got the Dems on board with the Third Way.
@@jeffferoce8757 Remember "Bones" in the Burt Reynolds movie, "Gator"? Bones was so tall he had to drive The Continental Mark IV with his head sticking out of the sunroof.
@@1970sthrowback Inspired in that they used real cars on real streets and kept mistakes in the final cut. But that's where the inspiration ends, in my opinion. Bullitt was not just more well known, but a better overall scene by orders of magnitude and the movies were only a year apart in release (1967 vs 1968).
Back when car chases were real cars and not CGI! You had to give it to the stunt drivers. They could do things with 6k lbs cars no one would think of in a 3k lb car today!
Sure was. Oh man... The parties. 5 kegs and 5 bands for 5 bucks. We used to bring in 500 people on the reg. Then cops became Christian and it all went to hell.
Ferd Burfel yeah I instantly felt bad after seeing that Poor electra being smashed, they were seen just as we see today a mid 2000 LeSabre... Only they had known what those cars were come to be
@@mikeconverse4853 Outgunned? Maybe. More likely to drive 200,000 miles on one oil change? Possibly. Better gas mileage? Definitely. But you need to drive through a construction site and a desert at 100 mph while being chased by stoned Hells Angels ninjas? Give me that Newport and a 15 second head start.
Had a 73' T- bird with a 460. Bought mint in 75'. It was great on the interstate. Kept up or passed anything on the road including corvettes. I have a 2014 Roish stage 3 phase 3 mustang now. I still miss that T-bird even though it was a luxury car. I remember women liked it better than any sports car. One girl gave me her 70 Corvette for the day just so she could drive my Bird. I used it to teach my younger brother how to drive a manual. It sure beat how I learned in my dad's 67' Chevy pick up.
The Chrysler, with it's superior Torsion-Bar suspension would out handle ANY GM car. That's why the Chrysler is taking turns that the GM cars (Buick Chevy, and Caddy ) are running into each other just trying to keep up with.
I love the bug Chryslers. He needed to get out on the Interstate where that car will really move. I had 3 of those and wish I had them all back.1966 New Yorker, 1971 Imperial 2dr.LaBaron, and a 1972 2dr. New Port Royal.
6:30, they smash that poor 1960 Buick and 1964 Impala convertible. Both of those are really cool classics, the 1960 Buick is really wild looking. The 1960 Buick really hurts, hardly any survivors compared to the Impala.
loved the fake sound on the motorcycles.... sounded like triumph motors not 750/4 hondas .... every time i did that with my old polara station wagon i would lose at least one hub cap lol...... it helped after my husband welded a chain around the motor mount i kept busting he got sick of replacing it for me....
Ah well, back then they were just cars. Weren’t classic yet. lol. Although with that frame of mind, I don’t think anyone will be calling a Nissan Versa “classic” in 50 years
There are even antique 1950s streetlights, including the old incandescent type, but today there are only remaining High Pressure Sodium Vapor lamps or LED street lights.
@@stevedickson5853 they actually handled quite well. For this to look more exciting in the movie they would adjust the brakes to lock up easily or use the parking brake to make them slide out in the rear. I’ve driven different models of these big Chryslers from 1977 till just five yrs ago when I sold my ‘69 Chrysler 300, they are great road cars that ride better than todays autos
Flying hubcaps, tail spins, tire squeals, bouncy suspension, severe understeer... Way better than any car chases today
...and nobody yielding to pedestrians
😆
Yeh, and they never even had to break the speed limit ;-)
And it was all accomplished in great comfort 😏
Back then cars were so massive they started braking in one movie and stopped in another.
This movie is 1970s GTA.
M. Sergio Armendáriz R. LMFAOO, wtf
Best comment ever!!! 🤣🤣🤣
You tube comment of the year! LOL!
😂😭😭 hahah yeah when they hop out and hit dude 😂😭😭 and take his car 😂😭
🤣😆🤣😆😁
I've never seen a car chase so reminiscent of GTA before, from the civilian cars getting in the way all the time to the car jackings and wacky acting of the pedestrians. Just gold.
Exactly what I was thinking as I watched the bad guys wreck car after car and keep jacking the next lol
Pretty sure GTA took after this movie lol
u blew my mind
Ooofffff maybe ya think that GTA was based off chase scenes and movies like this??? Just a thought
What's gta?
I just love 70s land yachts all that sliding and it managed to keep all its wheel trims superb!!!!
