This is the 2nd video in our 1970's Best Car Chase Film series. See the 1st one here: ua-cam.com/video/Rl5n2cpmaYg/v-deo.html Was you favorite in our compilation? Let us know your thoughts and which ones you would include in this video!
The video comments on the '68 Mercury crashing into another car and emerging with the front end still intact. Yeah. That's not as unbelievable as you might think! I hit a deer at 60mph in my 1970 Sedan de Ville! The deer took out the headlight (just 1 of 4) and smashed the grill a bit. But other than that... The chrome bumper and the hood didn't even have a dent!
The introduction detailing the talented stuntwork and filming techniques is an excellent observation that underscores the timelessness of these scenes, and how there is no comparison to overused and underwhelming CGI.
Back then the only people who cared about cars like that were gearheads, after the OPEC oil embargo of the early 70's that caused gas prices to skyrocket society as a whole simply didn't want cars like that and they were a dime a dozen, even as late as the early 80's when I was in high school you could buy your average late 60's to early 70's muscle cars for $500 to $1,500 depending on engine options and condition, something in good shape with some rarer big block might have gone for $3,000 to $3,500 depending, your average high school kid with a part time job could afford to buy a muscle car that nowadays would go for tens of thousands of dollars in the same condition, it might not have been mint condition but you could afford one and fix things up on it as you went along in life winding up with a pretty nice car by the time you graduated, the parking lot at my high school back then almost looked like a car show these days. And this will depress you even more, in 1972 I remember going to the county fair with my family and a bunch of cars in the demolition derby were 55 to 57 Chevy's, at that point a car like that was just a 15 or 16 year old used car that no one cared about, even better, in 1973 and 74 there was a yellow Superbird for sale at a used car lot I could see from my bedroom window, through both winter's when the leaves were off the trees I could see it sitting there covered with snow, no one wanted to buy a car like that back then, it just sat for two years on that lot outside in the weather, people looked at something like that as a gas guzzling freak with that wing on the back of it. Of course all this was before rich people became interested in collecting cars like that and drove the price of them to the ridiculous levels that they're at nowadays.
If you like cars and fast driving, arguably nothing captures the essence of such better than The Gumball Rally. It's a genuine wind in your hair, WOT, spirit of driving experience, that actually uses the real actors some of the time driving fast. The scenes with the Cobra and "Daytona" particularly get your heart going, but the Camaro racing through the winding road is also pretty awesome.
Gumball Rally had two cute ladies in a black Porsche and the adorable elderly couple in the silver Mercedes convertible! Maybe two of the funniest scenes of this movie!
The gumball rally was the first film my dad took me to the cinema to see when I was a young boy and I loved it and it was my first introduction to the AC COBRA and I was hooked on them and they are still my favourite car. I'm 52 now and I have a DVD of the movie which took me two years to find and it's a treasured possession.
Oh yes !...When I saw the first glimpse of the Pursuit Special at the drive in, I wanted that car so bad..years later as a non fabricator is a modified Grand Marquis that most people believe it to look like a DeLorean..ha ha
I remember going to the drive in to see many car chase movies in the 1970's when I was a kid. Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry was another great one; White Line Fever; Gone in 60 Seconds, which you mentioned.
A little Mad Max tidbit - the Mazda Bongo van (pre-crash) was owned by the director, George Miller. The one that was crashed was an engineless hulk from a wrecking yard, painted to match Miller's van.
I loved it when Raul Julia snatched the rear view mirror off the Ferrari and states"The first rule of Italian driving is whats behind is not important." Popular Mechanic Magazine did a review of the movie and the cars and stated that the sounds of the engines were created by putting the movie cars on dynos and recording the engines at speed.
Hi there. Great video here. But I still don't know why in this kind of videos allways forget the 40 minutes of one of the most great car chase films of the 70's, I'm talking about GONE IN 60 SECONDS, with the fabulous yellow Ford Mustang 1973. The original Eleanor. My favourte. Anyway. Greetings form México City.
