Back in the day tires were much more noisy because the rubber compounds were more rudimentary. You could skirt off of gravel. People would make noise just rounding a corner lol especially high performance wheels. Even tire Technology was different back then bud!
I agree. Superchargers emanate this whine sound that changes depending on the engine speed. I don't hear any supercharger whine sounds from this Challenger, so clearly it isn't supercharged.
@@77PacerStudios The whine comes from the belt. Theoretically it 'could' have had a Paxton/McCollough blow through supercharger, but no it just a stock 440 Mag. I always thought that was a pretty outlandish commentary from the cop on the radio. Just like the car reaching 160.
@@vincemajestyk9497 The thing about the 440 (like all big block V8s) is that it is such a gargantuan torquey engine (even in non-high performance guise) that it doesn't need a supercharger to go fast. But yeah...I call BS on 160mph too. If you had a car that was relatively light, with high enough rear gears, the right tire size, and well thought out aerodynamics, 160mph is possible. But in this era, you're not going to get there in stock form. I have seen a lot of posts by current/former owners of these cars and the consensus is that things get sketchy at 130mph. There are other 70s car chase movies where I've seen commentary like this by police. Dirty Mary Crazy Larry is another example. Larry jumps the Chevy over a construction site using a truck ramp. Later on, the cops discuss the incident and assume the Chevy was 'supped'.
@@jamesfarmer6039 All five were loaned to Cupid Productions by Chrysler for promotional consideration. Four were equipped with a 440 CID V8 and a 4-speed manual transmission, while the fifth was a 383 CID V8 with an automatic transmission. All sustained some damage during filming but none were totaled out. The car that hit the 2 bulldozers was a white 67 camaro with a 250 6 cyl.
Lucky me. I have owned my 70 Challenger since 1979. Today it is identical to the Vanishing Point Challenger except for a few things. I have a stock rear view mirror. And mine is a built 340 with a 727 torqueflite trans. 8 3/4 4:10 rear end. So 160 is 😂🤣🫤 not happening. But it will get to 120 pretty quick. Though I do not suggest it. And you will not be there long. I also have installed the 17” rally wheels made from aluminum 9” in the back 8” in front. I drive it all around as many nice days as I can. Also go to cruise ins and cars and coffee.
@@Paul-zz8lu. Nice. My second car was a 69 Charger with a 383 automatic. I let my brother drive it to high school. I paid $900 for it. I still miss that car.
When I went to the theater to see this movie for the first time. The owner of the theater had his one year old 70 Dodge challenger R/T parked out in front. This was back in the days of neighborhood mom and pop movie theaters. That was back in June 1971.
I recognized it the second i saw it its the little town of austin nevada my family owns one of the ranches in the valley there. Ive driven that strech of road hundreds of times and never knew a movie had been filmed there
@@ridgely1635 Wow, good eye! They're driving down water St, closing in on Virginia St at 2:31 (the church is a good reference point), then turning left on Virginia St, and then making a right from Virginia St onto Main St at 2:39. It's amazing to see how things have changed (and remained) for 53 years! Cheers!
I just got my first car. It was a 69 SS El Camino. The movie became a cult muscle car classic back then, we watched it at a drive in ,any times. It was almost as good as the 68 movie “Bullit”.
You're not. I had an ex Wisconsin State Patrol Lieutenant's Squad from 1977, bought it in 84 for $825 from the WSP auction, 1977 Plymouth Gran Fury, 440 Police Interceptor engine, cop tires, slotted cop rims w/poverty hub caps, dual exhaust, cop charging system, heavy duty cop cooling, pinion snubber, cop sway bar, cop transmission cooler, tan cop interior, it was slate-grey with 2 chrome spotlights up front, the car was in excellent condition for a squad, had 50,000 miles on it, I loved that car, but I ended up trading it for a 73 Kawasaki H2 750 triple two stroke widow maker, I always figured I'd find another squad, I did buy an 80 Gran Fury Milwaukee PD Detective squad while I owned the bike, but it wasn't the same. Heavy duty cop equipment, but just a 360 4 bbl. Yes, I understand your attachment to MoPar Squads. They were awesome cars. I think I died inside watching the Blues Brothers, even tho it's maybe my favorite flick of all time. God Bless Mother MoPar!!!
Also no rollcage, the guys don't have helmets, and don't have stunt/racing type belts. The other guy even pushes the roof not to fall. They just took a stock car and rolled it.
