They should have included the scene in the dvd of the guys talking about what engine was in the Charger. I think it’s very cool that those legendary engines were mentioned.
I saw this movie in the theater during its' original release, and I distinctly remember each and every one of these scenes. Can't say I ever saw it on TV. Acting was painful to watch, but the cars and the chases were worth the price of admission. Peace:-)
Thanks for your efforts. I saw this movie in 1974 perhaps it's first release and it became one of the best movie of my life time. I welcome you to keep this movie unforgettable. God bless you.
I remember, now, the George Raft/ coin toss scene from when seeing it for the first time as a yewt, on the telly. Mary's "parsoning" seemed familiar, too. Thank you for the share. I agree that the scenes are worthwhile. With all the extras that are included on the dvd that I have of it, it is disappointing that deleted scenes weren't inclusive. Well, thanks for picking up after the releasers.
I Love it. Thanks so much for posting this!!! I was watching Jackie Brown in the theater on christmas 1997 and when this movie came on the TV set I exclaimed 'a charger!'- then I found out what the movie was, and on Thanksgiving 1999 I was stuck in Canada on a biz trip and Speedvision had it playing. Made my holiday.
Great upload. I had only seen the TV versions before, and didn't realize these were "added" footage; I thought it was the actual movie. Still haven't seen the theatrical version, but I think these are good adds and help flesh out the story (which admittedly is pretty threadbare)
Glad you saved these. I think I have 'em on some old decaying VHS somewhere, but I'm not sure where. I remember when the DVD came out I was wondering "Where's the Johnny Angel quarter-pitching scene?"
Thanks for the upload. All of these 'lost' scenes were obviously shot at the same time as the rest of the film. Like most movies, scenes get cut for various reasons. When they went to TV broadcast, and like you mentioned, needed to pad it out to fill a time slot, they added these previously cut scenes to the TV broadcast of the film. This can be compared with the reverse case of the well known TV movie "DUEL" by Steven Spielberg. There, a movie made for television went to the big screen. Scenes were added later, and shot later, when the film was released theatrically (and on DVD). If you own the DVD of DUEL, you have the padded-out version, not the original which aired on television and scared the bejeezus out of everybody. ;)
Sometimes I feel like I'm the only person that even noticed the brutally badass BelAir. This is the car that lit-up my love affair with "sleepers", and my second favorite in film history, right behind Gator McCluskey's big brown Ford, from the movie "White Lightning"!
Of the three Chargers used in the film, none were originally Limelight Green. All were custom painted, with hand-taped custom stripes made up by the film's car crew. The '440' numbers at the rear sides were just house address stickers applied over the green, then painted over with the black stripes, then the stickers got removed, leaving green numbers on the car- simple and cheap!
@jwramc Both 69s were AC cars, the 68 is unknown. The paint is Dodge's 1971 "Citron Yella", code GY3, custom sprayed by the film's car crew. They put mailbox number stickers on the quarters, taped the stripe, then shot satin black paint, removed the tape & stickers, leaving the Yella '440' in the black stripe- cheap & easy. As they approach the bar/pool hall, look @ the door mirror to see another Charger reflected in it. They had no camera trucks- they just used the other Chargers to shoot from!
The late Vic Morrow as "Franklin" made this movie great. The aging sherriff that won't wear a badge or gun and has contept for technology and will not stop his pursuit for nothing. They should have added these scenes. Movies like these are long history. Today it is all CGI fakery.
I have the original version on VHS, and it has all these scenes. Didn't realize some releases had these omitted from them. I've always wondered if there was more than 1 Charger used for the filming. If so what happened to it. As well, I've always been curious about more Charger options/mods, details, etc.
what ever happened to ALL the Dodge Chargers used in this film after filming ? Do ~ ANY ~ survive ? Gotta LOVE the Old Mopar Muscle cars ! Timeless style !
