Lots of hot rod oriented movies lately.....great to see them after all these years and LOVE seeing the same cars I saw on the streets as a kid in the '50s. The kids knew how to dance back then too, not the crappy jumping around they do today!!
@@jessebaca2750 So true.....and look at the way people dress today. Years ago if we went out in public we dressed better than you would at home. Going downtown was usually for a special reason and you dressed for it. Today it's ripped and even dirty clothes....or sweats!!! They look like slobs and don't seem to care. ;-(
This film has some good things to recommend it. Firstly, there is Mamie Van Doren's dance scene to Bill Haley's RAZZLE DAZZLE. One of her great talents is dancing and the way she moves in all her pictures. Secondly, there is Jan Merlin, one of the greatest smart alecks ever. What a mouth to go with his face of pure insolence! Merlin is a very under-rated character actor who deserves more recognition for the conflict and drama he causes so capably. And last but not least is Lita's hairstyle. What a great look Kathleen Case cultivated for this film. She looks angelically innocent with that cut framing her face, a great 50s style you don't see anymore.
It was his first credited film role. He was 19. He made his film debut at 18 in "IT should Happen to You", but the role was uncredited, and he had no lines.
Never saw this one, I was one year old when it came out. Great old greaserhood movie not to mention some of the snazziest music I've heard in a while! Really enjoyed this one 👌
1955 and some sweet custom cars! Wonder who made them? Maybe Von Dutch or George Barris possibly. When he dropped off the girl outside the house, you can see him hit the inside door release. And that chopped coupe was sick! Good stuff and a happy ending ha. Where’s the sequel where she’s an unhappy cops wife ha.
The star is the famous Bob Hirohata's 1951 Mercury, the bad guy's car. customized by George Barris. The convert is also a Barris-built, Fred Rowe's, '51.
That Merc was what caught my eye and made me click. Then when I saw the Hirohata Merc a few minutes in I was hooked. When I was a kid our family car was a 49. That’s the first car I remember riding in. I’ve always wanted one.
@@vladtheimpala5532its pretty cool you recognized the Barris car. I did a car for John Barris a few years ago called "The Rose "a tribute to Sam Barris .
This is JOHN Saxon's 1st credited film role at age 19. He made his film debut at 18 in "IT should Happenen to You", but the role was uncredited and he had no lines. Oddly enough it was also Jack Lemmon's film debut, but he was the star, opposite Judy Holiday. Between 1949 and his film debut in 1954 he worked in television.
Very good flick, kept me kind of on the edge of my seat throughout, really enjoyed it. You can’t go wrong watching anything with Keenan Wynn in it, William Campbell was pretty good too. Thanks for posting! 👍
You gotta love cars from the 50"s they had personally . Those were cars you could idenify in the dark by their tail lights . My Dad had a Hudson Hornet . The only car I had that rated COOL wasa 64"Chevy Impala SS ,now all the Home Boys wana make lowriders . I let mine be the Beast it needed to be . When I got , it looked brand new , it was 10 yrs. old and I paid $600. for it . Bargain !!!
Wish I kept Dad's '67 Chevelle coupe. He paid $540 in '72, and let me drive it after I got my license. Bench-seat, 283, powerglide, dual exhaust. No hot-rod, but still looked cool. Today, most I see for sale are rusty hulks, gutted parts-cars, or grossly overpriced SS 'conversions'. There may be more SS models now than what left the factory! Back then, even though gas was only about 32 cents per gallon, the reality was Dad's Chevelle V8 was only running on 7, got about 10 mpg, and was gobbling up all my lawn mowing money. So Dad sold the Chevy, for $750, and we found a beat-up old $200 foreign sedan, that my brother said looked "like an old lady's shoe". But it got 30 mpg! 🙂
@@bluepov To bluepov , I was'nt sure , I saw no credits for the build . Usually George Barris custom builds are way over the top , but considering the movie year you are probably right . I don't think Mr. Barris truly came into his own till the 60's , anyway I thank you for your input . I have my happy face on .