I think the actual pursuit vehicles were big block, dual exhaust cars. They sounded spectacular and moved down the road fast as hell... That was probably a 318 or 360 Satellite that they rolled... Nothing like a 70s era Fuselage body MoPar Squad!!!
I noticed the single exhaust when it rolled over too! So, that '70 Belvedere either had a 318 or a 383 2bbl under the hood. If it was a 383 4bbl, it would've been dual exhaust for sure!
Hello, folk, car chase scenes from old classic movies like this are absolutely better than Mr. Bean, SpongeBob SquarePants, Peppa Pig, Oggy And The Cockroaches, Say Yes To The Dress, K-Pop, K-Drama, educational language grammar, spelling, pronunciation, Math, national, world History, Science, its experiment, other school subject, Civil Service Examination, General Knowledge learning tutorial, quiz, dancing cute sexy girl, journal scrapbooking, stationery, art, craft, drawing, delicious food, snack, dessert, cake, or dish, drink, or beverage recipe, ASMR, coding, spreadsheet, slideshow presentation program tutorial, all electric bass, guitar, real drum videos including tutorials, reviews, and song covers especially if it's a female player of those musical instruments, greetings from the Philippines!
Oh, I'd say it's up there with all of those things--definitely ahead of 'Say Yes To The Dress', but equally satisfying as a recipe, or certain eps of Spongebob Squarepants.
Also no rollcages or helmets worn by the drivers. In the roll scene if you look closely, they don't even have racing seatbelts. Probably just standard waist belt back then. They risked their lives to film this.
@@andynewman835 that argument is just plain untrue. So you're saying that all things being equal, a 500hp car and a 300hp car have the same top speed? That is impossible unless they're limited by gear ratio or aerodynamics. By your metric, a 100hp car and a 1000hp car would have the same top speed, just different rates of acceleration.
@@RedEye19 No. First, even in basic rollcage you need at least a single inclined reinforcing pipe that is easily seen against rear window, and the other pipes are easily visible some distance from the pillars. Then, the center bar has to be behind the front seats, so it's easilly visible from the side. I've watched the turn and roll in slow motion like 15 times now and there is definitely no rollcage in that, not even a thin ineffective one. Another point; the guys that roll the car don't have helmets or any stunt harnesses. If you look closely, you can even see how passenger pulls himself against the roof. And rollcate itself becomes a lethat danger for a person not wearing a helmet.
They had Cary Loftin as stunt driver/coordinator. He told them exactly where to put that camera so they would get the shot of the rollover you see here. He did it in one take. Nice shot after that of Kowalski powersliding away from a stop. Both tires spinning shows the Sure Grip limited slip rear end is doing its job.
Kowalski told his drug dealer friend, "it's hopped up (modified) to over 160 (MPH)", so on the straights he's been pulling away (into The Vanishing Point) from all of the cop cars. The police SUSPECT it's supercharged and that's why they think it's so fast. A Paxton supercharger COULD have been installed without altering the exterior appearance of the car. All of the Challengers used in the movie were stock 383 or 440 cubic inch Magnum V8s. Top speeds were likely 120-130 MPH, limited by gearing and aerodynamics. A modern 6.4L Challenger goes over 160 from the factory. Modern technology is pretty cool.
People make too much money on overpriced/low budget land development deals now, so america being that open and nice looking is soon to be gone at this rate unfortunately
The East Block countries bought rights for this movie to be displayed in theaters for the reason they believed is showed the US in bad light. It was displayed in the USSR and a few other East Block countries for this reason.
Torsion bar gave more trouble than benefits in most cars and leaf springs were not as bad journalists portrayed them. Ford Escort RS1800 had live axle leaf spring and could go toe to toe with Lancia Stratos super-rally car.
Skill, skill, skill. Notice how the front wheels are almost straight at all times. They knew how to turn using weight balance and pull all four wheels to work.
Old movie sound effect cliches, gotta love them. But years ago I was going up a very steep , off road, dirt tracked hill, and my Jeep tires, in 4x4 low, were slipping and squealing on the hard packed clay dirt tracks. I made it to the top alright but it sounded like I was on asphalt. And I said to my friend, hmmm my Jeep sounds like it’s in an old movie.
You're not obligated to like it. I do like it a lot. It's a character study, a car movie, and it touches on racism, police brutality, religion, and the counterculture of the day.
@@snowrocket I didn't say I was obligated to like it,im just stating my opinion on the film, which like you I am entitled to.some people regard this film as a cult classic and it isn't that.
