In 1991 I worked for a security company that had a fleet of ex-police Dodge Diplomats as patrol cars. They were as tough as anvils. None of them worked right but they never stopped running.
When I started my 30 year career as a cop, our fleet has Dodge Aspens as patrol cars. They were horrible. They were very fast if you drove straight. But hard braking and turning right or left, the engines would die. Cops knew to put it in neutral and restart the engine. Nice and roomy. Phased those out fir the early 80’s Chevy Malibu, a great car, but came with different engines, a 305 and 350. The 350’s screamed.
Side story to the Aspen! There was a cop, who was very strong. The Aspen died on him while driving in a high speed situation. The power steering shuts off and he had to muscle through the turn. He bent the steering wheel. Typical, the city mechanics tried to straighten out the steering wheel so for the duration that cruiser was in service, the steering wheel was more oval than round.
I love watching the car chase scenes from these movies. You get to see a lot of cars that were common in those days but you don’t see anymore. Very nostalgic.
I remember this movie. It was hilarious. The cop thought he was dying of a terminal disease that was not covered by insurance but if he was killed in the line of duty his family would get a huge settlement. So he was taking a lot of dangerous chances. He had been an extremely cautious cop until then. The actor was not really known for comedy roles but he did a good job in this one.
@@a.person7825 one of his best in this genre is actually "Cloak and dagger. " where he played dual roles as the dad who has no time for his kid and an imaginary spy that advises the kid through a lot of adventures against real spies.
@@sprint429 He's not so much "loosening the belt" as expressing regret that the seatbelt saved his life in the roll-over crash. He wants to die, on his own terms.
@@ChrisMaxfieldActs Don't you hate it when you want to die dramatically in a car chase, but _then safety belts have to get involved and ruin the fun for everyone!_
Nobody who saw the film was expecting him to get out. He was trying to kill himself in the line of duty but didn't realise he was still wearing his belt.
@@Pbadome1 It was the ending of the second Bourne movie. He steals a cab and beats the hell out of it, along with half the cars in Russia. For gratuitous property damage though, I think "Blues Brothers is the winner.
One of the greatest underrated car chases in movie history. The camera work, editing and sound design, not to mention the stunt driving, is absolutely first rate. I would even put this slightly above the chase scene in Friedkin's To Live And Die In LA.
@@TurboPro9952 Dabney Coleman played the voice of Principal Peter Prickly in the animated TV series, _Recess_ (1997-2001), as well as _Recess: School's Out, Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street_ (both 2001), _Recess: Taking the Fifth Grade_ and _Recess: All Growed Down_ (both 2003).
Exactly! Wish they would go back to making stunts and practical effects. Computerized explosions and cars turning over, bullets flying through in slow motion doesn't do anything for me. Movie producers need to go back to the drawing board and make good movies again.
@Dude with Opinion when i was 17 , i ride my BMX all day long.....not the same country, not the same way for play. Now i'm 34 and i ride a 1971 firebird tuned to 330hp , and every time i ride my pontiac i'm back to my 19, when i was stupidly mad.
Another thing that makes this car chase so brilliant and sets it apart from the others is the context behind it. It's not about catching the bad guys or escaping the bad guys. Its about Dabney Coleman's character trying to get himself killed and failing to do so!
This was awesome! Look closely at 1:49 frame by frame, the cop car clearly breaks his Left Front tie rod (steering) but looks like they repaired that and kept filming the scene with the same car at 1:51.
Yep. Same with the tow truck in Terminator 2. When it jumps down from the bridge you can clearly see that it broke its right steering but in the next scene its fixed.
@@magnetmannenbannanen Well good point, but the only the T1000 himself was liquid metal, not the truck he was driving. And like the T-101 said, it cant use/make complex shapes or things.
The camera shots played a massive role in this masterpiece. The bumper shots, the camera shake, the sudden pause here for an example 4:00, the creative camera placements like this one here 3:38, the static shots on some parts. It really adds to the excitement.
Absolutely phenomenal camera work here. You can tell precisely what is going on at all times and with maximum impact. Also, the sound and editing is incredible.
If you watch the whole movie it is not lame, he is driving like that so he can die in the line of duty and his family will be set for life as he thinks he is dying !!!
How about how the cop car loses its windshield and then a few (film) shots later it has a windshield and then a few (film). shots later the windshield is missing again!
This was one of the most hilarious ridiculous things I have ever viewed - especially when his red mangled car was still able to drive after somersaulting. this is one of the best good old belly laughs I have had in a long time. Good for the immune system.
My full admiration goes out to the flashing red light on top of the cop car! Not only did it manage to stay attached right til the end, it also managed to remain functioning right til the end. It's made of sturdy stuff!
"Short Time" is a real gem of a movie with some great stunts and funny lines. It is helped by Dabney Coleman and Matt Frewer playing two cops called "Bert" and "Ernie" and doing a good job of channelling the Sesame Street characters.
I love movie car chases! Car takes a hundred rounds to the radiator without a puff of steam. "Bullet* with Steve Mcqueen has got to be the all-time best
Certainly not, many car chases are better, in Bullit you dont see any cars in streets, except one or two beetles!For example, I watched a french movie called " le casse" (" the burglars") and chase is in real streets traffic....There are many others examples..
No!!! The geezers here seem to think these cars all survived. Just patch up the holes and drive them another 800,000 miles. Nostalgia is one of the greatest enemies of the truth.