William Campbell (the undercover cop) reminds me of Tony Curtis - even their accents are alike. I guessed Campbell was born in New Jersey. So, I looked it up and he was - In Trenten. And Tony Curtis was born in Manhattan - about 20 miles apart as the crow flies.
@helbitkelbit1790 LoL. I was actually a part time projectionist way back in the 1960's! I just can't help but see those dots about every 20 minutes! But did enjoy Columbo back in the day.
@@adriancole3165 you’re absolutely right about the dots . Also when you seen the dots you knew you were coming to a commercial 👍🏼Time to refresh your snack tray😂
The William Campbell that was in this movie is the same William Campbell that was in the TV series in the 1950s called cannonball to get this message. I hope you do bye.
Well it's not short on action that's for sure! LOL. One thing they seem to miss on in a lot of these car based movies is that even if the guys are thieves Car thieves are still Car lovers. They never show them talking about the cars they'd love to build or have or race etc. Lots of cheese in he movie but it's entertaining. Lots of "I know you are but what am I" type stuff and "No, You" "No, YOU!" LOL.
1945 myself; bought a few old cars when they were real cheap to buy, like my first, 53 Chevy for $35 in 1967 but needed a brake master cylinder, and a few more after that. Now you can't get that same car for under $20,000. 4-8-2023😭
I remember both William Campbell and the 'Cannonball' series. I also remember the co-star, Paul Birch, actually the first-listed star. That was a long time ago, when this country wasn't paralyzed by 'political correctness' and we lived normal lives.
i dont remember it but have seen it i believe it was created in canada was a pretty good show as i recall certainly miles above the sheer garbage they call tv today..such shit i thought id never have to suffer
oh wow this guy the actor cambel i think? he did do a film noir i THINK it was called cell 2554 (death row) great little movie def worth the watch i watched it 5 tims..i just liked the feel of it
I remember William Campbell as "Trelane" (Star Trek TNG), the kid who got too rough with "his toys" 53:45 Just dawned on me; if his 32 is like the Browning M1922 WWII souvenir I have (or its predecessor the M1910) 32ACP barrels are pretty cheap and can be swapped out in less than 2 minutes flat... (also swappable between 32 and 380 in same time. (PS Im in the market for a 380 barrel. LOL) 1:16:08, I swear I didnt look - but I guessed right didnt I? I really AM in the market for a 380 barrel
@@sunbeam8866 And they got the idea from the Czechs back in the late 20's. when people found how easy it was to swap back and forth between from 32ACP and 9mm Kurz (.380)in the Browning M1910. . PS the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria with an FN Browning M1910 in 9mm Kurz/ 380 was what started WWI
The leading man (Ralph), wasn't he in one of the Star Trek episodes called _The Squire of Gothos?_ He played a character called _Trelane._ played by John De Lancie. Never mind, I just checked the actors in this movie and John De Lancie is not one of them. Edit: A little more research and I find that I am wrong about being wrong. Apparently I was right the first time, _William Campbell_ the male lead actor in this movie is Trelane from the Star Trek episode, _The Squire of Gothos?_
who say's white people cant dance.. what happen to the good old days were man and women dance like that.. now you go to a club and jump up and down.. even in the thirties and forties you could hold your partner and dance and talk and get to know a man or women. now you go to a bar and its so loud. you can t even hear her name.. sad
No spoiler, just a warning: Bill Haley is nowhere on the cast list or credits yet the thumbnail makes it look like he's the star. I assume the Comets will be onscreen for as many minutes as it takes to play a song or two but the thumbnail is clickbait. I'll probably watch anyway because I like film noir (though nobody's ever called this one outstanding) and I kinda like Mamie Van Doren (though I have no delusions about her as an actress - she's basically eye candy). So I'm giving it a chance but if you're more particular than I am, I hope you read comments before watching.