@@KiernanDavid Oh no, it IS a cult classic to many of us. I guess it's not a cult classic to people with your particular taste in movies, and that's fine. So many people of my era rave on and on about how great "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" is and I just don't get it. I saw it once and thought it was good, but not spectacular. Different strokes for different folks, I guess.
love the tire screeches when they’re in the dirt
Technically the car could screech on rocks
@@Towermemeswell it was kicking the rocks around
Back in the day tires were much more noisy because the rubber compounds were more rudimentary. You could skirt off of gravel. People would make noise just rounding a corner lol especially high performance wheels. Even tire Technology was different back then bud!
@@Shirehi thanks for the help👍
@@Shirehi True, but the sounds in the movie are certainly Foley.
I saw this movie at the Drive In Theater in Greenwood Indiana in 1971. I was six years old. It made a lifelong impression on me. Thanks!
Saw it in jonesboro arkansas July 4th 1978
Vanishing Point, best movie all times
Great car scenes for sure
The car wasn’t supercharged. The driver was.😂
I agree. Superchargers emanate this whine sound that changes depending on the engine speed. I don't hear any supercharger whine sounds from this Challenger, so clearly it isn't supercharged.
@@77PacerStudios The whine comes from the belt. Theoretically it 'could' have had a Paxton/McCollough blow through supercharger, but no it just a stock 440 Mag. I always thought that was a pretty outlandish commentary from the cop on the radio. Just like the car reaching 160.
@@vincemajestyk9497 The thing about the 440 (like all big block V8s) is that it is such a gargantuan torquey engine (even in non-high performance guise) that it doesn't need a supercharger to go fast. But yeah...I call BS on 160mph too. If you had a car that was relatively light, with high enough rear gears, the right tire size, and well thought out aerodynamics, 160mph is possible. But in this era, you're not going to get there in stock form. I have seen a lot of posts by current/former owners of these cars and the consensus is that things get sketchy at 130mph. There are other 70s car chase movies where I've seen commentary like this by police. Dirty Mary Crazy Larry is another example. Larry jumps the Chevy over a construction site using a truck ramp. Later on, the cops discuss the incident and assume the Chevy was 'supped'.
I've heard their were 383's in these cars. Their were five of them. 🤔
@@jamesfarmer6039 All five were loaned to Cupid Productions by Chrysler for promotional consideration. Four were equipped with a 440 CID V8 and a 4-speed manual transmission, while the fifth was a 383 CID V8 with an automatic transmission. All sustained some damage during filming but none were totaled out. The car that hit the 2 bulldozers was a white 67 camaro with a 250 6 cyl.
Lucky me. I have owned my 70 Challenger since 1979. Today it is identical to the Vanishing Point Challenger except for a few things. I have a stock rear view mirror. And mine is a built 340 with a 727 torqueflite trans. 8 3/4 4:10 rear end. So 160 is 😂🤣🫤 not happening. But it will get to 120 pretty quick. Though I do not suggest it. And you will not be there long. I also have installed the 17” rally wheels made from aluminum 9” in the back 8” in front. I drive it all around as many nice days as I can. Also go to cruise ins and cars and coffee.
Now for a 6 Speed.
& To Half it (make it a little lighter)
Bought my first car, a 1970 383 Plymouth Roadrunner in 1979... It was a freakin awesome year for slightly used MoPars!!!😊
@@Paul-zz8lu. Nice. My second car was a 69 Charger with a 383 automatic. I let my brother drive it to high school. I paid $900 for it. I still miss that car.
Nice youngster
Man that Plymouth is beautiful
When I went to the theater to see this movie for the first time. The owner of the theater had his one year old 70 Dodge challenger R/T parked out in front. This was back in the days of neighborhood mom and pop movie theaters. That was back in June 1971.
@@VincentFisher-e8b this mustve been a hell of a view back then sir, id kill to be able to see one of these machines.. never have yet
not fucking nearly as beautiful as that challenger.
The E Bodies are the most gorgeous muscle cars.
I agree, but I do love my b body too!! @@chriswendschlag1856
Great Movie Mr CCW2 movies with no CGI are the best
what is the name of the film?
1970 Plymouth Belvedere Police Car With Siren 1930's And 1940's
A common site for small law enforcement agencies back then.
67
And I love this movie
Is it worth it?
When i was a kid i watched this movie over and over lol
For the cutie on the motorcycle?