Hell yes. All action and no cgi. Never saw this movie, but will now have to check it out. Dabney Coleman was hysterical, and was also a good dramatic actor as well. The car chase in "Ronin" has always been a fave, also obviously Smokey and the Bandit, and the Blues Brothers too, for the choreography, sheer hilarity and utter destruction of many, many cars. John Candy's quip in the Blues Brothers- "We're in a truck!" Classic.
I was a teenager in the 90's and it was easily the best decade of my life! The early Internet, Gamespy, heaps of populated Quake servers, modem and LAN Warcraft II, Star Trek Next Generation, Stargate, X-Files, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Sopranos, Jamie Lynn Sigler, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nirvana, The Smashing Pumpkins, and so much more! Pure heaven!
Was a teenager in the the early 80's and it was easily the best decade of my life! Discovering computers with my first VIC-20, then C64. Trading games on BBS's. Great action movies like Aliens, Die Hard. Back to the Future, the Terminator, Star Trek WOK, Commando, Ghostbusters, The Goonies. Back when TV was entertaining with shows like The A-Team, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Breakfast Club, Knight Rider, the start of Star Trek:TNG, McGyver, Magnum PI, The Greatest American Hero, The Six Million Dollar man. And so many sitcoms. The birth of Music videos. Very cool TV miniseries like "V". When Schwarzenegger, Willis, M. J. Fox, Sigourney Weaver, were household names. Good times. Good memories. (The 90's weren't too bad either. Neither was the 70's)
@@DocMicrowave Awesome reply! Although I was too young in the 80's (born in 1984) I still have immense love and respect for that era, as well as the 70's (mostly from music, TV shows and movies from those decades). Thank you so much for sharing your experience! Peace and love ❤✌❤
Lets see...SEGA in it's prime, console wars, the Mclaren F1 (and supercars in general), best NFS games of all times, the best anime, NBA golden age, best action movies (Arnold, Sly, JCVD, JC, Bruce willis, Seagal, etg), first Matrix, The truman show (Jim Carrey), Football in it's prime (the real Football, not the american), F1, FIA GT, Indycar golden years, and a long etc...
I always get sad when I watch old movies and they total something like an old Crown Vic, Dodge Diplomat, Grand Prix, etc. But the thing is, those cars were new then. It's the same principle as taking a 2021 car (any model), and revving it until the engine explodes. Or taking it off-roading and purposely putting it through abuse. We don't see them as valuable now, but they could be in 50 years, the same way classic cars now were normal then, so they didn't think anything of it. That's what I always think of.
@@jackrich8399 true because there was a time when cheap easy to modify vehicles were readily available for $1000 on Craigslist and the days of 92-00 Civic, Integra, Prelude, E30, Volvo Brick cars are long gone. Eventually everything becomes a classic and sought after on some level.
@@BoostedPastime they only become a classic after people buy and wreck as many as they can. No respect for the car, just something to beat up because you can't be bothered to fix it.
@@internetbodhi1009 agreed I think a lot of what it also is is the fact that it's a limited edition item they were only produced for a certain amount of time and once the car is no longer in production it is essentially a countdown until there is none left which means that they can only become more valuable overtime since there's going to be less of them overtime.
Funny I recognize the final scene, under the parkade. It's in New Westminster British Columbia, Canada. As a little kid I used to go shopping with my parents at the department store that was there Army and Navy. Between Amazon and the pandemic it put the final nail in the coffin for them. The family that started it the children decided it was time to wrap it up and cash out. As a young man my girlfriend used to work in a bar on that street so I'd always be there late at night. Now as a truck driver I drive down that street on a weekly basis it's changed a lot. Last year there was this huge fire that destroyed a pier here on the river beside a nice park. They are now building two of the tallest waterfront towers in Metro Vancouver there it's along the Fraser River. When they go up for sale I think I'll inquire about a unit. It's beside the New West Quay some cool shops and pubs and restaurants down there.
W...why? Those things were at the tail end of the Malaise era. Thing only made 140 HP or something. My 2 liter 4G63 SOHC makes that amount. On a 2xbbl carb.
@@the_kombinator e58 4bbl 360 made 245 hp and a nice big flat torque curve. More torque at 1500 rpm than your shitbox all out. You're engine wouldn't last 30 minutes at maximum rated horsepower. A 318 would last 20k hours in a towmotor.
@@randymagnum143 Um, actually, a very worn out (and heavily modded - 15.8 at St Thomas) 4G32 I had lasted an hour at Mosport well past the redline at times until I spun a bearing due to oil starvation. I still have the engine. I was keeping up with an Integra Type R on the straights and an MR2 kept up with me in the turns. The 360 fitted to an American land yacht would not be able to keep up with my shitbox on track, period. It MIGHT breach the 14s with some mods. Also, 4G33s are in fact used as forklift engines in Asian countries and are extremely durable. So are GA16DEs - both are better than what Hyster put into their forklifts and require very little servicing and don't piss out oil like the Iron Duke.
I still want a DVD for this. The movie is 'Short Time' from 1990. Long story short, a medical mix up makes Dabney Coleman think he's only got a short while to live, but his insurance only pays out if he dies on the job, so to provide for his wife and son after he's gone, he becomes supercop.
I saw this on HBO! I've always felt this was by far the greatest car chase on film to this day. Rolls down an enbankment, unclicks seat belt and continues. This is for you Dougie.
SHORT TIME: I watched this film a few days ago with low expectations. Hahahaha! How wrong was I. When you know the story you will understand why the cop was annoyed with himself for wearing a seat belt during the rollover. Brilliant film and if you like comedy/cop movies, you will not be disappointed.