One did it was bought from the lot there at the studio the guy who owned it, let his girlfriend’s friend drive it and wrecked it on the Los Angeles Freeway it was never repaired
Coming back to this film once again, I noticed upon watching it this weekend that there's a couple of continuity goofs with the Impala. The rear license plate is different from one scene to the next in the beginning when he drops off Deke at the store manager's house. There it's not RTG 911, like it is in the rest of the film. At first I thought the change was on purpose to fool the cops, but I think it's just a second car goof. There were two Impala's I believe, as the dents in the trunks match up exactly, either. Other goof is hubcaps appearing on the Impala in a scene after the car is shown without any hubcaps.
@apatheticempathy Three Chargers were used- a '69 R/T (has the C-pillar chrome of a vinyl top car), a '69 base model (seen just before hitting the red pickup) and a '68 R/T (side-by-side bumping with police car). The original colors aren't known but I believe one of them was gold based on the scenes while repairing it and while the helicopter is overhead...little clues there..
My version, I recorded back in the 1980's. It was on a Saturday or Sunday noon or 2pm mid day movie kinda deal. Before cable. My version has almost all of this. I don't recall Fonda taking the coffee in the managers office, nor do I recall the engine size talk, or the book reciting talk. Those scenes are still in my version, just those little parts still edited out. Interesting. I still love the Charger.......
@lemmyswartt Yes, these scenes were filmed at the same time, but were never part of the film- there was no 'longer edit' before the film was to come to TV and was too short, so these unused shots were then added-in..
You missed the point of the scene. In the short version, the guy says 'It had a black racing stripe' because it DOES have stripes & it was so obvious, he only mentions it to mock the cop, as in "How could he miss that?". In the long version, the discussion of the engine is also mocking the cop, simply because they can't possibly KNOW what's under the hood (they've never looked) & it doesn't matter. They are making it up as they go along, wasting the cop's time, letting Larry get further ahead.
The tape copy I bought from ebay has part of them and part of them it doesn't search the internet, their are several of these remade Chargers out there, the last one I say i forget what the asking price was, but I thought it to be a pretty reasonable, As for using another Charger not film trucks, remember speeds were 100mph+ For you model car guys, if you shoot flat white and spray it with Luma Yellow Pearl I believe the model paint is called, you get a very close match to this paint.
Wow how weird you posted that the same day or should i say after mine LOL, i don't remember anything being deleted from the kidnapping, store office scene or the confrontation between Franklin or Donahue and last but not least telling dingleberry to tuck it in.? I've seen this movie plenty.
@jwramc Ah, very interesting. I can only imagine how much one of those Charger's might be worth today. Would be loads of fun for us mopar guys, just seeing pics and knowing it was till out there. Wonder if anybody has pics of any of them, after the filming? Any further details on the cars? Like all real R/T's, all auto's, what paint was used to prep them for the film? Anything else? Thanks....
My dad who was from Brooklyn and went to New Utrecht was friends with the guy the mechanic call Zeke in the credits they say his name is Adam r o a k e and my father told me when he seen this movie his real name was Richard gurla
@SixSpeedSS The VHS came after it ran on TV in 1978, so it would likely have gotten the added scenes. The scenes are not 'omitted'- they weren't used for the original theater release because the director chose not to use them. They were added for TV to stretch the film out to fill a 2-hour timeslot. 3 Chargers were used. Two destroyed in crashes with the train, one was sold to a crew member who's wife wrecked the car in the late 1970s. All three are believed long scraped and gone.
I had a 67 GTO. Premium was 28 cents a gallon. When it hit 33 cents a gallon I thought they'd lost their minds and people would never pay that much for gas. Next thing I know I'm drivin a 72 Vega pay in 40 cents for regular
@SixSpeedSS The crew guy that bought the main car (the '69 fake-RT) fixed it up, and has shown a few grainy photos of it from the few short years he owned it. Go on dodgechargerDOTcom and look for the DMCL threads in the Charger Discussion section- lots of chatter there. Both of the '69s were base models, the '68 may or may not have been a real RT. The #1 'hero' car that was sold was a base 318/Auto, originally blue with black vinyl top. We don't know what drivetrains the other two had. More...