I love to drive
Cool little town they drove through
I recognized it the second i saw it its the little town of austin nevada my family owns one of the ranches in the valley there. Ive driven that strech of road hundreds of times and never knew a movie had been filmed there
@@ridgely1635 Wow, good eye! They're driving down water St, closing in on Virginia St at 2:31 (the church is a good reference point), then turning left on Virginia St, and then making a right from Virginia St onto Main St at 2:39. It's amazing to see how things have changed (and remained) for 53 years! Cheers!
Considering how crap those 70’s tires were, the stunt drivers did some great work at the wheel!
The main objective of a delivery driver is to deliver the car in the same condition as it was when it was picked up. But then sometimes shit happens.
I still watch it once and a while and the Viggo 90s version also..😍🔥
for such cars, the cornering is really good
I just got my first car. It was a 69 SS El Camino. The movie became a cult muscle car classic back then, we watched it at a drive in ,any times. It was almost as good as the 68 movie “Bullit”.
'Audioslave' used scenes from this film for its music video 'Show me how to live'
I thought they re-enacted it.
It looks like they played with the camera's, making the cars appear to move faster. Fun movie regardless.
Ahhh... When Car Chases used to be Car Chases. Open Roads, No other Cars and/or Citizens in the way to be in harms way. Yep Those was the days
The Tow Mater ahh Music makes this just perfect
Now that was a chase scene! Long cuts from angles that make you feel like you're there.
As a kid this was my favorite movie.
Another great video, you did good job
Thanks again!
Interesting coincidence that the video is 3:40. 340 V8 lol
The Challenger is a given, but I can’t believe that I’m the only one who would also want that Satellite police cruiser.
Yep the 4 door version of the 70 Roadrunner...
You're not. I had an ex Wisconsin State Patrol Lieutenant's Squad from 1977, bought it in 84 for $825 from the WSP auction, 1977 Plymouth Gran Fury, 440 Police Interceptor engine, cop tires, slotted cop rims w/poverty hub caps, dual exhaust, cop charging system, heavy duty cop cooling, pinion snubber, cop sway bar, cop transmission cooler, tan cop interior, it was slate-grey with 2 chrome spotlights up front, the car was in excellent condition for a squad, had 50,000 miles on it, I loved that car, but I ended up trading it for a 73 Kawasaki H2 750 triple two stroke widow maker, I always figured I'd find another squad, I did buy an 80 Gran Fury Milwaukee PD Detective squad while I owned the bike, but it wasn't the same. Heavy duty cop equipment, but just a 360 4 bbl. Yes, I understand your attachment to MoPar Squads. They were awesome cars. I think I died inside watching the Blues Brothers, even tho it's maybe my favorite flick of all time. God Bless Mother MoPar!!!
@@thudtheace Yep, and let's not forget the BEAUTIFUL 1970 Plymouth GTX!!!
Why is nobody here mentioning the fact that they’re playing Dukes of Hazzard music in a vanishing point movie?
Looks like single exhaust on the squad car as it rolls over.
Also no rollcage, the guys don't have helmets, and don't have stunt/racing type belts. The other guy even pushes the roof not to fall. They just took a stock car and rolled it.
I think the actual pursuit vehicles were big block, dual exhaust cars. They sounded spectacular and moved down the road fast as hell... That was probably a 318 or 360 Satellite that they rolled... Nothing like a 70s era Fuselage body MoPar Squad!!!
I noticed the single exhaust when it rolled over too! So, that '70 Belvedere either had a 318 or a 383 2bbl under the hood. If it was a 383 4bbl, it would've been dual exhaust for sure!
Hello, folk, car chase scenes from old classic movies like this are absolutely better than Mr. Bean, SpongeBob SquarePants, Peppa Pig, Oggy And The Cockroaches, Say Yes To The Dress, K-Pop, K-Drama, educational language grammar, spelling, pronunciation, Math, national, world History, Science, its experiment, other school subject, Civil Service Examination, General Knowledge learning tutorial, quiz, dancing cute sexy girl, journal scrapbooking, stationery, art, craft, drawing, delicious food, snack, dessert, cake, or dish, drink, or beverage recipe, ASMR, coding, spreadsheet, slideshow presentation program tutorial, all electric bass, guitar, real drum videos including tutorials, reviews, and song covers especially if it's a female player of those musical instruments, greetings from the Philippines!
Oh, I'd say it's up there with all of those things--definitely ahead of 'Say Yes To The Dress', but equally satisfying as a recipe, or certain eps of Spongebob Squarepants.