It was a funny movie. Worth checking out if you can find it for free. Don't remember the movie name but the actor was Dabney Coleman. He was in the original Wargames movie among a few other 80s movies
I used to drive one of those Dodge/Plymouths. Very exciting chase, but the most unbelievable part is, how fast that Dodge/Plymouth drove. The most desirable thing about that car was the air conditioner.
I owned a 1980 Dodge Diplomat and what a good car it was just like all of the 1960's and 1970's Chrysler Corp. cars I owned. Back then Chrysler was awesome if you can believe that.
I too owned a boatload of MoPar cars. Starting with a 1961 Plymouth, 383 auto. all the way up to 1967. These were all former Tx Department of Public Safety patrol cars. They started getting flaky after that.
Amazing, - . . . . . . . all those bullet holes appear in the sides & in the hood. I don't really know why. (Maybe there is a "bad guy"-helicopter just off screen) ?
Yes sir. That new west minster underpass is such a giveaway. They use it in many films. I like how they made true to life use of the stop sign that’s totally hidden by the support column. They must have thought hmm we can use that, get a car about to go through and he doesn’t see the stop sign till the last second. Idk the right filmography term for it but they made use of their surroundings. I mean once they had the location they’re like ok good let’s do this but I bet they added the stop sign as they were in production.
Anyone else notice that the car changed from a Dodge to a Plymouth? In all the scenes Right before the rifle shots to the front of the car, the car was a Dodge Diplomat. From the rifle scenes forward, the car was a Plymouth. The grilles are noticeably different. Great chase though.
I've never heard of this movie until this clip showed up in my feed. And I'm a big fan of older action movies. I'll have to look up this movie on DVD or iTunes!
The story and acting in this movie is superb from everyone involved! It is a great movie. But that damned car chase made it monumental. That is bad ass. Short Time!
Certainly one of the best car chases since 1968's "Bullitt" with Bill Hickman and Steve McQueen and 1973's 'The Seven Ups" with Bill Hickman and Roy Scheider.
The cars were solid as a rock, and the fleshy people inside turned to mush upon impact. You're driving a 1970s Buick and get into a crash. You'd rather die a horrible mangled death than let your car be totaled? Priorities, I guess.
@@DubiousDrewski Just to let you know, I wasn't saying that I absolutely preffered these body designs over modern ones. The advancements in technology, redesign, andsafety have certainly proved to be far more favorable than having your car be incredibly durable but at the cost of risking your life at the same time.
@@s.stan007 oh I thought they were figuratively deathtraps. Obviously the person with a dragged out modern car profile picture has non biased opinions on a older automobile with a paint job that easily makes your Toyota look like a black and white movie. Why do you get onto this video anyway, it's funny I always find you wastes of life on the topics you hate. Get all angry at the big 70's car, go stroke your Tesla model x.
I love watching these classic 80s movie car chase scenes! It reminded me of Cobra! In reality these cars would've been done but it's just Hollywood entertainment!
In 1991 I worked for a security company that had a fleet of ex-police Dodge Diplomats as patrol cars. They were as tough as anvils. None of them worked right but they never stopped running.
"but they never stopped running" But this is bad once you parked it ... everybody could drive it ... ^^
When I started my 30 year career as a cop, our fleet has Dodge Aspens as patrol cars. They were horrible. They were very fast if you drove straight. But hard braking and turning right or left, the engines would die. Cops knew to put it in neutral and restart the engine. Nice and roomy. Phased those out fir the early 80’s Chevy Malibu, a great car, but came with different engines, a 305 and 350. The 350’s screamed.
Side story to the Aspen! There was a cop, who was very strong. The Aspen died on him while driving in a high speed situation. The power steering shuts off and he had to muscle through the turn. He bent the steering wheel. Typical, the city mechanics tried to straighten out the steering wheel so for the duration that cruiser was in service, the steering wheel was more oval than round.
@@oldguysrock2170 'breaking'? You breaked by using the break pedal, presumably?
@@markfox1545 : breaking the brake.
I love watching the car chase scenes from these movies. You get to see a lot of cars that were common in those days but you don’t see anymore. Very nostalgic.
Looks like back then cars were painted with actual colors & not just grey, white, black or silver.
What's the name of this movie?
It’s in the description
Check out episodes of CHiP's.
Yeah at 0:06 I'm 90% sure that's a 1st gen Hyundai Scoupe.
RIP Dabney Coleman 1932-2024. This chase is too memorable for his passing
I remember this movie. It was hilarious. The cop thought he was dying of a terminal disease that was not covered by insurance but if he was killed in the line of duty his family would get a huge settlement. So he was taking a lot of dangerous chances. He had been an extremely cautious cop until then. The actor was not really known for comedy roles but he did a good job in this one.
The movie is called Short Time, starring Dabney Coleman. Great flick.
Dabney Coleman Actually Did Plenty of Comedy.... usually Playing a Prick.
Great Actor.
Tootsie and 9 to 5 come to mind.
@@a.person7825 one of his best in this genre is actually "Cloak and dagger. " where he played dual roles as the dad who has no time for his kid and an imaginary spy that advises the kid through a lot of adventures against real spies.
@@a.person7825 and Dragnet!
I love how real this car chase is. No BS cgi or animation. It’s so cool
actually it was done with models idiot
@@ko6jay681 So much anger in you , also that wouldn't be possibly because there is people inside to real scale doing real movements
3:47 whoa!
You would like the movie Blues Brothers.
You must be joking. This is fake as shit.
no music. just the sound of the engines. love it!
Guy thought he was a cop in Los Santos!