@lemmyswartt The VHS tape came AFTER the TV version, so it of course can contain the added footage. As for my source, that would be the director, John Hough. And, yes, like every film ever made, additional scenes were filmed & never used. The 5 I've included here were just like that 'til the TV execs said the film needed to be a few minutes longer for TV & Hough went back & picked these shots as 'good enough' to insert- but these scenes were NEVER in the theater as a 'longer version'.
What are the chances of getting one of those? I'm such a fan that i saw this on the big screen when it came out and watched it at least once a year since then :-)
Yeah, I agree, they do add to the characters quite well. The cut version shows the 'friends' of Mary not helping the cops at all, in fact, adding misinformation about the stripe (which the Camaro they are near has, not the Charger). But in the extended ver. they do supply crucial info about what engine the Dodge has. So the goons are slimier in the extended ver. by ratting on Mary.
I’ve seen these before, my parents taped it off _AMC_ or _Turner Classic Movies_ for me back in 1996... although I probably have the tape, I don’t know where it is right now...
You are thinking of Daniel Stern, but he's not old enough to have looked as this actor does in 1973. If you want to see him really young, check out "Blue Thunder". Good eye, tho!
Unless you have a copy of the 'extended version DVD' I created a few years ago and offered on eBay, your DVD does NOT have the coffee scene, the 'holding you responsible' scene, the pitching quarters scene, the 351 Cleveland' scene, nor the 'book, bozo' scene.
I would be interested in buying a copy of your extended version DVD. “Dirty Mary Crazy Larry” is my dad’s top favorite movie, and I can’t think of a better Christmas or birthday gift for him than a DVD of it containing these lost scenes.
triva the colour on the charger 440 was the same used in australia it was called (lime light green) rare on a R//T 6 pack only see one e48 this colour with srange blackouts/stripes
Of course the car to love in the movie is the Charger, but no one here has remarked on the 'goof' or incorrect info about the 'Blue Chevy'. It's a '66, not a '67 or '68 as the witnesses relate to the police. Witnesses are often wrong, so it's not a mistake. But it's never corrected when they find the car. It's not important info at that point, so it makes sense they gloss over it. But I had a '66 Chevy Impala, exactly like that car. Also a 4 Door, just like it, except mine had posts. And it even had a dent in the rear just like that one. ;) Mine had a 283 and could get up and go, believe it or not. I bought it for the huge price of fifty bucks. That's right, a drivable, running car (burned oil) for fifty bucks. And the guy actually drove it to my house (since I didn't have a license yet). ;) This was back in the early 80s. The car in the film, or at least the foley f/x sound like a big block chevy engine. So the car might've come with a 396, then souped. It's been noted that some people spotted a '327' emblem on it. Maybe. I didn't notice it. But to my ears, it sounds like a big block. And when I got older (and a license;) I had a lot of big block motors. But I'll never forget that '66 Impala. It was my first car.
@binnyman You've answered your own question! :) If you remember these scenes, you've seen it on TV... cuz they were not in the theatrical release, but added later specifically for TV. There's no mystery about it, nor any FOX-style revisionist history going on. As for the acting, I don't see bad acting, just quirky characters...tho I'm very biased about this film, so... :)
They shoudl have thrown in a quick shot of somebody slapping the guy who said "351 Cleveland" for getting his Ford and Mopar engines mixed up. Or maybe a behind the scenes shot of somebody slapping the guy who wrote that into the script.
Thanks. You gotta wonder what the guy who gave it one star was thinking. Just what is he comparing it to? Has he seen better 'lost scenes' from this movie? Duh.
This works if you know a paint and body place that will make a small amount and not have to buy a whole quart, not many want to buy a quart for doing a model or two.