The stunt driver who piloted the '70 Thunderbird and the '73 Chrysler was amazing. The Chrysler mus have weighed 4700 pounds - even modified, to drive it that well was almost a miracle. The T-Bird too.
Power sunroof on that 73 Chrysler s such a rare option...so many neat cars wrecked...but at that time they were worthless....
Not worthless, but certainly more plentiful!
Christopher Marks You beat me to the sunroof comment. Had know idea that a power sunroof was an option on the New Yorker back then.
Christopher Marks the prius too will be a rare and classic car one day too
Then you haven't watched 60 seconds. Cars wrecked like swatting flies.
Now a BEAT 1999 Honda Civic goes for $3000
I love seeing that huge Chrysler boat drift around
RIP to all those cardboard boxes that gave their structural integrity so we could have 70's car shows
Z X RIP to three innocent drivers.
Hahaha
Excellent 👍
So groovy, baby. Had to pick up my Fender bass and jam with the brothers. Right on.
Yea ok I know the 73 Chrysler New Yorker is the star of this video, but the real treat here is seeing the 70-71 Thunderbird!!! That's a real nice personal luxury performance Coupe!! Now I've had these birds in my family, new back in the 60's when my grandmother would buy a new one every two years! That was after her Mercury with the power rear window that I remember as a kid. But the cars I really remember was a beautiful all black 69 4dr, with alligator vinyl landau top! That my dad bought when she bought a new 71 4dr, that was nice but in metallic green, inside and out, but the black one was beautiful! That was the first car I ever drove even though I had no license, my dad let me drive it around his trucking co terminal area! Until he caught me doing donuts!!! But Kate on, in the early nineties I found and bough a 71, 4 Dr, the same colors as the Coupe in this video! It only had 48,000 miles and was totally rust free! Up here in New England that's saying something about these cars! Cause that black beauty I mentioned above? Ended up in the hands of my dads best friend, a Judge in town, that had sons that were friends of mine! I remember going out cruising with in the black beauty as we all called it! That car was fast! No to mention we beat the crap out of it! But it ran great and never broke down, but what did end up happening? Is a rusted chassis! Not so much in the body, but the chassis got so bad, you could not open and close the rear doors!!! So it was parked, till someone with a Mustang he was rebuilding needed a powerful engine and trans. But those two generations Of Thunderbirds were amazing cars!! Much nicer that the Mark they were built on!
Thank god the Chrysler had a sunroof or I don't know what he would have done with that stick
trunk is big enough
I do love how much life seems to be in these massive street scenes. People gawking at fights or bystander's verbally responding to the car accidents gives it a more realistic tone despite the corny 70's aesthetics.
The cars back then....their unstable suspensions, and their big, powerful engines...
Those cars did exactly what they were designed to do they weren't designed to be stunt cars or sports cars they were designed to be slow luxurious straight line yachts. What they're doing is the equivalent of taking an aircraft carrier and putting it in a boat race
Not to mention drum brakes. 🤪🤪🤪
@@sludge8506 nah most of em had disc brakes by the early 1970s.
Drum brakes actually stopped well, until they got too hot, thats where discs shine, they dissipate heat much better.
@@twoeightythreez Thanks for that information, 283!!!! 👍👍
That is what made them fun. You actually had to know how to drive.
Ah, nothing says 1970's America like slamming through piles of old metal garbage cans in a big ass four-door with a crushed velvet interior, all to a disco beat. If you aren't squealing tires and spinning out, you aren't driving fast enough!
Mista Butterworth did you notice the garbage cans were brand new on the inside. some spray paint on the outside
In the 80"s they switched to slamming into empty cardboard boxes
greaseitandsqueezeit that's because a 1980s car would be totaled if it hit a metal garbage can. Cars from the era this movie was made in could knock down a brick wall and just need a few scratches compounded out.
And smacking knicker-wearing women's asses. You know, if I ever invent a time machine I know what decade I'm going back to first lol
Remember the early 80s show police squad ?
Every time they pulled up to a scene the garbage cans flew everywhere 🤣🤣
I had a white 73 New Yorker brougham coupe with white leather bucket seats, sunroof and 440 engine. Fast and floaty.
ME TOO ,But didn't have a sunroof.
@@marvinderevage6566 sunroofs were rare
They had a fucking lion in the bar .
I'll say it again .
They had a fucking lion in the bar.
Great car chases , cool dudes , cool dialogue , great fight scenes , hot chicks and a guy with an enormous stick ( big cock analogy ? ).
But I still can't forget that fucking lion . Even if it was probably pumped with a gallon of tranquiliser it's still a fucking lion.