And no shitty cgi, just a couple cars, a freeway and badass actors and stuntmens (sorry for my english)
Hell yes! The sound of Bert's red beast when it came blasting onto the highway was the beginning of a great sound track!
When he Loosens his safety belt after rolling down the bank, you think he's going to get out, and then he carries on driving - absolutely priceless.
That’s a classic Dale Earnhardt move!
@@sprint429 He's not so much "loosening the belt" as expressing regret that the seatbelt saved his life in the roll-over crash. He wants to die, on his own terms.
@@ChrisMaxfieldActs Don't you hate it when you want to die dramatically in a car chase, but _then safety belts have to get involved and ruin the fun for everyone!_
Opposite move from Bullitt.
Nobody who saw the film was expecting him to get out. He was trying to kill himself in the line of duty but didn't realise he was still wearing his belt.
The last time a cop car had that much damage but kept on going...and going..was driven by Sheriff Burford T. justice of Texas!
Yep that car was flogged out.
You're right about that one
You forgot the indestructible Russian taxi that Jason Bourne was driving.
@@paulmoore7064 Don't remember it, I'll look it up
@@Pbadome1 It was the ending of the second Bourne movie. He steals a cab and beats the hell out of it, along with half the cars in Russia. For gratuitous property damage though, I think "Blues Brothers is the winner.
Stunt man: what do you want to happen during this car chase?
Director: yes.
10 years before this was filmed: original Mad Max.
Director here: Amateurs.
😂😂😂😂
One of the greatest underrated car chases in movie history. The camera work, editing and sound design, not to mention the stunt driving, is absolutely first rate. I would even put this slightly above the chase scene in Friedkin's To Live And Die In LA.
A moment of silence to.all the cars that gave their lives for this amazing scene.
Pretty sure when asked what type of car chase scene this was going to be, the director said "Demolition Derby"
It's a good number of wrecks, but nothing holds a candle to the epic pileup in The Blues Brothers.
Every driver you see was a stunt man.
Especially with the crash at 6:32 with that Dodge Diplomat and Pontiac Catalina.
That Dodge cup car most of them came with a v8 318 no way could out run the pontiac Catalina with its v8 400. Just a movie.
RIP Dabney Coleman
January 3, 1932-May 17, 2024
Who'd he voice?
@@TurboPro9952 Dabney Coleman played the voice of Principal Peter Prickly in the animated TV series, _Recess_ (1997-2001), as well as _Recess: School's Out, Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street_ (both 2001), _Recess: Taking the Fifth Grade_ and _Recess: All Growed Down_ (both 2003).
@@devinmceachern Thank you.
@@TurboPro9952 You're welcome.
Dabney Coleman is died in 2024? What's happening?
I miss the real movies, a real car chase no cgi crap, and seat belts save lives !!!
Exactly! Wish they would go back to making stunts and practical effects. Computerized explosions and cars turning over, bullets flying through in slow motion doesn't do anything for me. Movie producers need to go back to the drawing board and make good movies again.
@@caramia9756 -- well said my friend, well said. 👌
@@kevCjm6dhhihiujkbbhjhvcfyhuiij Yes, let me know which ones so I can watch those instead.
That's if the classic car actually has one.
@@LITTLE1994 The seatbelt comment was a reference to the roll over scene, and yes all of mine have them.
Nobody was planning on getting this in there recommendations and watching it but we all watched till the end
Beat part the crazy ones saying this guy crazy 😜 🤣🤣
Lmao me think best car chase my a**...I guess that was before fast and the furious😂😂
@@nicholasdiehl7368 اااهعاز
Yes yes yes
Used to love watching this every time it would come on TV. Now I can watch it anytime of UA-cam.
I was born in 82' and watched this a ton as a kid and assume my father must have bought the VHS. It's incredible how well this has aged!
What movie is this
Short Time. But didn't Ernie have a cigarette in the clinic/hospital?
Craigslist be like: Vintage Chrysler for sale. Low miles, no low ballers plz. I know what I got.
“No hood for weight reduction and show off super engine”
Hey!
It's a Dodge.
@@ThatGuy-te9wh Chrysler Dodge Chrysler is the company, was!
“Dont waste my time.”
@@lm9847 lol imma waste ur time
Those V8s sang gorgeous sounds, and tough as nails. And my friends and family wonder I love those cars so much.
@Dude with Opinion when i was 17 , i ride my BMX all day long.....not the same country, not the same way for play.
Now i'm 34 and i ride a 1971 firebird tuned to 330hp , and every time i ride my pontiac i'm back to my 19, when i was stupidly mad.
@Dude with Opinion Coke?
@@marcuswelch4515 cocaine. This fellas a old car hater, don't take him seriously.
Sounds more like at least one has a straight six
Well they are definitely better than the computer junk we have today
Another thing that makes this car chase so brilliant and sets it apart from the others is the context behind it. It's not about catching the bad guys or escaping the bad guys. Its about Dabney Coleman's character trying to get himself killed and failing to do so!
The gray car being chased is a 1976 Pontiac Parisienne and the chasing red car is first a 1982 Dodge Diplomat and later a 1982 Plymouth Gran Fury.
thank you
Thank you
Thanks
wow i have to get one of those
Good eye
This was awesome! Look closely at 1:49 frame by frame, the cop car clearly breaks his Left Front tie rod (steering) but looks like they repaired that and kept filming the scene with the same car at 1:51.
Yep. Same with the tow truck in Terminator 2. When it jumps down from the bridge you can clearly see that it broke its right steering but in the next scene its fixed.
Well spotted!
tie rods? TIE RODS??? we dont need no stinking tie rods!