2- The cop saw the Charger drive off. He knows the color, the stripe, & the model, so he never asks for that. They offer it to toy with him. These guys are obvious gearheads based on the car they have & all the engine types they rattle off. Would such guys seriously suggest a 351 Cleveland was in a Charger? They were playing stupid, entertaining themselves with the cop's frustration. Note the slow turn of the head after the guy mentions the stripe & the other guy's smirk as the cop leaves.
No, I disagree. The cop is assuming they know something, because they are friends with Mary. That's why the cop is interviewing them to begin with. Secondly, the Charger has a stripe, which may or may not be obvious in the getaway, but the Camaro they're standing around also has one. Yes, it's to mock the cop. Never said it wasn't. But I stand by my assertion that the cut scene makes them out to be less helpful. The uncut scene has one member correctly state it was a '440', remember.
That was Bill McKenzie, ex Homicide Man, has a snack shop at the airport, greatest burgers in town! He never forgot the Floyd Case... Got it with an axe during the rush hour!
They had no money for film trucks, which is the reason they used the extra Chargers. No scenes were filmed at 100mph, most especially with a camera vehicle right along side.
Seriously I bought it from a woman who had to bail her hubby out of jail . She sold me a chevy caprice classic station wagon her hubby had customized this thing. It was seriously faster than the little cool asian race cars that were comming out
They should have included the scene in the dvd of the guys talking about what engine was in the Charger. I think it’s very cool that those legendary engines were mentioned.
I saw this movie in the theater during its' original release, and I distinctly remember each and every one of these scenes. Can't say I ever saw it on TV. Acting was painful to watch, but the cars and the chases were worth the price of admission. Peace:-)
Parts of theses lost scenes were and wrent in the movie. These are a mixture.
Thanks for your efforts. I saw this movie in 1974 perhaps it's first release and it became one of the best movie of my life time. I welcome you to keep this movie unforgettable. God bless you.
Spectacular Stunts!!!!These are some of the Best Stunt Scenes from 20th Century Fox up to this date! These are Real Stuntman & Real Stunt Cars!
I remember, now, the George Raft/ coin toss scene from when seeing it for the first time as a yewt, on the telly. Mary's "parsoning" seemed familiar, too. Thank you for the share. I agree that the scenes are worthwhile. With all the extras that are included on the dvd that I have of it, it is disappointing that deleted scenes weren't inclusive. Well, thanks for picking up after the releasers.
I Love it. Thanks so much for posting this!!! I was watching Jackie Brown in the theater on christmas 1997 and when this movie came on the TV set I exclaimed 'a charger!'- then I found out what the movie was, and on Thanksgiving 1999 I was stuck in Canada on a biz trip and Speedvision had it playing. Made my holiday.
No need to apologise - quality-wise, this is pretty GOOD by YT standards! Thanks for making the effort.
I saw this movie at the drive-in when I was a kid.
🏆Same here it was the best movie ever saw when I was 12🍀so cool 😎✌️
Great find! They really do add to the movie, shame they didn't include them on the DVD...
Great upload. I had only seen the TV versions before, and didn't realize these were "added" footage; I thought it was the actual movie. Still haven't seen the theatrical version, but I think these are good adds and help flesh out the story (which admittedly is pretty threadbare)
Who the hell is thumbing this down? Priceless footage!
Glad you saved these. I think I have 'em on some old decaying VHS somewhere, but I'm not sure where. I remember when the DVD came out I was wondering "Where's the Johnny Angel quarter-pitching scene?"
Thank You for posting it. You are right the scenes together do develope the characters.
Thanks for the upload.
All of these 'lost' scenes were obviously shot at the same time as the rest of the film. Like most movies, scenes get cut for various reasons. When they went to TV broadcast, and like you mentioned, needed to pad it out to fill a time slot, they added these previously cut scenes to the TV broadcast of the film.
This can be compared with the reverse case of the well known TV movie "DUEL" by Steven Spielberg. There, a movie made for television went to the big screen. Scenes were added later, and shot later, when the film was released theatrically (and on DVD). If you own the DVD of DUEL, you have the padded-out version, not the original which aired on television and scared the bejeezus out of everybody. ;)
Can you get the non padded out one?