Pareces npc
That was a blown scene, the Cops were supposed to call in and just chase after him.
😂 On US 40 (now I-80) going towards Dunphy, but ended up in Austin on US 50!
Love vanishing point
2:15 dude was INCHES away from that camera gah damn
Also no rollcages or helmets worn by the drivers. In the roll scene if you look closely, they don't even have racing seatbelts. Probably just standard waist belt back then. They risked their lives to film this.
@@piotrmalewski8178 what a hell of a life to be part of such thing
That was how me and my buddy drove pretty much...every day, lol!
me encanta esa película, los autos también
مشهد انقلاب السيارة واقعي!
"Hell yeah" kind of video
Awesome film 😉👍
The Vanishing Point...classic.
I love the Dodge Challenger R/T and Plymouth Belvedere It is a very nice car in the movie 💿📀🎥🎞📽🎬📺🚘🚗🚘🥰😍😘😗😚😙😽😻💋💌💘💝💖💗💓💞💕💟❣❤🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤🤍
It's a cult classic now. I have this and the remake with Viggo Mortenson.
Ain't no one better than Kowalski.. he was a good driver ..
Supercharged 500hp Challenger already going 100+ can barely shake a 300hp sedan with two people in it... riiight.
Gotta love Hollywood 😂
Supercharging increases power which improves acceleration, not top speed.
@@andynewman835 that argument is just plain untrue. So you're saying that all things being equal, a 500hp car and a 300hp car have the same top speed? That is impossible unless they're limited by gear ratio or aerodynamics.
By your metric, a 100hp car and a 1000hp car would have the same top speed, just different rates of acceleration.
@@andynewman835 my main point was that the Challenger already had a HUGE head start, and then the Plymouth magically is right on its tail.
@@TheOfficialCaseMade you have much to learn. Start with gearing. Good luck.
My Gramps had a 69 Valiant. Played Adam-12 in it.
Love the belly - roar of a Big Block MoPar Squad Car! God Bless Mother Chrysler!
Challenger n' Barracuda? Same car but different looks n' brands. WTF IS A KILOMETERRRRRRRRR?!
God speed Barry Newman 😢.
Two legends.
Este video se parece al de "show me how to live" de Audioslave
Must see uncut.
I like how they rolled a stock car without any rollcage. Either they wanted to risk it or it was an accident they decided to keep in the movie.
I like how it LOOKS like they rolled a stock car without a rollcage. Two camera shots, two cars.
@@RedEye19 No. First, even in basic rollcage you need at least a single inclined reinforcing pipe that is easily seen against rear window, and the other pipes are easily visible some distance from the pillars. Then, the center bar has to be behind the front seats, so it's easilly visible from the side.
I've watched the turn and roll in slow motion like 15 times now and there is definitely no rollcage in that, not even a thin ineffective one. Another point; the guys that roll the car don't have helmets or any stunt harnesses. If you look closely, you can even see how passenger pulls himself against the roof. And rollcate itself becomes a lethat danger for a person not wearing a helmet.
They had Cary Loftin as stunt driver/coordinator. He told them exactly where to put that camera so they would get the shot of the rollover you see here. He did it in one take. Nice shot after that of Kowalski powersliding away from a stop. Both tires spinning shows the Sure Grip limited slip rear end is doing its job.
Öde. Das die Alten soetwas früher toll fanden, unfassbar !
MEINE EHRE HEIẞT TREUE!!! ☠️⚡⚡☠️
Nice music 😊
This is more 70s than 70s
What’s the name of that little town?
Austin, Nevada. Never heard of it before seeing this clip again!
Great fkn movie
what was the reason to believe it was supercharged again?
Kowalski told his drug dealer friend, "it's hopped up (modified) to over 160 (MPH)", so on the straights he's been pulling away (into The Vanishing Point) from all of the cop cars. The police SUSPECT it's supercharged and that's why they think it's so fast. A Paxton supercharger COULD have been installed without altering the exterior appearance of the car.
All of the Challengers used in the movie were stock 383 or 440 cubic inch Magnum V8s. Top speeds were likely 120-130 MPH, limited by gearing and aerodynamics. A modern 6.4L Challenger goes over 160 from the factory. Modern technology is pretty cool.
How did they chase him in the first place
1:03 this gives me 2fast2furious vibes
name pelicula?
THAT THING GOT A HEMI?!!
No, a 440 Magnum.