I scrolled down the comments to see if anyone would comment on the lion.
i had a baby blue 70 t-bird in 1979. 429 thunderjet ...premuim fuel only 11to1 compression. replaced it with a 69 roadrunner 383 stick. those were the days !...i still have the roadrunner to this day!
The way they car jacked that station wagon was fucking hilarious 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I had a black 73' Chrysler newport with a big block 400 before I got my license. I'd pull it out front of the house and do insane burnouts. I pulled out once and this boat hit the tree acrossed the street because it got sideways. Story goes the car ended up getting a small ding in the bumper and killed the tree. Miss that beast!
So many cars wasted just for a movie. But back then they were considered old trash piles. Worth nothing. Shame, shame, shame.
These were just used cars in the early 1970s. Dealer lots were full of them. Muscle cars too since there was gas rationing, etc. The 1970s sucked after around 1972.
Southern Mechanics back then those cars where what a 1999 honda civic is to us now
Shoe Game99 more like a Chrysler 300
Southern Mechanics but even I say a 300 will be viewed as a classic 30 years from now too
theyre still worth nothing
Damm love that Thunderbird personal luxury and that Chrysler New Yorker Brougham 73
Yachts with headlights
Big Block Chrysler Puttin the Hurt on the Chase Cars!
Same director as The Gumball Rally (1976), the one and only Charles Bail, who was also a hell of a stunt co-ordinator as evidenced in Freebie and the Bean (1974). Chuck got into network television directing in the 80's and 90's and directed 7 episodes of "CHiPs", 4 episodes of Knight Rider, and among other things directed 22 episodes of Dragnet in the late 80's and early 90's.
Eddy Donno was the stunt co-ordinator in this movie :)
That's what I call handlin'😀.
when they punched that guy for his station wagon, I laughed my ass off 🤣
And don't forget the guy that was pulled out of his white Cadillac who ran after them and his car...🤣
Me too
Man they laid that guy flat out in the street.
And the guy who slapped his wife at a place I’m not gone say and then they repeat it 3 times oh god
@@LateNightCable yea it’s a cheaply made movie, quite the fantasy
I wish they still made movies like this!
Why
The editing was so bad back then that sometimes the number of people in the car changes in the middle of a chase. Maybe they fell out, ran to catch up and got back in....lol
rotflmao
Back then; those were just old cars, especially in SoCal.................today: most of them would be worth some serious coin.
Too; I also miss the music and clothing/hair styles from that era.
Most of these were 4 doors worth little to no value today. That 2door t-bird with some nice magnum 500 rims/white letter fatties heavy duty suspension in the rear for some lift and that 429 thunderjet under the hood with minor engine mods would be a terror.
This video clip was worth the 16 minutes of my life.
Now that's what you call a real American made cars right there love that big boy 73 Chrysler good ass cars back then compare to this crap on the road today go Chrysler
Is chrysler still in business, champ?
🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪
@@sludge8506 yes lmao they own jeep and a bunch of other companies
@@rexjolles and Stellantis owns Chrysler and all of the Chrysler divisions so they aren’t an independent American automaker anymore. Stellantis is a merge between Fiat, Chrysler’s former parent and Peugeot.
@@andrewcolsen but it's still a company
That black woman is so beautiful
White woman at 12:36. Hell yeah.
Hey what about her at 8:08
That's carol speed . unfortunately she passed away this year
1:24 is that a ford cortina and if so how did it end up in America?
Erm ..Ford did make them for the American market you know?? .. They also had Chevettes , Cavaliers , Hillman Avengers (Crickets i believe they were called ) , Talbot Horizons (Plymouth Horizon) and VW Rabbits (Golfs) ... Car models can be available in other countries you know... the Mk1 Cortina was not just a British only car.
Holy shit the suspension roll
Yup but you couod drive over curbs and corollas and hardly feel a thing
Absolutely. Those cars would ride up on the curb and would absorb all the shock, you would barely know you ran over a curb.
Today's cars, even the so called luxury ones, your head will go through the ceiling if you roll over a speed bump.
The roads weren’t as good as today. You didn’t need speed but comfort.
@@RustOnWheels Actually, the roads were better then. They went to shit in the 90's because the politicians realized they could keep the sheeple paying into their "funds" by endless promises to fix the roads that never got fixed.
@@muziklvr7776 thank Reaganism for that. He single-handedly destroyed gvt, media, wages, the middle class and democracy and let America slowly bleed to death for over forty years. He even got the Dems on board with the Third Way.