Amazingly beautiful 😻 you even put Mad Max number 1 thank you from south Australia 🇦🇺, the mad max car was near my house at Heatfield at Evans car wreck for few years under a car cover seating in the front lawn luckily Evans never had the courage to wreck it , eventually got taken to Birdwood museum then to car shows around Australia then sold to Germany museum then last I heard the car got bought by an American 🇺🇸. All the best
Out of *thousands* of nice UA-cam channels that I know, this is one of the most intelligent ones. ♥ And I feel so lucky that you apply your view&style to topics such as 1980s fads. Looking forward to binge-watching your other videos and seeing your fanbase grow in the future!
Thank you so much for the great comment! Glad to know you enjoy watching our channel and content. We love creating interesting videos that keep our fans coming back for more !!
I love watching the older movies just to see all of the bloopers lol...When I's a kid and a teen I'd see em alot cause I knew the difference between Ford Chevy and Dodge, cause they'd crash em and the next scene they didn't have a scratch on em lol...I've also watched a Ford roll over and a Chevy would flop on its wheels and keep going. Ya gotta love the 60s and 70s movies cause they didn't have the technology that they have in 2days movies and depending how much you'd be interested in the movie, not being a car guy you'd never notice the changes they made lol
Good stuff. Makes me nostalgic for the days of childhood and my Knight Rider Big Wheel. That being said, they sure did waste a lot of great cars that would be nice to have today.
Love both videos! I hope you'll have a part three in the works as I do have a suggestion. Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo. Maybe not exactly a chase movie, but many classic cars appear in that film.
Wow, I saw almost all of these movies first run, I was 18 in 1971. Really liked Eat My Dust. In some of the scenes the camera was mounted low in the grill and I actually felt the car moving in my stomach. Never experienced anything like it again.
I remember Harrison's Ford's 55 Chev and Milner's Yellow T-Bucket for sale in Canadian Old Car Auto Trader for $20,000 back in the late 70s. Mind you, $20,000 was a heck of a lot of cash back in the late 70s.
Ha, Gumball Rally and Cannonball Run gave me aspirations as a kid to race across the USA too after I grew up. Now I wanna see them again. Also, thanks for showing the movie posters. I miss how movie posters used to be based on the story or concept (very artistically, in some cases) rather than the actors in the movie.
Here's a fun fact you'll enjoy, the ambulance that Burt Reynolds and Dom Delouise drive in The Cannonball Run is the very same ambulance that Hal Needham (who has a cameo as one of the EMT's in it) is the very same one Needham ran in the 1979 Cannonball race.
If I had to pick 3 cars as favorites; 1. 55 chevy 2 lane blacktop 2. 70 GTO Judge 2 lane blacktop 3. 72 Camaro gumball rally Also, I understand there are much better cars in these films like the Ferrari Daytona and Cobra, but these 3 just happen to be my favorite cars.
I bet somebody is regretting using that 427 Cobra in Gumball Rally. I don't think they had kit cars like that back then. They probably junked it after filming.
Very glad Mad Max was, fittingly, rated @ number 1. If EVER a film could be called a cult classic, it is Mad Max. My favorite character in the film was killed off early: The Night Rider LOL.
Great watch..... I went to a screening with Steve Bisley as a special guest.. Me and another bloke wore black leather(MFP style) and he gave us each a bottle of wine !
It is soooo frustrating that some of these films cannot be watched on any streaming platform. One example is Two Lane Blacktop - it's only available on old fashioned 20th century physical dvd / blu-ray disks.
Attention to detail and getting them correct like name in the cars and the years and so forth, shows through in the quality of your production of this episode. I watched part one and two back-to-back quite interesting. By the way I'm part 1 the lady looked like she needed a hairpiece up in front on the 1st I think is mad Max
My dad took me to watch Gumball Rally and the original Gone In 60 Seconds when i was only six years old and they brought on a life long obsession with movies,especially ones with car chases. Now I’m slowly collecting as many as humanly possible. H.B.Halicki in my eyes is the greatest ever maker of movies in that genre..he even paid the ultimate price while making a sequel to his magnum opus Gone In 60 Seconds. I own quite a few as of this moment which included the obvious. From Gumball to Baby Driver and many Inbetween like Smokey And The Bandit,Cannonball Run,Vanishing Point and Bullet.