@@dontaylor7315 well click bait? MAYBE but when i post it seems the thumbnails are fairly randon and def picked for you although you CAN change it but i generally dont bother this person prob just lazy as i am
Unbeliveable , $ 0.29 a gal . For gasoline in 1955 , that was the average price per gal. She payed $1.50 . According to U.S. Energy Info. Admin. adverage today is $3.32 per gal . She got 5 gal. + . Inflation sucks .
@@eltonspurlock I know what you mean . 5 bucks in my old 64"Country Squire and I was set for the night . Gas , grass or ass nobody rides for free . My very first car was a 1961 Ford Galaxie Starliner , black body ,red top , red leather like interior , 390 c.i. interceptor engine , a very sweet ride . A drunk sideswiped the whole left side and pushed me off the road . By the time I was able to get a cop the idiot was long gone. A narrow road , idiot swerving ,could'nt get out of the way . Man , was my wife pissed , at least she and I wern't hurt . I missed that car , my next ride was the Country Squire , A totally different vibe .
Well, everything's relative. By 1972, a gallon of regular was still only 32 cents, and after I got my license, Dad let me use his '67 V8 Chevy. But with a dead cylinder, it got maybe 10mpg, and devoured all my lawn-mowing money!
@@sunbeam8866 I had similar situation . A friend had a 74" Chevy C 10 pickup that would'nt run right, said ( l'd sell the damn thing for $100 ) I could'nt get the cash from my pocket fast enough. A push rod and rocker arm + tune up and I was good to go . Older V8's were easy to work on . That truck served me well for many years.
You must remember Jim bo when you multiply 150 pounds with a ten foot leaver it could easily be closet 500 pounds or 3oo pounds or unknown # of pounds without math .must abb in the bar
it is always fun to watch these old movies to see if you can spot someone who became famous later.
Like Trelane (William Campbell) from Star Trek?
@@MonsterHobbiesModelCarGarageNot only him, but John Saxon and Mamie Van Doren
@@fernandomaron87 Cool!
Lots of hot rod oriented movies lately.....great to see them after all these years and LOVE seeing the same cars I saw on the streets as a kid in the '50s.
The kids knew how to dance back then too, not the crappy jumping around they do today!!
Oh yeah, they're rockin with ol Bill Haley there. Looks like fun!
People were healthy and fit not overweight like what you see you today at Walmart more than double triple supersize😬
@@jessebaca2750 So true.....and look at the way people dress today. Years ago if we went out in public we dressed better than you would at home.
Going downtown was usually for a special reason and you dressed for it. Today it's ripped and even dirty clothes....or sweats!!! They look like slobs and
don't seem to care. ;-(
This film has some good things to recommend it. Firstly, there is Mamie Van Doren's dance scene to Bill Haley's RAZZLE DAZZLE. One of her great talents is dancing and the way she moves in all her pictures. Secondly, there is Jan Merlin, one of the greatest smart alecks ever. What a mouth to go with his face of pure insolence! Merlin is a very under-rated character actor who deserves more recognition for the conflict and drama he causes so capably. And last but not least is Lita's hairstyle. What a great look Kathleen Case cultivated for this film. She looks angelically innocent with that cut framing her face, a great 50s style you don't see anymore.
Really enjoying watching all these old classics 👍👍
Great Movie! Thanks ! It was great to see John Saxon in most likely his first or one of his first movie appearances.
It was his first credited film role. He was 19. He made his film debut at 18 in "IT should Happen to You", but the role was uncredited, and he had no lines.
Those dancers sure cut a mean rug ! 😊
Those mean dancers don't cut it.
Never saw this one, I was one year old when it came out. Great old greaserhood movie not to mention some of the snazziest music I've heard in a while! Really enjoyed this one 👌
What a suspenvill good plotted movie I love the period it was made in the old good fashion method of a good story many thanks ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Enjoyed the movie. Thanks.