My folks had a 73 New Yorker, it was green with a white vinyl top. Monster boat, it cornered like a dinning room table
I learned to drive in a 1973 Newport Custom, in moss green - just like this one! Awesome car for a 16 year-old.
I took my drivers test in a 1973 Newport Navaho edition, copper color with a special edition interior. Had to parallel park it to pass the test🙂
The convertible is 63 Buick Skylark. by far the best handling car here
I would give this car chase 4 out of 5 stars only because it looked weird with the staff sticking out of the sunroof LOL
I though the staff looked like there was a 3rd person in the car who had a super long neck and abnormally tiny head.
@@jeffferoce8757 Remember "Bones" in the Burt Reynolds movie, "Gator"? Bones was so tall he had to drive The Continental Mark IV with his head sticking out of the sunroof.
@@lincmerc1581 Ha! Too funny.
The way the car chase scene in 1968's Bulllitt was shot SURE did spark a decade of inspired car chases!
The Bullitt chase was inspired by the car chase in 1960s British crime movie Robbery but Bullitt would have been the more well known one obviously
@@1970sthrowback Inspired in that they used real cars on real streets and kept mistakes in the final cut. But that's where the inspiration ends, in my opinion. Bullitt was not just more well known, but a better overall scene by orders of magnitude and the movies were only a year apart in release (1967 vs 1968).
Peter Yates directed "Robbery" and "Bullitt " @@BPoweredLove
73' Newport Coupe...they sure dont make tanks no more...these cars today hit a curb and considered totaled..
Vic Salone it's a Sedan and it's a New Yorker the trim is too high level for a Newport.
Carol Speed was smokin’ hot! Sadly she passed away in January 2022 at 76 rip
Back when car chases were real cars and not CGI! You had to give it to the stunt drivers. They could do things with 6k lbs cars no one would think of in a 3k lb car today!
Fightin' with the pimp cane. LMAO!
.... 'Thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me...'
2:15 - Drift was so good they showed it twice!
So, did the lion get killed in the explosion, too?
Rob N. Snoop lion 🦁
I am pretty sure this movie never got oscars..
A guy named Oscar might have watched it.
I love me some 60s and 70s Chryslers...but they wouldn't be my first choice as a getaway car.
I was an 80s driver I love these old cars :) Joel
The best bad acting I've ever scene
It was hilarious 😂
Cars were cars,men were men,girls were as decoration and everybody was drinking and smoking....Good old times...
Sure was. Oh man... The parties. 5 kegs and 5 bands for 5 bucks. We used to bring in 500 people on the reg. Then cops became Christian and it all went to hell.
Dude, you don't want to mess with Black Samson, I love the how he mixes the cool African clothes with the white socks and work pants
I realy love this chanel just the best
better than any comic book movie.
Noting the tragic destruction of a nice '60 Electra
Ferd Burfel yeah I instantly felt bad after seeing that Poor electra being smashed, they were seen just as we see today a mid 2000 LeSabre... Only they had known what those cars were come to be
The acting in this whole clip is just amazing!!!
Wow, I thought I was the only one enjoying this!
These old car chase scenes are much funnier to watch than modern ones.
Is this supposed to be a "boat/yacht" chase scene?
'barge' racing at its best!!! lol
These cars were representative of the general size 45 years ago. Absolutely nothing unusual.
Fun fact. The 1970-3 "fuselage" style Chrysler group sedans are unibody (monocoque)
The 69 was a fuselage,too.
@@TheItsmegp46 Love those big boats, awesome
I drove all those tuna boats when I had Driver ed in 1973
I can already hear & feel the A727 Torqueflite on WOT 2-1 kickdown...
Nothing beats 70s car chases.
The 1970 Thunderbird would have eaten the doors off of both of these cars.
ThunderJet 429.
Thunderbird, nova, all junk and outgunned by any run of the mill Mitsubishi Mirage or Toyota Corolla today.
scdevon The Thunderbird was total trash to a New Yorker.
@@mikeconverse4853 thats funny
@@mikeconverse4853 Outgunned? Maybe. More likely to drive 200,000 miles on one oil change? Possibly. Better gas mileage? Definitely. But you need to drive through a construction site and a desert at 100 mph while being chased by stoned Hells Angels ninjas? Give me that Newport and a 15 second head start.