This is the second time I have seen a super charger on a motor that was non functional. In the opening scenes of the series, "The Monkeys" that Pontiac convertible, that they cut the roof off of, and put that Weiand on top of the carburetor.
In their defense, fake blowers were a thing on the street scene in the 70s. 😁 I think I read somewhere that the original (1st attempt) Monkeemobile had a solid rear suspension, but it proved pretty much undriveable.
The Holden HQ that swings round the truck near the beginning of Madmax was powered by a JATO rocket. You can see it still burning in your clip. Good show.
me and my dad almost bought a sterling gt kit car when i was 14 - 15. if i remember correctly the guy wanted like 1500-2500 for it. this was back in early 2000s and the car had electrical problems among some other issues and was sitting outside with the top off for years. so we didnt buy it. but i think about that car a LOT.
In the original version of "The Getaway" of 1972 is possible to see the cameraman next to the stuntman,but in the digital restoring this is deleted. I've the version in DVD and this particular does not appear.
This is the 2nd video in our 1970's Best Car Chase Film series. See the 1st one here:
ua-cam.com/video/Rl5n2cpmaYg/v-deo.html
Was you favorite in our compilation? Let us know your thoughts and which ones you would include in this video!
Duel.
The video comments on the '68 Mercury crashing into another car and emerging with the front end still intact. Yeah. That's not as unbelievable as you might think!
I hit a deer at 60mph in my 1970 Sedan de Ville! The deer took out the headlight (just 1 of 4) and smashed the grill a bit. But other than that... The chrome bumper and the hood didn't even have a dent!
GREAT VIDEO!! THE 60-70S CARS ARE THE BEST YEARS EVER ,,. THATS WHY I ONLY DRIVE 70S CARS TO THIS DAYS.. YA!! FEAR IS A KEY GREAT,, THE CARS..
The introduction detailing the talented stuntwork and filming techniques is an excellent observation that underscores the timelessness of these scenes, and how there is no comparison to overused and underwhelming CGI.
Very well done video, especially liked the mention of all the cars, naming them and the years correctly.
Car chase movies were so much better without this CGI stuff
Love the video! But seeing those beautiful cars getting destroyed is heartbreaking! 🥺
Back then the only people who cared about cars like that were gearheads, after the OPEC oil embargo of the early 70's that caused gas prices to skyrocket society as a whole simply didn't want cars like that and they were a dime a dozen, even as late as the early 80's when I was in high school you could buy your average late 60's to early 70's muscle cars for $500 to $1,500 depending on engine options and condition, something in good shape with some rarer big block might have gone for $3,000 to $3,500 depending, your average high school kid with a part time job could afford to buy a muscle car that nowadays would go for tens of thousands of dollars in the same condition, it might not have been mint condition but you could afford one and fix things up on it as you went along in life winding up with a pretty nice car by the time you graduated, the parking lot at my high school back then almost looked like a car show these days.
And this will depress you even more, in 1972 I remember going to the county fair with my family and a bunch of cars in the demolition derby were 55 to 57 Chevy's, at that point a car like that was just a 15 or 16 year old used car that no one cared about, even better, in 1973 and 74 there was a yellow Superbird for sale at a used car lot I could see from my bedroom window, through both winter's when the leaves were off the trees I could see it sitting there covered with snow, no one wanted to buy a car like that back then, it just sat for two years on that lot outside in the weather, people looked at something like that as a gas guzzling freak with that wing on the back of it.
Of course all this was before rich people became interested in collecting cars like that and drove the price of them to the ridiculous levels that they're at nowadays.
I am the night rider a fuel injected suicide machine lol😄😄😄
@@dukecraig2402Those were the days.
If you like cars and fast driving, arguably nothing captures the essence of such better than The Gumball Rally. It's a genuine wind in your hair, WOT, spirit of driving experience, that actually uses the real actors some of the time driving fast. The scenes with the Cobra and "Daytona" particularly get your heart going, but the Camaro racing through the winding road is also pretty awesome.