I want Scotty's car! 🤩
They sure knew how to dance back then.
Love the witty dialogue, an honest LOL for me.
Those old Mercury's were very popular for hot-rodding and customizing
An excellent film, and the classy cars really made the grade.
Love cars up until 1973
The cars are the most. I like your name TaiChiGhost. What inspired it?
1955 and some sweet custom cars! Wonder who made them? Maybe Von Dutch or George Barris possibly. When he dropped off the girl outside the house, you can see him hit the inside door release. And that chopped coupe was sick! Good stuff and a happy ending ha. Where’s the sequel where she’s an unhappy cops wife ha.
Can't beat these old time movies 🎥
And the old times cars, like the 50 Merc
@norbertofontanez5550 It sure sounds like his band's style!
@norbertofontanez5550 It was them....and here it is---> ua-cam.com/video/zHqrjGQxl9o/v-deo.html
@norbertofontanez5550 performing? They're blowing the roof off, Dad!!🎸😎
John Saxon is so young , he did have moviestar good looks . I have never seen him this young before .
He was 19. He made his film debut at 18 in "IT should Happen to You", but the role was uncredited, and he had no lines.
The star is the famous Bob Hirohata's 1951 Mercury, the bad guy's car.
customized by George Barris.
The convert is also a Barris-built, Fred Rowe's, '51.
You answered it for me. I thought it was the Hirohata Merc.
That Merc was what caught my eye and made me click. Then when I saw the Hirohata Merc a few minutes in I was hooked. When I was a kid our family car was a 49. That’s the first car I remember riding in. I’ve always wanted one.
Is that the one at 21:06?
49 50 51 Mercury got it one piece at a time😂
@@vladtheimpala5532its pretty cool you recognized the Barris car. I did a car for John Barris a few years ago called "The Rose "a tribute to Sam Barris .
You're Right...I was born in 1947 and William Campbell also co- starred in "Love Me Tender" w/c intoduced Elvis Presley along with Richard Egan.
I was 12 years old in 1955 my sisters were nine and six years older so this brings back a lot of memories of those times.
Good flick, Keenan Wynn in great form as ever. Thanks for posting
This is JOHN Saxon's 1st credited film role at age 19. He made his film debut at 18 in "IT should Happenen to You", but the role was uncredited and he had no lines. Oddly enough it was also Jack Lemmon's film debut, but he was the star, opposite Judy Holiday. Between 1949 and his film debut in 1954 he worked in television.
Just ordered it on Amazon! Thank you.
The end got me in tears , lovely film ...
Thanks. Worth watching
I like his taste in cars!
thom petersen , great movie ...thanks for posting
Wow..!! Cool...that's hip.!
These kids were far out, man.!
I'm diggin' the hype, dude.!!
No jivin goin off here.!
Very good flick, kept me kind of on the edge of my seat throughout, really enjoyed it. You can’t go wrong watching anything with Keenan Wynn in it, William Campbell was pretty good too. Thanks for posting! 👍
William Campbell played bad guys on 'Perry Mason' and 'Star Trek', so it was nice to see him be a good guy, even if he was 'pretending' to be bad!
You gotta love cars from the 50"s they had personally . Those were cars you could idenify in the dark by their tail lights . My Dad had a Hudson Hornet . The only car I had that rated COOL wasa 64"Chevy Impala SS ,now all the Home Boys wana make lowriders . I let mine be the Beast it needed to be . When I got , it looked brand new , it was 10 yrs. old and I paid $600. for it . Bargain !!!
Wish I kept Dad's '67 Chevelle coupe. He paid $540 in '72, and let me drive it after I got my license. Bench-seat, 283, powerglide, dual exhaust. No hot-rod, but still looked cool.
Today, most I see for sale are rusty hulks, gutted parts-cars, or grossly overpriced SS 'conversions'. There may be more SS models now than what left the factory!