@jwramc Thank you for providing this and helping keep the memory of this "B" film alive!
My grandparents taped this movie with a VCR off Cinemax in 1988 for me. It had all the scenes I wore that tape out.!!!
Sometimes I feel like I'm the only person that even noticed the brutally badass BelAir. This is the car that lit-up my love affair with "sleepers", and my second favorite in film history, right behind Gator McCluskey's big brown Ford, from the movie "White Lightning"!
William Volenec To be accurate, it isn't a Bel Air, nor is it a Biscayne. It's an Impala. :)
Of the three Chargers used in the film, none were originally Limelight Green. All were custom painted, with hand-taped custom stripes made up by the film's car crew. The '440' numbers at the rear sides were just house address stickers applied over the green, then painted over with the black stripes, then the stickers got removed, leaving green numbers on the car- simple and cheap!
@jwramc Both 69s were AC cars, the 68 is unknown. The paint is Dodge's 1971 "Citron Yella", code GY3, custom sprayed by the film's car crew. They put mailbox number stickers on the quarters, taped the stripe, then shot satin black paint, removed the tape & stickers, leaving the Yella '440' in the black stripe- cheap & easy. As they approach the bar/pool hall, look @ the door mirror to see another Charger reflected in it. They had no camera trucks- they just used the other Chargers to shoot from!
I was trying to remember that scene where the witnesses described the car. A Charger with a 351 Cleveland. Great writing. Awesome find.
Not in a charger . 351 Cleveland was in Ford's mustang,Torina,
That was the guy that played Leo in Hill Street Blues
The late Vic Morrow as "Franklin" made this movie great. The aging sherriff that won't wear a badge or gun and has contept for technology and will not stop his pursuit for nothing. They should have added these scenes. Movies like these are long history. Today it is all CGI fakery.
I have the original version on VHS, and it has all these scenes. Didn't realize some releases had these omitted from them.
I've always wondered if there was more than 1 Charger used for the filming. If so what happened to it. As well, I've always been curious about more Charger options/mods, details, etc.
what ever happened to ALL the Dodge Chargers used in this film after filming ?
Do ~ ANY ~ survive ?
Gotta LOVE the Old Mopar Muscle cars ! Timeless style !
I HEARD NONE SURVIVED.
NOTHIN BETTER WATCHIN THIS ON A SATURDAY NIGHT AS A KID.
One did it was bought from the lot there at the studio the guy who owned it, let his girlfriend’s friend drive it and wrecked it on the Los Angeles Freeway it was never repaired
THIS IS PERHAPS THE VERY FINEST AMERICAN MID BUDGET MOVIE....EVER MADE ....PERIOD!!!!
i seen this movie in 1974 at the theater , age 9 . the Charger and Susan George are branded in my memory
Coming back to this film once again, I noticed upon watching it this weekend that there's a couple of continuity goofs with the Impala. The rear license plate is different from one scene to the next in the beginning when he drops off Deke at the store manager's house. There it's not RTG 911, like it is in the rest of the film. At first I thought the change was on purpose to fool the cops, but I think it's just a second car goof. There were two Impala's I believe, as the dents in the trunks match up exactly, either. Other goof is hubcaps appearing on the Impala in a scene after the car is shown without any hubcaps.
@apatheticempathy Three Chargers were used- a '69 R/T (has the C-pillar chrome of a vinyl top car), a '69 base model (seen just before hitting the red pickup) and a '68 R/T (side-by-side bumping with police car). The original colors aren't known but I believe one of them was gold based on the scenes while repairing it and while the helicopter is overhead...little clues there..
My version, I recorded back in the 1980's. It was on a Saturday or Sunday noon or 2pm mid day movie kinda deal. Before cable. My version has almost all of this. I don't recall Fonda taking the coffee in the managers office, nor do I recall the engine size talk, or the book reciting talk. Those scenes are still in my version, just those little parts still edited out. Interesting. I still love the Charger.......