@@JackMacLupus the terminator fixed it so fast you did not notice. liquid metal, remember?
@@magnetmannenbannanen Well good point, but the only the T1000 himself was liquid metal, not the truck he was driving.
And like the T-101 said, it cant use/make complex shapes or things.
The camera shots played a massive role in this masterpiece. The bumper shots, the camera shake, the sudden pause here for an example 4:00, the creative camera placements like this one here 3:38, the static shots on some parts. It really adds to the excitement.
And the editing is nothing short of amazing.
Today it's all Techno cranes that make everything look like a video game cutscene.
Watch "Deathproof" ... mmmmm yes
Absolutely phenomenal camera work here. You can tell precisely what is going on at all times and with maximum impact. Also, the sound and editing is incredible.
The original gone in sixty seconds end chase is my all time fave.
RIGHT!!!!! Check out Freebie and the Bean as well!
Ronan
Or the To live and die in LA chase
Ronin has badass chase
Absolutely agree!!! Facts!!! 💯💯💯
*"This is for you, Dougie. You're going to college, little guy!"* LMAO
😂😂😂
Proceeds to charge at a AK 47
If you watch the whole movie it is not lame, he is driving like that so he can die in the line of duty and his family will be set for life as he thinks he is dying !!!
@@MichaelsMustang Makes me want to watch it all the more now.
due to some policy his bosses told him the only way he could collect his pension was to get killed in the line of duty.
Are we really going to ignore the fact that these two cars never caught a flat tire😆
Mr Drexler was a badass!
🤣🤣🤣🤣 Was thinking the same thing at about the 5:00 mark!
Yeah, we didn't have flats in the 80s action police 🚓 movie. 😂 Dabney Coleman is BAD ASS AWESOME 👍😎
How about how the cop car loses its windshield and then a few (film) shots later it has a windshield and then a few (film). shots later the windshield is missing again!
movie magic
This was one of the most hilarious ridiculous things I have ever viewed - especially when his red mangled car was still able to drive after somersaulting. this is one of the best good old belly laughs I have had in a long time. Good for the immune system.
Especially when he puts the somehow still working red flashing light back on the roof after.
@@ke2395 absolutely!
It's from a comedy movie, the cop wants to die so his family gets insurance pay out.
@@8G00SE8 I know
did you see Colin McRae cars?
My full admiration goes out to the flashing red light on top of the cop car! Not only did it manage to stay attached right til the end, it also managed to remain functioning right til the end. It's made of sturdy stuff!
I was thinking the same thing!!!
You can thank the now-defunct Southern Vehicle Products for their “pancake” dash light.
Yep, just like his windscreen ...
That's the cherry on top of the donut
@@kennethjohnson5180 top of the donut, good one.
Shoutout to the camera man for hovering and going 60km/h to film this masterpiece
Dominic Torretto : "I won a race with a junk rusty car"..
This Man : " That's cute...hold my beer Baldie Boy"
THAT OL DODGE WOULD BEAT ANY ELECTRIC PLASTIC JUNKER ON THE ROAD TODAY WITH THE CHEAP OVERPRICED JUNKS THEY SELL
I wonder from what his engine made? XD
Even the blues mobile didn't take a beating like this!!
You haven’t lied about that! That dodge Monaco from the blues brothers had it better than these 🤣
🤣🤣🤣👍🏻🤦♂️
What about Jackie Gleason's sheriff's car in Smokey and the Bandit" ? 😉😊😄😂🤣
@@dalemcnamee2427 Yeah, I gotta admit that car took one helluva pounding. But he lost pieces a little at a time, not all in one chase, LOL!
They don't build 'em like they used to
Oh, I love Dabney Coleman. Thanks for posting.
Can't believe Dr phil used to be a cop!
that's not Dr. Phil
He wasn't a cop, but he did almost go to prison for fraud until Oprah found him and convinced him to scam millions instead of a few.
@@LearnAboutFlow THAT'S BRILLIANT!
Lol
@@mysterymayhem7020 r/woooosh
Man I love the old school car chases.
Me to and I love old movies like this. What movie is this?
@@JWooARoo420Box short time.
Not CGI SHIT 🤗
Rest in Peace Dabney Coleman who passed away on 16 May 2024 aged 92 years.
"Short Time" is a real gem of a movie with some great stunts and funny lines. It is helped by Dabney Coleman and Matt Frewer playing two cops called "Bert" and "Ernie" and doing a good job of channelling the Sesame Street characters.
Recorded it off of cable which I only had for 1 summer, and watched it over and over.
I like how he keeps a spare emergency light.
You don't??
He actually just picked up the one that flew off when the car flipped. I thought so too when I first saw this.
@@royale7620 Lol! Good observation :)
Safety first.
The glove box is full of them.
I love movie car chases! Car takes a hundred rounds to the radiator without a puff of steam. "Bullet* with Steve Mcqueen has got to be the all-time best
Certainly not, many car chases are better, in Bullit you dont see any cars in streets, except one or two beetles!For example, I watched a french movie called " le casse" (" the burglars") and chase is in real streets traffic....There are many others examples..
I wish we still have cars like this in today's world
citizens would not like it fuel cars would banned and Scrapped in 2030
@@Ryuu1010YTsadly:(
@@Anhka_ak some of them don't like it because they get late in their work.
@@Ryuu1010YT like long charg
A 76 Pontiac Bonneville and Dodge Diplomat , can't do this in today's plastic pod cars!
if think they destroyed a lot of these to turn the chase, you'd be surprised of how much stronger are recent car
That’s it I am looking for a 76 Bonneville and diplomat
@@Win-lr4ix Buy one of those in the movie cheap!