Back then, even though gas was only about 32 cents per gallon, the reality was Dad's Chevelle V8 was only running on 7, got about 10 mpg, and was gobbling up all my lawn mowing money. So Dad sold the Chevy, for $750, and we found a beat-up old $200 foreign sedan, that my brother said looked "like an old lady's shoe". But it got 30 mpg! 🙂
We had a red Impala back when gas was 25 cents/gallon..until someone put sugar in the tank.
WOW ,THOSE LEAD SLEDS ARE SO FREAKING COOL .
Both were customs built by George Barris.
@@bluepov To bluepov , I was'nt sure , I saw no credits for the build . Usually George Barris custom builds are way over the top , but considering the movie year you are probably right . I don't think Mr. Barris truly came into his own till the 60's , anyway I thank you for your input . I have my happy face on .
Cool movie. Thanks for posting this.
Worth watching again.
Wow the dancing is out of sight !
That blond wasn't the kind you'd take home to meet your mom...... (but she did play that role well). ;-)
John Saxon he played in Entire the Dragon.
Very interesting movie!!!
Back in the Drive inn, "If the car is a rock'n, don't bother nock'n!"
What a tremendous cast 👍
Yeah right some fun good-looking cast and decent acting!
William Campbell (the undercover cop) reminds me of Tony Curtis - even their accents are alike. I guessed Campbell was born in New Jersey. So, I looked it up and he was - In Trenten. And Tony Curtis was born in Manhattan - about 20 miles apart as the crow flies.
However in NYC, you could have different accents, in different neighborhoods (burrows)
London is similar
I thought it was him at first too
You could get leverage on someone harboring an Illegal immigrant. What a novel idea.
33.20 to 33.30 change of reels. Note the dots on screen showing projectionist when to switch from old reel to new reel in the early theatres.
You've watched to many Columbo shows
@helbitkelbit1790 LoL.
I was actually a part time projectionist way back in the 1960's! I just can't help but see those dots about every 20 minutes!
But did enjoy Columbo back in the day.
@@adriancole3165 you’re absolutely right about the dots . Also when you seen the dots you knew you were coming to a commercial 👍🏼Time to refresh your snack tray😂
An unexpected gem.
The William Campbell that was in this movie is the same William Campbell that was in the TV series in the 1950s called cannonball to get this message. I hope you do bye.
That was a good movie😊😊😊
Well it's not short on action that's for sure! LOL. One thing they seem to miss on in a lot of these car based movies is that even if the guys are thieves Car thieves are still Car lovers. They never show them talking about the cars they'd love to build or have or race etc. Lots of cheese in he movie but it's entertaining. Lots of "I know you are but what am I" type stuff and "No, You" "No, YOU!" LOL.
Great film
'hey, The Cove is a real rockin' place.
There's William Campbell from the 1950's tv show Cannonball.... anyone remember it? I was born in 1946😊
1945 myself; bought a few old cars when they were real cheap to buy, like my first, 53 Chevy for $35 in 1967 but needed a brake master cylinder, and a few more after that. Now you can't get that same car for under $20,000. 4-8-2023😭
I remember both William Campbell and the 'Cannonball' series. I also remember the co-star, Paul Birch, actually the first-listed star. That was a long time ago, when this country wasn't paralyzed by 'political correctness' and we lived normal lives.
@@clydedahler9542 I'd rather pay $20,000+ for a 1953 Chevy than $40,000+ for the junk in dealer's lots today.
they drove a 53 gmc coe semi two truckers,,,,,,,,i remember it well
i dont remember it but have seen it i believe it was created in canada was a pretty good show as i recall certainly miles above the sheer garbage they call tv today..such shit i thought id never have to suffer
Love this movie. Too bad hollywierd doesn't make them like they use to.
oh wow this guy the actor cambel i think? he did do a film noir i THINK it was called cell 2554 (death row) great little movie def worth the watch i watched it 5 tims..i just liked the feel of it
Trelane from Star Trek!!