Yes, as I said, these scenes were added to the TV version. I, too, got them recorded of TV in the 80s. :)
wow, i got the DVD, wish these scenes were in it...
James Gavin had some pretty good lines in the flick. Hell of a helo driver...
@lemmyswartt Yes, these scenes were filmed at the same time, but were never part of the film- there was no 'longer edit' before the film was to come to TV and was too short, so these unused shots were then added-in..
This was one great "Drive-In movie flick from 1974! Peter Fonda kicked ass! The same way he did in "Outlaw Blues" in 1977!
You missed the point of the scene. In the short version, the guy says 'It had a black racing stripe' because it DOES have stripes & it was so obvious, he only mentions it to mock the cop, as in "How could he miss that?". In the long version, the discussion of the engine is also mocking the cop, simply because they can't possibly KNOW what's under the hood (they've never looked) & it doesn't matter. They are making it up as they go along, wasting the cop's time, letting Larry get further ahead.
Missing scenes? These scenes are all in the dvd of this movie that I have.
Dodge chargers are awesome fun boyo
Listen for that 4barrel Rochester quadrajet carburetor moaning n the 66.
who here come to see the Charger
Raises hand
Im here to see mary the car is secondary
Strange isn't it that just a few short years later, actor Vic Morrow would be killed in another stunt involving a helicopter:(
The tape copy I bought from ebay has part of them and part of them it doesn't
search the internet, their are several of these remade Chargers out there, the last one I say i forget what the asking price was, but I thought it to be a pretty reasonable,
As for using another Charger not film trucks, remember speeds were 100mph+
For you model car guys, if you shoot flat white and spray it with Luma Yellow Pearl I believe the model paint is called, you get a very close match to this paint.
Keep going partner cause my top end is unlimited !!!
Wow how weird you posted that the same day or should i say after mine LOL, i don't remember anything being deleted from the kidnapping, store office scene or the confrontation between Franklin or Donahue and last but not least telling dingleberry to tuck it in.? I've seen this movie plenty.
@jwramc Ah, very interesting. I can only imagine how much one of those Charger's might be worth today. Would be loads of fun for us mopar guys, just seeing pics and knowing it was till out there. Wonder if anybody has pics of any of them, after the filming?
Any further details on the cars? Like all real R/T's, all auto's, what paint was used to prep them for the film? Anything else? Thanks....
My dad who was from Brooklyn and went to New Utrecht was friends with the guy the mechanic call Zeke in the credits they say his name is Adam r o a k e and my father told me when he seen this movie his real name was Richard gurla
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Roarke
@SixSpeedSS The VHS came after it ran on TV in 1978, so it would likely have gotten the added scenes. The scenes are not 'omitted'- they weren't used for the original theater release because the director chose not to use them. They were added for TV to stretch the film out to fill a 2-hour timeslot. 3 Chargers were used. Two destroyed in crashes with the train, one was sold to a crew member who's wife wrecked the car in the late 1970s. All three are believed long scraped and gone.
A hand full of quarters could have bought a few gallons of premium.
...still can...I have really big hands...
I had a 67 GTO. Premium was 28 cents a gallon. When it hit 33 cents a gallon I thought they'd lost their minds and people would never pay that much for gas. Next thing I know I'm drivin a 72 Vega pay in 40 cents for regular
or a hand job.
There is a "supercharged" version of this they made, with enhanced restored sound or something. Its great with a good sound system.
Got to wait for the last one.
@SixSpeedSS The crew guy that bought the main car (the '69 fake-RT) fixed it up, and has shown a few grainy photos of it from the few short years he owned it. Go on dodgechargerDOTcom and look for the DMCL threads in the Charger Discussion section- lots of chatter there. Both of the '69s were base models, the '68 may or may not have been a real RT. The #1 'hero' car that was sold was a base 318/Auto, originally blue with black vinyl top. We don't know what drivetrains the other two had. More...
You're muchly welcome. I can tell you feel the same about them and the film itself as I do. :)
ME TOO !! BETTER THAN FAST AND FURIOUS EVEN !!