Velozes e furiosos antigo 😂 só v8
I wonder what that house on the ridge at 2:34 looks like now?
I’m sure there are pictures
Got any Ups?
That's a very obscure reference but it is very pertinent to this chase scene! Good call!
It takes a mopar to catch a mopar.
Now that’s how I imaged America
People make too much money on overpriced/low budget land development deals now, so america being that open and nice looking is soon to be gone at this rate unfortunately
@@Garf2O yes that’s the problem there
The East Block countries bought rights for this movie to be displayed in theaters for the reason they believed is showed the US in bad light. It was displayed in the USSR and a few other East Block countries for this reason.
Torsion bar front springs and leafs out back 😂
Torsion bar gave more trouble than benefits in most cars and leaf springs were not as bad journalists portrayed them. Ford Escort RS1800 had live axle leaf spring and could go toe to toe with Lancia Stratos super-rally car.
Heavy duty cop suspension!
Challenger legend
Just like death proof
Was that Ronald Reagan talking in the radio?!
All the safety bs killed suspension. Look how those cars float like desert prerunner trucks over the dirt.
Safety BS had nothing to do at all with suspension. Suspension (and tires) have been gradually getting better for decades.
You need a Mopar to catch a Mopar!
Or any modern day minivan will do...
@@richardbossman9875 terrible weight distribution, and high gravity center makes them slow in corners and straight dangerous in Moose manuver.
Los coches Yanquis de esos años eran muy duros.
Amen!!!
0-60 in lets find the fuck out
would tyres squeal on a dirt rd?
Rocks. This also happens when there is very hard dry soil inder the upper loose surface.
@@piotrmalewski8178 Consider me now educated! Thank you :)
name movie?
Vanishing Point (1971)
wing windows..... the original A/C !!
What does it matter if it’s supercharged? Was that a crime back then brah?
Was the challenger a 426 R/T car!?
no
440 cars, 1 383 auto for some scenes
440 car with a Dana 4.10 rear gear ⚙️
Fluchtpunkt San Francisco
Movie name?
Vanishing Point (1971)
Такие гонки на авто с АКПП это полная шляпа. Чуть дольше подрифтил и привет перегрев и выход коробки из строя😊
так у масл каров коробка НЕ перегревается 🤗
@@borets-s-rasizmom все возможно, хотя инфы что там стоят какие то особенные коробки не встречал...
@@АлександрКобылкин-м5е так это же качественная чугунная коробка передач, а не китайский шлак как сейчас 🤷♂️
what's the Banjo track?
There's no way those cars can take those curves at that speed, pure trickery behind the camera, video at higher speed, they record at much lower speed
no it aint dude, these dude were pushing it. makes me wonder, if he actually meant to roll or if that was an honest mistake
Skill, skill, skill. Notice how the front wheels are almost straight at all times. They knew how to turn using weight balance and pull all four wheels to work.
@@kainoa3078 The roll was planned by Cary Loftin the famous stunt driver/coordinator on this film. He did it in one take.
That hillbilly music ruins the chase scene.
See Vigo GO
Squeal tires on dirt. Great movie
Old movie sound effect cliches, gotta love them. But years ago I was going up a very steep , off road, dirt tracked hill, and my Jeep tires, in 4x4 low, were slipping and squealing on the hard packed clay dirt tracks. I made it to the top alright but it sounded like I was on asphalt. And I said to my friend, hmmm my Jeep sounds like it’s in an old movie.
I've done it. Going to fast around a turn on dirt road, almost spun out.
I think it was better off speeding
Interstate 76
Son primos
Mopar or no car
Sub!
Zoom. Zoom
Mad Mad copied a few of these scenes.
I always found this film overrated.its just some guy driving around in a desert continuously
You're not obligated to like it.
I do like it a lot. It's a character study, a car movie, and it touches on racism, police brutality, religion, and the counterculture of the day.
@@snowrocket I didn't say I was obligated to like it,im just stating my opinion on the film, which like you I am entitled to.some people regard this film as a cult classic and it isn't that.
@@KiernanDavid Oh no, it IS a cult classic to many of us. I guess it's not a cult classic to people with your particular taste in movies, and that's fine.
So many people of my era rave on and on about how great "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" is and I just don't get it. I saw it once and thought it was good, but not spectacular. Different strokes for different folks, I guess.
No time sit down 😂😂😂 at 3:30 mark.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Those cops couldn't catch my Honda lol
Ну гробы! Чуць едуць!
сам ты гроб 😛