It isn't a Diplomat, that was a Plymouth Fury, take a little look on the grill
@@нико-р2х They used both. In the early scenes with was a Dodge(you can see 5 letters over the grill) then later it was a Plymouth
Best car chase I've ever seen. The whole movie is a great action comedy. Criminally underrated.
They totaled like 30 cars in this chase. This is a good one. I really like to see the older cars.
No!!! The geezers here seem to think these cars all survived. Just patch up the holes and drive them another 800,000 miles.
Nostalgia is one of the greatest enemies of the truth.
I agree with you, though. I love seeing the old iron.
But, I wouldn’t trade my cr-v for a seventies era car for all the tea in China.
Cars completely destroyed so they could be revered for eternity on celluloid.
@@sludge4125 Oh fucking course you drive a CRV
Yep, about 30 cars had they're resale value SERIOUSLY lowered that day!
Hell yes. All action and no cgi. Never saw this movie, but will now have to check it out. Dabney Coleman was hysterical, and was also a good dramatic actor as well. The car chase in "Ronin" has always been a fave, also obviously Smokey and the Bandit, and the Blues Brothers too, for the choreography, sheer hilarity and utter destruction of many, many cars.
John Candy's quip in the Blues Brothers- "We're in a truck!"
Classic.
What is the name of this movie??
@@saunderscatala703 Short Time (1990)
Yes! Real action is best action! Not only is this chase exceptionally well done, the plot/premise behind it makes that much better!
I was a teenager in the 90's and it was easily the best decade of my life! The early Internet, Gamespy, heaps of populated Quake servers, modem and LAN Warcraft II, Star Trek Next Generation, Stargate, X-Files, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Sopranos, Jamie Lynn Sigler, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nirvana, The Smashing Pumpkins, and so much more! Pure heaven!
cool but idk if this was the place to randomly post this lmao
Cool story I guess?
Was a teenager in the the early 80's and it was easily the best decade of my life!
Discovering computers with my first VIC-20, then C64. Trading games on BBS's.
Great action movies like Aliens, Die Hard. Back to the Future, the Terminator, Star Trek WOK, Commando, Ghostbusters, The Goonies.
Back when TV was entertaining with shows like The A-Team, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Breakfast Club, Knight Rider, the start of Star Trek:TNG, McGyver, Magnum PI, The Greatest American Hero, The Six Million Dollar man. And so many sitcoms.
The birth of Music videos. Very cool TV miniseries like "V".
When Schwarzenegger, Willis, M. J. Fox, Sigourney Weaver, were household names.
Good times. Good memories.
(The 90's weren't too bad either. Neither was the 70's)
@@DocMicrowave Awesome reply! Although I was too young in the 80's (born in 1984) I still have immense love and respect for that era, as well as the 70's (mostly from music, TV shows and movies from those decades). Thank you so much for sharing your experience! Peace and love ❤✌❤
Lets see...SEGA in it's prime, console wars, the Mclaren F1 (and supercars in general), best NFS games of all times, the best anime, NBA golden age, best action movies (Arnold, Sly, JCVD, JC, Bruce willis, Seagal, etg), first Matrix, The truman show (Jim Carrey), Football in it's prime (the real Football, not the american), F1, FIA GT, Indycar golden years, and a long etc...
I always get sad when I watch old movies and they total something like an old Crown Vic, Dodge Diplomat, Grand Prix, etc. But the thing is, those cars were new then. It's the same principle as taking a 2021 car (any model), and revving it until the engine explodes. Or taking it off-roading and purposely putting it through abuse. We don't see them as valuable now, but they could be in 50 years, the same way classic cars now were normal then, so they didn't think anything of it. That's what I always think of.
I don't feel so bad being rough with my '06 caravan. Kinda don't think it'll ever become a "classic car".
@@mikehall3976 you never know 😂😂
@@jackrich8399 true because there was a time when cheap easy to modify vehicles were readily available for $1000 on Craigslist and the days of 92-00 Civic, Integra, Prelude, E30, Volvo Brick cars are long gone. Eventually everything becomes a classic and sought after on some level.
@@BoostedPastime they only become a classic after people buy and wreck as many as they can. No respect for the car, just something to beat up because you can't be bothered to fix it.
@@internetbodhi1009 agreed I think a lot of what it also is is the fact that it's a limited edition item they were only produced for a certain amount of time and once the car is no longer in production it is essentially a countdown until there is none left which means that they can only become more valuable overtime since there's going to be less of them overtime.
Very underappreciated movie. Was one of my favorites as a kid.
This is one of the great forgotten movies of the 1980s and had a great closing song too. Also starred Teri Garr, Barry Corbin and Matt Frewer
1990 actually. Sadly on maybe a $9 million budget it only grossed $4 million in release. Maybe it made some back on home video and cable runs?
What is the name of this movie??
@@saunderscatala703”Short Time”
I had a 73 Bonneville way back when. That car was a strong runner.
But didn't miss many gas stations... Lol
Dad had a 78 Catalina 2 door.... The doors weighed 200 lbs a piece
Funny I recognize the final scene, under the parkade. It's in New Westminster British Columbia, Canada. As a little kid I used to go shopping with my parents at the department store that was there Army and Navy. Between Amazon and the pandemic it put the final nail in the coffin for them. The family that started it the children decided it was time to wrap it up and cash out. As a young man my girlfriend used to work in a bar on that street so I'd always be there late at night. Now as a truck driver I drive down that street on a weekly basis it's changed a lot. Last year there was this huge fire that destroyed a pier here on the river beside a nice park. They are now building two of the tallest waterfront towers in Metro Vancouver there it's along the Fraser River. When they go up for sale I think I'll inquire about a unit. It's beside the New West Quay some cool shops and pubs and restaurants down there.