Cage; take the point! Kirby! Littlejohn! You're on me! The rest of you! Spread out!
@lemmyswartt The VHS tape came AFTER the TV version, so it of course can contain the added footage. As for my source, that would be the director, John Hough. And, yes, like every film ever made, additional scenes were filmed & never used. The 5 I've included here were just like that 'til the TV execs said the film needed to be a few minutes longer for TV & Hough went back & picked these shots as 'good enough' to insert- but these scenes were NEVER in the theater as a 'longer version'.
Thanks for posting! Do you have the whole movie with commercials
What are the chances of getting one of those? I'm such a fan that i saw this on the big screen when it came out and watched it at least once a year since then :-)
Yeah, I agree, they do add to the characters quite well. The cut version shows the 'friends' of Mary not helping the cops at all, in fact, adding misinformation about the stripe (which the Camaro they are near has, not the Charger). But in the extended ver. they do supply crucial info about what engine the Dodge has. So the goons are slimier in the extended ver. by ratting on Mary.
@whitebread8381 The three Chargers were comprised of two 440-4vs and one 383-4v, no six packs.
That's because the 440 6bbl wasn't offered in the charger til.1970
I’ve seen these before, my parents taped it off _AMC_ or _Turner Classic Movies_ for me back in 1996... although I probably have the tape, I don’t know where it is right now...
You are thinking of Daniel Stern, but he's not old enough to have looked as this actor does in 1973. If you want to see him really young, check out "Blue Thunder". Good eye, tho!
Unless you have a copy of the 'extended version DVD' I created a few years ago and offered on eBay, your DVD does NOT have the coffee scene, the 'holding you responsible' scene, the pitching quarters scene, the 351 Cleveland' scene, nor the 'book, bozo' scene.
Do you still make the extended version DVDs?
I would be interested in buying a copy of your extended version DVD. “Dirty Mary Crazy Larry” is my dad’s top favorite movie, and I can’t think of a better Christmas or birthday gift for him than a DVD of it containing these lost scenes.
@jwramc thanks for your reply we saw the movie recently and my buddy thought it was a six pack by the paint scheme
triva the colour on the charger 440 was the same used in australia it was called
(lime light green) rare on a R//T 6 pack only see one e48 this colour with srange blackouts/stripes
I saw this one and also Squirm at the same theatre.
On what movie site is that?
I like 'em! They're natural. And very white and clean - just crooked. ;) But I do miss her British accent.
Of course the car to love in the movie is the Charger, but no one here has remarked on the 'goof' or incorrect info about the 'Blue Chevy'.
It's a '66, not a '67 or '68 as the witnesses relate to the police. Witnesses are often wrong, so it's not a mistake. But it's never corrected when they find the car. It's not important info at that point, so it makes sense they gloss over it.
But I had a '66 Chevy Impala, exactly like that car. Also a 4 Door, just like it, except mine had posts. And it even had a dent in the rear just like that one. ;) Mine had a 283 and could get up and go, believe it or not. I bought it for the huge price of fifty bucks. That's right, a drivable, running car (burned oil) for fifty bucks. And the guy actually drove it to my house (since I didn't have a license yet). ;) This was back in the early 80s.
The car in the film, or at least the foley f/x sound like a big block chevy engine. So the car might've come with a 396, then souped. It's been noted that some people spotted a '327' emblem on it. Maybe. I didn't notice it. But to my ears, it sounds like a big block. And when I got older (and a license;) I had a lot of big block motors.
But I'll never forget that '66 Impala. It was my first car.
RIP Adam Roarke........
" Try not to squash the tomatoes " .
Love fast loud roaring engines
@binnyman You've answered your own question! :) If you remember these scenes, you've seen it on TV... cuz they were not in the theatrical release, but added later specifically for TV. There's no mystery about it, nor any FOX-style revisionist history going on. As for the acting, I don't see bad acting, just quirky characters...tho I'm very biased about this film, so... :)
They shoudl have thrown in a quick shot of somebody slapping the guy who said "351 Cleveland" for getting his Ford and Mopar engines mixed up. Or maybe a behind the scenes shot of somebody slapping the guy who wrote that into the script.