I have Gumball Rally on dvd with Cannonball Run 2
Gumball Rally had two cute ladies in a black Porsche and the adorable elderly couple in the silver Mercedes convertible! Maybe two of the funniest scenes of this movie!
I was between 8 & 15 when these movies came out, great time to be a kid in the 70s & go to the drive-in ✌💖☮
The gumball rally was the first film my dad took me to the cinema to see when I was a young boy and I loved it and it was my first introduction to the AC COBRA and I was hooked on them and they are still my favourite car. I'm 52 now and I have a DVD of the movie which took me two years to find and it's a treasured possession.
Cannonball Run got me into Camaros. Thank you, Gary Busey. "Roll on, yelllllll-ow Ca-maroooooooo!" So, I bought a '72 RS/SS after I saw the movie.
Mad Max will always be one of the top all time greatest movies ever made & happy to see it is #1 as it should be..nice top 10 list too.
Oh yes !...When I saw the first glimpse of the Pursuit Special at the drive in, I wanted that car so bad..years later as a non fabricator is a modified Grand Marquis that most people believe it to look like a DeLorean..ha ha
Real cars smackin’’ into each other with over the top fireballs! Lived it, loved it!
I remember going to the drive in to see many car chase movies in the 1970's when I was a kid. Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry was another great one; White Line Fever; Gone in 60 Seconds, which you mentioned.
“ that Plymouth had a hemi with a torqueflite” - never forgotten that line!
“ I believe we sawed the guy off even though we did loose two hundred!”
"make it 3 yards mfer and we'll have an automobile race"- baddest line in any car movie
A Real Blast from da past,
Thank you 😊
Gumball Rally is one of my favorite movies 🎦 and inspires me to drive across the country
I remember all these movies from the drive-in ,good movie watching and I miss the drive-in.
Gumball rally has always been my favorite cross country race. If you look they didn't fake the speedometer shots!!
A little Mad Max tidbit - the Mazda Bongo van (pre-crash) was owned by the director, George Miller. The one that was crashed was an engineless hulk from a wrecking yard, painted to match Miller's van.
I like how u added the movie mistakes.
1st! Great Video. In Gumball Rally, Raul Julia and Michael Sarrazin look like they could be twins.
I loved it when Raul Julia snatched the rear view mirror off the Ferrari and states"The first rule of Italian driving is whats behind is not important." Popular Mechanic Magazine did a review of the movie and the cars and stated that the sounds of the engines were created by putting the movie cars on dynos and recording the engines at speed.
@@jameswest9261 I still use Franco's line about the rearview mirror...lol
The Gumball Rally was a better Cannonball Run movie than The Cannonball Run.
I haven't seen the movie in a long time but I thought that was Raul Julia after seeing his video.
@@mtrich8113 It is.
Hi there. Great video here. But I still don't know why in this kind of videos allways forget the 40 minutes of one of the most great car chase films of the 70's, I'm talking about GONE IN 60 SECONDS, with the fabulous yellow Ford Mustang 1973. The original Eleanor. My favourte. Anyway. Greetings form México City.
They covered that film in the 1st video of this series. This is the 2nd video of the series.
Amazingly beautiful 😻 you even put Mad Max number 1 thank you from south Australia 🇦🇺, the mad max car was near my house at Heatfield at Evans car wreck for few years under a car cover seating in the front lawn luckily Evans never had the courage to wreck it , eventually got taken to Birdwood museum then to car shows around Australia then sold to Germany museum then last I heard the car got bought by an American 🇺🇸. All the best
Out of *thousands* of nice UA-cam channels that I know, this is one of the most intelligent ones. ♥ And I feel so lucky that you apply your view&style to topics such as 1980s fads. Looking forward to binge-watching your other videos and seeing your fanbase grow in the future!
Thank you so much for the great comment! Glad to know you enjoy watching our channel and content. We love creating interesting videos that keep our fans coming back for more !!
Two Lane Blacktop…..yes!!
Gumball rally was my favorite movie as a kid. I still fantasize about cross country race.
Never seen such, almost HD quality videos from the 70s!!!