Kits Pub
@@robentourage4687
You bet...good times
Yup. All the actors in this chase (aside from Dabney Coleman) are local guys. They're all still with us and working today.
The sound of that 318 opening up when he floors it is badass. I wish these 4 door early 80s american sedans were still made to this day ☹️
Blame "Detroit" for telling us what we wanted in a car. If the general public had any balls things could be different these days.
A diplomat at the time probably had a 360 in it for a "police package" option. Still anemic by today's standards, but cool nonetheless.
W...why? Those things were at the tail end of the Malaise era. Thing only made 140 HP or something. My 2 liter 4G63 SOHC makes that amount. On a 2xbbl carb.
@@the_kombinator e58 4bbl 360 made 245 hp and a nice big flat torque curve. More torque at 1500 rpm than your shitbox all out. You're engine wouldn't last 30 minutes at maximum rated horsepower. A 318 would last 20k hours in a towmotor.
@@randymagnum143 Um, actually, a very worn out (and heavily modded - 15.8 at St Thomas) 4G32 I had lasted an hour at Mosport well past the redline at times until I spun a bearing due to oil starvation. I still have the engine. I was keeping up with an Integra Type R on the straights and an MR2 kept up with me in the turns. The 360 fitted to an American land yacht would not be able to keep up with my shitbox on track, period. It MIGHT breach the 14s with some mods.
Also, 4G33s are in fact used as forklift engines in Asian countries and are extremely durable. So are GA16DEs - both are better than what Hyster put into their forklifts and require very little servicing and don't piss out oil like the Iron Duke.
I still want a DVD for this. The movie is 'Short Time' from 1990. Long story short, a medical mix up makes Dabney Coleman think he's only got a short while to live, but his insurance only pays out if he dies on the job, so to provide for his wife and son after he's gone, he becomes supercop.
thank you !
this movie was funnier than sh*t, we were high watching this as kids and remember laughing our ass off when he said, "MACHINE GUNS!?, ALRIGHT!"
Thanks I was hoping someone would give the name of the movie.
Dabney Coleman and Matt Frewer.
I saw this on HBO! I've always felt this was by far the greatest car chase on film to this day. Rolls down an enbankment, unclicks seat belt and continues. This is for you Dougie.
What is the name of this movie??
@@saunderscatala703 1990 cinematic masterpiece "Short Time".
Am I the only one thinking the stuntmen were having a blast in these scenes? 😁
As I was watching the video I was thinking the same exact thing 😁. It would have been awesome just to be there when they were recording those scenes.
3:58 5:08 6:30 whoa!
The Greatest Chase scene that's ever been filmed"
You have Comedy and action"
That was some epic driving!! Love the way the driver threw it into a slide @0:45 Look at how close he was to clipping the other car!
Filmed during a time when you never had to reload.
Ah endless mag dumps. Wish I could figure out that trick
...or get gas!!!🤣
... and before airbags
Start up up down down left right left right start
Or Refill, those cars were the worst when it came to gas mileage.
SHORT TIME: I watched this film a few days ago with low expectations. Hahahaha! How wrong was I. When you know the story you will understand why the cop was annoyed with himself for wearing a seat belt during the rollover.
Brilliant film and if you like comedy/cop movies, you will not be disappointed.
The one time the title nails it and isnt clickbait. Amazing scene
The best Dodge advertising I've ever seen!🔥
Awe, the cars of the 80's. That was a good chase seen. Never saw this movie.
It was a funny movie. Worth checking out if you can find it for free. Don't remember the movie name but the actor was Dabney Coleman. He was in the original Wargames movie among a few other 80s movies
SHORT TIME....movie name
@@saxman432004
Tyvm, Bruh!!!! I'm much obliged for the info!!!!
What this movie called
Same.
Let's appreciate how much effort went into adding engine sounds and tire squeal into this car chase!!!
Pretty good...man I haven't seen that movie since it came out. Totally forgot about it actually...thanks for the trip down memory lane!
Any movie with Dabney Coleman in it will be great and worth watching. Man I love this guy.
What is the name of this movie??
@@saunderscatala703 _Short Time_ (1990). You're welcome.
Oh man I forgot about this one. That bit with the seatbelt, absolute gold!
I used to drive one of those Dodge/Plymouths. Very exciting chase, but the most unbelievable part is, how fast that Dodge/Plymouth drove. The most desirable thing about that car was the air conditioner.
I owned a 1980 Dodge Diplomat and what a good car it was just like all of the 1960's and 1970's Chrysler Corp. cars I owned. Back then Chrysler was awesome if you can believe that.
I too owned a boatload of MoPar cars. Starting with a 1961 Plymouth, 383 auto.
all the way up to 1967. These were all former Tx Department of Public Safety patrol cars. They started getting flaky after that.
To live and die in LA had a great chase scene, got to love those 80’s movies.
Set in Seattle.
Thank you. I saw this movie when I was a kid. I've been telling people about this car chase ever since then but I could never remember the movie.
Back when Ford was “built tough” for that LTD.
Where's the Ford at?
Excuse me. Plymouth Caravelle
@@skjoe1115 Pontiac Catalina and Plymouth Caravelle
That is a Dodge Diplomat & Pontiac Catalina
Amazing, - . . .
. . . . all those bullet holes appear
in the sides &
in the hood.