THE WORD HOT WAS INVENTED JUST TO DESCRIBE SUSAN GEORGE
No shit!
just as hot in "straw dogs"
@@grantw.whitwam9948 YUP
@@bamaguy50 WHAT WAS STRAWDOGS ?
@@joeshmo4929 it was a movie with Dustin Hoffman and Susan.... ua-cam.com/video/yXkqGVfm1mo/v-deo.html
Larry was polite to Millie, give him credit for that.
Thanks. You gotta wonder what the guy who gave it one star was thinking. Just what is he comparing it to? Has he seen better 'lost scenes' from this movie? Duh.
This works if you know a paint and body place that will make a small amount and not have to buy a whole quart, not many want to buy a quart for doing a model or two.
I remember those . It's got a black racing stripe.lol best movie
Cops don't want us to have these beautiful fast muscles for road fun
I tried to tell my brothers little wigger friends that my car is fast yet they insisted upon a civic lol
pisses me off they aren't on my DVD
Remember the dude who out ran drove the cops ? Yah he was in his Hellcat Dodge
"Nothin' gonna stop us now , right Deke "?
Sure doesn't look like it as he taps Larry's shoulders
First movie I saw at a drive in movie . I was around 14-15 got drunk and then vomited first time I did that also. Lololol
2- The cop saw the Charger drive off. He knows the color, the stripe, & the model, so he never asks for that. They offer it to toy with him. These guys are obvious gearheads based on the car they have & all the engine types they rattle off. Would such guys seriously suggest a 351 Cleveland was in a Charger? They were playing stupid, entertaining themselves with the cop's frustration. Note the slow turn of the head after the guy mentions the stripe & the other guy's smirk as the cop leaves.
Odd that a NASCAR level like Deke had so many screws loose.
Drank himself out of the gig.
No, I disagree. The cop is assuming they know something, because they are friends with Mary. That's why the cop is interviewing them to begin with. Secondly, the Charger has a stripe, which may or may not be obvious in the getaway, but the Camaro they're standing around also has one. Yes, it's to mock the cop. Never said it wasn't. But I stand by my assertion that the cut scene makes them out to be less helpful. The uncut scene has one member correctly state it was a '440', remember.
at 4minutes 2 seconds theres a clip which shows an actor that resembles one of the wet bandits from home alone, wonder if it`s him?
in scene 4..that was ex-cop who tried to sell Harry some cream pie in 'Magnum Force'.
"In broad daylight at close range. Must have looked like ripe melons."
That was Bill McKenzie, ex Homicide Man, has a snack shop at the airport, greatest burgers in town! He never forgot the Floyd Case... Got it with an axe during the rush hour!
351 Cleveland in a Charger? Who wrote this stuff?
They had no money for film trucks, which is the reason they used the extra Chargers. No scenes were filmed at 100mph, most especially with a camera vehicle right along side.
the female police dispatcher was the Girl from the Born Losers film
Seriously I bought it from a woman who had to bail her hubby out of jail . She sold me a chevy caprice classic station wagon her hubby had customized this thing. It was seriously faster than the little cool asian race cars that were comming out
Love this I live love love love love love love love love love love love love love love love love love love love this
Well found jwramc :-)
Well, the guy did say that the other guy was crazy for saying that the car had a 351 Cleveland.
this is some gud stuff
Vic Morrow was the man!!
I always got Peter Fonda and Michael Sarrazin mixed up
In the early 70s Peter Fonda was one cool dude.
Thunderbolt this a real good as movie lot of action can't find the dam movie!!!!!!
Go to Amazon . com and search the movie title. DVD is $13.
Susan George was hot back in the day. See Straw Dogs.
dingleberry lol as Peter Fonda calls her
I love muscle cars