I love watching the older movies just to see all of the bloopers lol...When I's a kid and a teen I'd see em alot cause I knew the difference between Ford Chevy and Dodge, cause they'd crash em and the next scene they didn't have a scratch on em lol...I've also watched a Ford roll over and a Chevy would flop on its wheels and keep going. Ya gotta love the 60s and 70s movies cause they didn't have the technology that they have in 2days movies and depending how much you'd be interested in the movie, not being a car guy you'd never notice the changes they made lol
I grew up with movies!!! They're awesome and no computer faking!!
Good stuff. Makes me nostalgic for the days of childhood and my Knight Rider Big Wheel.
That being said, they sure did waste a lot of great cars that would be nice to have today.
YES! - - - Glad you included "Gumball Rally" here!
(Saw that movie at a car show in the early 1980s!! 😃)
Love both videos! I hope you'll have a part three in the works as I do have a suggestion. Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo. Maybe not exactly a chase movie, but many classic cars appear in that film.
Wow, I saw almost all of these movies first run, I was 18 in 1971. Really liked Eat My Dust. In some of the scenes the camera was mounted low in the grill and I actually felt the car moving in my stomach. Never experienced anything like it again.
I remember Harrison's Ford's 55 Chev and Milner's Yellow T-Bucket for sale in Canadian Old Car Auto Trader for $20,000 back in the late 70s. Mind you, $20,000 was a heck of a lot of cash back in the late 70s.
Ha, Gumball Rally and Cannonball Run gave me aspirations as a kid to race across the USA too after I grew up. Now I wanna see them again. Also, thanks for showing the movie posters. I miss how movie posters used to be based on the story or concept (very artistically, in some cases) rather than the actors in the movie.
Here's a fun fact you'll enjoy, the ambulance that Burt Reynolds and Dom Delouise drive in The Cannonball Run is the very same ambulance that Hal Needham (who has a cameo as one of the EMT's in it) is the very same one Needham ran in the 1979 Cannonball race.
Max running Toe Cutter into and under the 18 wheeler was movie gold! They brought that actor back in the latest version, but no Mel? WT.....
Ok, sure, yeah.....many low budget car chase films.
But nothing beats the cars of the 70's !
Found out one thing, I have some movies to watch. This era and before were the best, as the narrarator said, before CGI.
The other '55 from Two Lane Blacktop is now owned by the same person who owns the yellow coupe from American Graff
itti.
LOVE both of them! Thanks!
That Gumball Rally motorcycle stuntman got absolutely throttled and then slammed when he went through the sign. Ouch!
If I had to pick 3 cars as favorites;
1. 55 chevy 2 lane blacktop
2. 70 GTO Judge 2 lane blacktop
3. 72 Camaro gumball rally
Also, I understand there are much better cars in these films like the Ferrari Daytona and Cobra, but these 3 just happen to be my favorite cars.
Same 55 Chevy was used in American Graffiti
@@raygronemann8555 yup..
I bet somebody is regretting using that 427 Cobra in Gumball Rally. I don't think they had kit cars like that back then. They probably junked it after filming.
I'm impressed. You did a good job with this video.
I saw many of those films at the drive-in the way they were intended.
This list should be required watching for all kids in middle school
More, more, MORE, MORE!!!
Two Lane Blacktop is a must see to every chevy enthusiast in the world
Nice video! WAsn't all the typical car movies and you had nice detail about the cars, thanks!
Very cool video and a thumbs up.
Fantastic list.
excellent work and comment. thank you.
Two Lane Blacktop, one of my all time favorites.
Saw it when it came out.. along with the other movies..I own the criterion set of two lane Blacktop... love hearing that ol' rock crusher growl..
Very glad Mad Max was, fittingly, rated @ number 1. If EVER a film could be called a cult classic, it is Mad Max.
My favorite character in the film was killed off early: The Night Rider LOL.
Great watch..... I went to a screening with Steve Bisley as a special guest.. Me and another bloke wore black leather(MFP style) and he gave us each a bottle of wine !
Kick it in the guts Barry, (translation) Start the engine Barry.
Movie Stuntmen have always been my Super Hero's..