Had a 73' T- bird with a 460. Bought mint in 75'. It was great on the interstate. Kept up or passed anything on the road including corvettes. I have a 2014 Roish stage 3 phase 3 mustang now. I still miss that T-bird even though it was a luxury car. I remember women liked it better than any sports car. One girl gave me her 70 Corvette for the day just so she could drive my Bird. I used it to teach my younger brother how to drive a manual. It sure beat how I learned in my dad's 67' Chevy pick up.
Driving with these kind of cars is like drive a bathtub 😂🤣but I like these cars from the 70th and 80th. So big sizes and much chrome.
The Chrysler, with it's superior Torsion-Bar suspension would out handle ANY GM car.
That's why the Chrysler is taking turns that the GM cars (Buick Chevy, and Caddy ) are running into each other just trying to keep up with.
1:19 Mk1 Ford Cortina. 11:44 Mk 2 Jaguar. Look out of place here.
I'm surprised that the three stooges didn't narrate this movie.
This is a good movie but why is Dirty Mary and crazy Larry edit in the scene
DON'T MESS WITH THE BLACK BOB ROSS
@Car Chash Wonderland 2
Finally, something good to watch on UA-cam! Thank you!
No problem!
I drove my 72 fury that way. that tail would slide...!
+Rob Dawg ..
mine was a 400 , fury Gran coupe. I miss it
Kills me to watch these cars getting getting trashed. I would love to even have the '62(?) Chevy wagon .
Chuck Key The buick sport wagon too.
2:16 ty for that double take bro I’m a subscriber !
was that a sunroof or pimp cane stand?
It was the ghetto option to give room for the hair
I love the bug Chryslers. He needed to get out on the Interstate where that car will really move. I had 3 of those and wish I had them all back.1966 New Yorker, 1971 Imperial 2dr.LaBaron, and a 1972 2dr. New Port Royal.
I have the 64 New Yorker wagon, but would love that rare 73 Sunroof
3:00 - GTA style.))
You know you play too much GTA when you think stars are gonna start appearing in the upper corner of the screen xD
Man those Buick Specials and Skylarks are so rare today and even they are actually worth something too
One minute of silence for all those hubcaps that got lost
Got to love all that body roll
Love those Chryslers!
6:30, they smash that poor 1960 Buick and 1964 Impala convertible. Both of those are really cool classics, the 1960 Buick is really wild looking. The 1960 Buick really hurts, hardly any survivors compared to the Impala.
Who saw the 69 Charger ?
loved the fake sound on the motorcycles.... sounded like triumph motors not 750/4 hondas .... every time i did that with my old polara station wagon i would lose at least one hub cap lol...... it helped after my husband welded a chain around the motor mount i kept busting he got sick of replacing it for me....
Luv these cars the ride is awesome
Is that a Soul Pole sticking out of your sunroof or are you just happy to see me?
I had a '73 Newport for a while. 400 four barrel. The tires weren't nearly big enough for hard cornering, but it would seat six with room to spare.
the 12 people that disliked this had their cars stolen
Behold the glorious, glorious body lean!
And modern day East L.A. thugsters are cringing at the sight of an original '64 Chevy drop top being demolished.
Eh it wasn't an SS, still hurts me tho haha
A '64 Impala is a desirable classic to any collector, SS or not.
Every Samson had his Delilah
That triple rep butt slap at 4:16 was awesome!
🤣
They are still studying this screenplay in film school.
"OK you piece of black shit" !Students had to study that line daily
The funny thing is this is how real fights look sloppy and messy
7:18 I can’t believe they crashed those two classic two door impalas, their are classic cars all over this city!
Ah well, back then they were just cars. Weren’t classic yet. lol. Although with that frame of mind, I don’t think anyone will be calling a Nissan Versa “classic” in 50 years
Just late model used cars back then.
When you could squeal your tyres while cornering at 25mph
There are even antique 1950s streetlights, including the old incandescent type, but today there are only remaining High Pressure Sodium Vapor lamps or LED street lights.
"AH WHAT THE FUCK, HERE COMES ANOTHER ONE!"
Shitty day for that dude.
Worth watching for the bikes!
Broken control arm at 2:37 lol.
3:10 - Is that an Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser station wagon?
all I can think of is peter griffin "wow, we've gone 55 miles with the gas light on"
These cars handle better than any of todays suvs or crossovers would
Probably not , any corner at speed results in no tyres and you in a ditch
@@stevedickson5853 they actually handled quite well. For this to look more exciting in the movie they would adjust the brakes to lock up easily or use the parking brake to make them slide out in the rear.
I’ve driven different models of these big Chryslers from 1977 till just five yrs ago when I sold my ‘69 Chrysler 300, they are great road cars that ride better than todays autos