I don't really know why.
(Maybe there is a "bad guy"-helicopter just off screen) ?
That's my typical drive to work!!!
4:46 whoa lol
The best of radiator I've ever seen in my life 😜! I want some of this for my Audi 👉😁👈
Any car that can put up with that much damage and still run it's a keeper.
2:50 I love how dissapointed he was when he found out he saved his life because he was using seatbelt....
Hillarious....
Classic old car films . you can never have enough of them 👍👍
This is awesome, alongside the Blues Brothers final chase scene.
Dabney Coleman was one damn good actor
Saw it in a theatre! Hilarious underrated movie!
Vancouver B.C. and surrounding municipalities. Driven all those roads many times.
Thought so. They covered a lot of ground in a short time.
Yes sir. That new west minster underpass is such a giveaway. They use it in many films. I like how they made true to life use of the stop sign that’s totally hidden by the support column. They must have thought hmm we can use that, get a car about to go through and he doesn’t see the stop sign till the last second.
Idk the right filmography term for it but they made use of their surroundings. I mean once they had the location they’re like ok good let’s do this but I bet they added the stop sign as they were in production.
At 1:15 you can see the New West/ North Delta and Knight Street Vancouver signs on the overpass
@@JonTron11 hah totally. So that was highway 91 south maybe? I don’t cross the Alex Fraser every day but I do when I see my sister
I thought the part where the street has all the pillars was Chicago, like the Blues Brothers
Anyone else notice that the car changed from a Dodge to a Plymouth?
In all the scenes Right before the rifle shots to the front of the car, the car was a Dodge Diplomat. From the rifle scenes forward, the car was a Plymouth. The grilles are noticeably different.
Great chase though.
Cars do that
@@stephenkissane4268 Random.....What did your contribution add to the topic? "Cars do that" means nothing.
@@stephenkissane4268 🤣🤣🤣
@@gregorykern9679 its called humour dear boy!
Continuity department no budget in this film lol.
I've never heard of this movie until this clip showed up in my feed. And I'm a big fan of older action movies. I'll have to look up this movie on DVD or iTunes!
just straight stunt driving! worthy of the 80s!
I would like to recommend the car chase from the '70's original "Gone in 60 seconds" it's pretty much half the whole film.
Absolutely. Half the movie. It's excellent
Senguruvi senguruvi
Yeah, one of the rawest and longest chases ever.
Very good chase movie.
I recommend it.
And the movie " Dirty Mary Crazy Larry"
This is beyond amazing, never saw this movie. The scene is brilliantly filmed.
LOL! The stunt man driving the Diplomat looks like the My Pillow guy.
Wait! I thought THAT WAS the My pillow guy. 😅😅
How'd you notice?
He has his product inside... before airbags
Oh I love this movie! It's such a great concept.
The story and acting in this movie is superb from everyone involved! It is a great movie. But that damned car chase made it monumental. That is bad ass. Short Time!
4:47 is literally like driving down my town’s streets lmao
Haha funny 😐
@@ugwemubwemosas4963 Stfu
Rural south african roads in nutshell
@@mlgfreddy4207 nope
Going to Vladivostok in a nutshell
The car chase scenes in the film ronin are great and all done for real!
Certainly one of the best car chases since 1968's "Bullitt" with Bill Hickman and Steve McQueen and 1973's 'The Seven Ups" with Bill Hickman and Roy Scheider.
Or maybe the chase in the Seven Ups.
The meaning of "muscle cars..." 💪🏽👍🏽👏🏽
LOL yeah, all 140 HP they made.
Jake and Elwood approve of this!
That blue Volkswagen sure does get around!
I am glad to see that Dabne is still with us.
I have sad news. Dabney Coleman has died at 92 years old.
@@devinmceachern Thanks for the information. 92 was a good run!
@bigtbolivar4939 You're welcome, my friend. 92 was a good run. An amazing run, if you ask me.
2:38 I did not expect that lmao
The longer a car chase the lasts, the more thrilling and exciting it gets.
Words you don't expect to ever see together: Dabney Coleman and action hero.
He shows some action at the end of _Cloak & Dagger,_ which stars Henry Thomas, the boy from E.T.
Back when cars could handle an insane beating because of their simplicity and body designs.
But now you hit a curb you will need a new car
Those were litterally death traps too
The cars were solid as a rock, and the fleshy people inside turned to mush upon impact. You're driving a 1970s Buick and get into a crash. You'd rather die a horrible mangled death than let your car be totaled? Priorities, I guess.
@@DubiousDrewski Just to let you know, I wasn't saying that I absolutely preffered these body designs over modern ones. The advancements in technology, redesign, andsafety have certainly proved to be far more favorable than having your car be incredibly durable but at the cost of risking your life at the same time.
@@s.stan007 oh I thought they were figuratively deathtraps.
Obviously the person with a dragged out modern car profile picture has non biased opinions on a older automobile with a paint job that easily makes your Toyota look like a black and white movie. Why do you get onto this video anyway, it's funny I always find you wastes of life on the topics you hate. Get all angry at the big 70's car, go stroke your Tesla model x.
I love watching these classic 80s movie car chase scenes! It reminded me of Cobra! In reality these cars would've been done but it's just Hollywood entertainment!
1990.
I actually got an adrenaline rush watching this clip.
Of course.
"The car that just keeps on going. Buy one today. Your local dealer just five minutes from this theatre."
Don’t need to watch any more chases, that was great. I was sad when it ended. Thanks for sharing.
Love how he pushes the gas pedal to the floor when the other guy said "GO".. Guess he had cruise control until then....