Huge car chase fan
It is soooo frustrating that some of these films cannot be watched on any streaming platform. One example is Two Lane Blacktop - it's only available on old fashioned 20th century physical dvd / blu-ray disks.
I was impressed you pointed out the Fiat 850 spider. I have 4...
Eat My Dust gets my vote for best shorts on a leading actress lol
This list was easier on my wallet than the first one! I already owned 7 of these! I only had to buy 3 of them!
Attention to detail and getting them correct like name in the cars and the years and so forth, shows through in the quality of your production of this episode. I watched part one and two back-to-back quite interesting. By the way I'm part 1 the lady looked like she needed a hairpiece up in front on the 1st I think is mad Max
That 55 was the same 55 used in American Graffiti and it was sold through Hot Rod Magazine a few years later
My dad took me to watch Gumball Rally and the original Gone In 60 Seconds when i was only six years old and they brought on a life long obsession with movies,especially ones with car chases. Now I’m slowly collecting as many as humanly possible. H.B.Halicki in my eyes is the greatest ever maker of movies in that genre..he even paid the ultimate price while making a sequel to his magnum opus Gone In 60 Seconds. I own quite a few as of this moment which included the obvious. From Gumball to Baby Driver and many Inbetween like Smokey And The Bandit,Cannonball Run,Vanishing Point and Bullet.
I really enjoy 70’s car chases.
Keep up all good work
When the cars, were the stars.
Barry Newman had already done Vanishing Point the year before
More please!
Loved it:)
Thanks Bunches:)
Excellent
At least, I learn something from the "Gumball Rally" movie, the blonde girl was Linda Vaughn ! I never pay attention to it !
What I learned from the "Gumball Rally" movie was the first rule of Italian racing,"Whats a behind me, is a not important.".
Cool recap / rundown.
Double Nickels looks like a made for TV movie.
This is the second time I have seen a super charger on a motor that was non functional. In the opening scenes of the series, "The Monkeys" that Pontiac convertible, that they cut the roof off of, and put that Weiand on top of the carburetor.
In their defense, fake blowers were a thing on the street scene in the 70s. 😁
I think I read somewhere that the original (1st attempt) Monkeemobile had a solid rear suspension, but it proved pretty much undriveable.
I heard one of the guys in the band almost wrecked it to much horsepower they detuned it to make it more driveable
Stuntman Mike had his work cut out for him
Will there be a part 3 ?
Fun to watch those stunts.
The Holden HQ that swings round the truck near the beginning of Madmax was powered by a JATO rocket. You can see it still burning in your clip. Good show.
I liked Dirty Mary and Crazy Larry along with Vanishing Point.
Honorable mention to C'etait un Rendezvous by Claude Lelouch. It's not strictly a chase film, but it's still very much worth watching.
Awesome!!!
"Freebie and. the Bean" had some awesome chase scenes.
Great movies that leaves you feeling human and natural.
Super 😊
Sad to see the old cars get destroyed though
Ok I plan on doing some 1970's James bond car chases.
Magnifique 👍🙏
My favorite is thunder and lighting
Even back then most car guys knew that cars did not explode upon impact.
Cool cars of the time, cool cars of all time.
MAD MAX Will always be number 1
Great vid 👍👍👍
All great movies for there day 👍🇦🇺
I was only 19 and 1979. but almost walked out of the movie theater laughing after seeing the non-functional supercharger on the interceptor.
David carradine, Gary busey.... Awesome!!😅
Great films when things were real 👍👍🇬🇧
me and my dad almost bought a sterling gt kit car when i was 14 - 15.
if i remember correctly the guy wanted like 1500-2500 for it. this was back in early 2000s and the car had electrical problems among some other issues and was sitting outside with the top off for years.
so we didnt buy it.
but i think about that car a LOT.
2 lane is a cult classic. Sooo good.
Interesting....😊
Loved 2 lane blacktop I want that 55 chevy
In the original version of "The Getaway" of 1972 is possible to see the cameraman next to the stuntman,but in the digital restoring this is deleted. I've the version in DVD and this particular does not appear.