Also Richard Haloran from 'Dementia 13'.
I completly forgot the STAR TREK bit , I really liked that episode .
Great flick Yonda
Trelane from Star Trek, "The Squire of Gothos"
With a happy ending.
John Saxon got better looking as he got older. 💕💕💕💕🥰🥰🥰🥰
Me too
Me three
Fabulous %".
Good movie💯
Ken Osanger could work on my car any day.
I've never seen it. I recognize the actors. Mamie van Doren? 1st time I've seen her in a movie. And I'm 65
"The butler did it!"😆😅😂🤣
Gosh those darn kids sure are square. In a month Rock n Roll will hit. (Rocket 88 came out before this but no one called it Rock n Roll at the time )
Now days when they’re ask if the want a drink 🥃 it’s whiskey, wine 🍷 or some other kind of drink. Back the it was a chocolate 🍫 malt. 🧋🧋🧋😅😅😅
"you look old for 19 years old"
has that ever been any more true? :D
Some historic iron in this movie. the queen of Kustoms H Merc up front
I remember William Campbell as "Trelane" (Star Trek TNG), the kid who got too rough with "his toys"
53:45 Just dawned on me; if his 32 is like the Browning M1922 WWII souvenir I have (or its predecessor the M1910) 32ACP barrels are pretty cheap and can be swapped out in less than 2 minutes flat... (also swappable between 32 and 380 in same time.
(PS Im in the market for a 380 barrel. LOL)
1:16:08, I swear I didnt look - but I guessed right didnt I?
I really AM in the market for a 380 barrel
Yeah, the Colt 1903 & 1908 barrels can be easily swapped too. That Idea was used on an old 'Perry Mason' episode!
@@sunbeam8866 And they got the idea from the Czechs back in the late 20's. when people found how easy it was to swap back and forth between from 32ACP and 9mm Kurz (.380)in the Browning M1910. . PS the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria with an FN Browning M1910 in 9mm Kurz/ 380 was what started WWI
trelane the squite of gothos was tos not tng and gave kirk mccoy and sulu troubles
@@YowzaBowzaWowzaAlready identified by sunbeam8866 right months ago. LOL
Nice. Sometimes these so-called B-movies are a helluva lot better.
1955- Pre- Rock and Roll. Pre emphasized. No Elvis yet. Bill Haley type roll. Teen agers in their late 20’s. 👍
👍👍👌👌✌✌⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
God I love Jan Merlin
The leading man (Ralph), wasn't he in one of the Star Trek episodes called _The Squire of Gothos?_
He played a character called _Trelane._ played by John De Lancie.
Never mind, I just checked the actors in this movie and John De Lancie is not one of them.
Edit:
A little more research and I find that I am wrong about being wrong.
Apparently I was right the first time, _William Campbell_ the male lead actor in this movie is Trelane from the Star Trek episode, _The Squire of Gothos?_
Yes, a really good movie. Kathleen Case was quite good looking, but she died young.
who say's white people cant dance.. what happen to the good old days were man and women dance like
that.. now you go to a club and jump up and down.. even in the thirties and forties you could hold your partner
and dance and talk and get to know a man or women. now you go to a bar and its so loud. you can t even
hear her name.. sad
The cove is cove cay golf course in st Pete, a dump
No spoiler, just a warning:
Bill Haley is nowhere on the cast list or credits yet the thumbnail makes it look like he's the star. I assume the Comets will be onscreen for as many minutes as it takes to play a song or two but the thumbnail is clickbait.
I'll probably watch anyway because I like film noir (though nobody's ever called this one outstanding) and I kinda like Mamie Van Doren (though I have no delusions about her as an actress - she's basically eye candy).
So I'm giving it a chance but if you're more particular than I am, I hope you read comments before watching.
Looks like I was wrong: The Comets aren't onscreen, just a jukebox. Good dancing though.
Finished it. Pretty much a standard film noir. Not one of the great ones but not bad.
NOT A NOIR FILM BY A MILE, YOU ARE WAY OFF 😊classic melodrama 😊
@@1949LA-ARCH funny how some people think all black and whiters are noir..nope
@@dontaylor7315 well click bait? MAYBE but when i post it seems the thumbnails are fairly randon and def picked for you although you CAN change it but i generally dont bother this person prob just lazy as i am
tralane from star trek?
Yes
Hollywood had no idea. Still doesn't.
Mamie Van Doren from Pulp Fiction
Unbeliveable , $ 0.29 a gal . For gasoline in 1955 , that was the average price per gal. She payed $1.50 . According to U.S. Energy Info. Admin. adverage today is $3.32 per gal . She got 5 gal. + . Inflation sucks .
Used to buy full tank for $5
@@eltonspurlock I know what you mean . 5 bucks in my old 64"Country Squire and I was set for the night . Gas , grass or ass nobody rides for free . My very first car was a 1961 Ford Galaxie Starliner , black body ,red top , red leather like interior , 390 c.i. interceptor engine , a very sweet ride . A drunk sideswiped the whole left side and pushed me off the road . By the time I was able to get a cop the idiot was long gone. A narrow road , idiot swerving ,could'nt get out of the way . Man , was my wife pissed , at least she and I wern't hurt . I missed that car , my next ride was the Country Squire , A totally different vibe .
Well, everything's relative. By 1972, a gallon of regular was still only 32 cents, and after I got my license, Dad let me use his '67 V8 Chevy. But with a dead cylinder, it got maybe 10mpg, and devoured all my lawn-mowing money!
@@sunbeam8866 I had similar situation . A friend had a 74" Chevy C 10 pickup that would'nt run right, said ( l'd sell the damn thing for $100 ) I could'nt get the cash from my pocket fast enough. A push rod and rocker arm + tune up and I was good to go . Older V8's were easy to work on . That truck served me well for many years.
Fun. Hot dance & musical number at 8:44. Love that Mamie!
Liz's bra is the most dangerous thing in this movie. You could poke your eye out with that thing!
Blimey John Saxon was very young
46:22 tha must have been were they got the idea of hooded sweaters.
Notice...No Patina? Lowered but not 'slammed'!
Devious cigarettes throughout the movie... smoke, smoke, smoke that cigarette
The Squire from Gothos!
the cove
You must remember Jim bo when you multiply 150 pounds with a ten foot leaver it could easily be closet 500 pounds or 3oo pounds or unknown # of pounds without math .must abb in the bar
Rock 'n' roll and fifties teenage angst ? 21 jump street or Mod squad an fifties version?
no A fifties version dont use "an" in this context
Just as you get engrossed in the movie, up pops a commercial. Ruins the mood. Thumbs down, greedy UA-cam. I'll find something else to watch. Too bad.
What ever it worth it ok got its point over
WHY men die younger.
11:43 A young Don Knotts on the left??
$10.00 to rent a room in 1955 !!!!!!!!
Must be cool to be wanted
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
@3:09 what does he ask?
@@YowzaBowzaWowzaokay thanks.
The dudes name is Osinger.
I started to watch this, but considering the poor quality print, and the posting here, way down at 480p, --I'll pass for now.
@@YowzaBowzaWowza Speak for yourself. Not being missed by you is fine with me.
@@YowzaBowzaWowza Thanks for the compliment, Bowz.
You don’t except me to go into combat with loose change in my pockets do you?
Sgt bautguamo
why didn't she whip out her cell phone and call the police ? Oh , that's right ....never mind
5:08 This scene is sus. "I could use another boy..how old are you"? A little on the ghey side if nobody's asking me.
The people in this movie are bad news. Yes, that's what they are. Bad news.