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Souped-up cinema: Our 10 favorite car movies

October 3, 2008 |  4:26 pm

What makes a great car movie? We here at Up to Speed pondered this question while waiting in line for a matinee showing of “Flash of Genius,” the based-on-fact story of one man’s legal battle against the auto industry (opening today at a giga-plex near you).

We decided to put together a list of our 10 favorite car movies, hopefully avoiding the usual recital of road-race smash-'em-ups (although there are, of course, several of those in our tally) to leave room for a few less-obvious choices — films that say more about the role of the automobile in American life than simply speed, mobility or cool quotient.

Here, in alphabetical order, are our picks:

Ron Howard and Cindy Williams in American Graffiti American Graffiti (1973) — Filmed mostly on the mean streets of Petaluma, this ode to cruising, street racing and an America that is all but unrecognizable today is on everyone’s list of great car movies, and deservedly so. The cars are classic — Paul Le Mat’s 1932 Ford coupe, Suzanne Somers’ 1956 Thunderbird, the Pharoahs’ 1951 Mercury — the acting is superb and the whole movie thrums like the well-tuned 454 in Harrison Ford’s ’55 Chevy.

Blue Collar (1978) — This movie isn’t about cars; it’s about the people who build them. Filmed around Detroit and in the old Checker Motors taxi assembly plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., and grounded by a slashing, bluesy soundtrack, “Blue Collar” depicts the auto industry — and, by extension, capitalism — as a soul-crushing fraud. And no one walks away clean. Workers, bosses, union reps, cops — they all exist on the downside of the American dream.

Bonnie and Clyde Bonnie and Clyde (1967) — Doesn’t usually make it on to greatest car flick lists, but this classic depicts the earliest entree into modern automobile-fueled criminal behavior (not to mention the template for the Grand Theft Auto Series of video games). For Warren Beatty’s Clyde and Faye Dunaway’s Bonnie, a car means freedom: freedom to rob banks, to attempt primitive drive-by shootings, and to bleed all over the back seat. For the record, the original gun moll and her man met their maker alongside a 1934 Ford.

Bullitt (1968) — A so-so flick, but the car chase through the streets of San Francisco — featuring a ’68 Mustang GT 390 — was so cool that Ford is still trying to make a buck off it 40 years later with its special edition Bullitt ’Stang. And any list of car movies has to name-check Steve McQueen at some point.

Emilio Estevez and Fox Harris in Repo Man Repo Man (1984) — A postmodern paean to the Chevy Malibu, a car that’s collectible now but was a total junker in early ’80s, rundown Los Angeles. The definition of a cult film, it will forever change the way you think about opening the trunk. And teach you how to steal cars: “I never broke into a trunk. I shall not cause harm to any vehicle nor the personal contents thereof, nor through an action let that vehicle or the personal contents thereof come to harm. That's what I call the Repo Code, kid.”

Mel Gibson in Road Warrior Road Warrior (1981) —The Devastator from Down Under, this apocalyptic vision of a future without fuel made Mel Gibson a star. More important, it melded punk fashion, mobile mayhem and an old-fashioned hero-saves-the-day sensibility into a violent tale of death and rebirth that still resonates today.

Smokey and the Bandit (1977) — This ain’t a great movie, but it’s a fun one. It delivers Burt Reynolds at his (relative) best and seemingly endless car chases — really, the whole movie is just one big car chase, when you get down to it. True aficionados argue that Jackie Gleason’s sheriff Buford T. Justice is Darth Vader to Reynold’s Han Solo personage, and since the movie came out the same year as "Star Wars," find themselves rooting for the dark side of the force. Of course, a 1977 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am trumps the long arm of the law every time. Over and out, good buddy.

Warren Oates in Two-Lane Blacktop Two-Lane Blacktop (1971) — Solves the eternal peanut butter-or-chocolate riddle: How do you choose between an existential art film about the unbridgeable gap between human beings and a kick-butt movie about illegal drag racing? With this classic, you don’t have to! James Taylor when he still had hair. Warren Oates when he was still alive. Grit. Lots of engine noise. A ’55 Chevy versus a 1970 Pontiac GTO. Endless road ahead.

Used Cars (1980) — More junkers than classics here (except for a ’57 Chevy driven to literal heart-attack-inducing extremes), but this is hands down the funniest movie ever made about the automobile business. Slimy salesmen? Check. Odometer tampering? Check. Gratuitous nudity? Double-check.  And just remember: Fifty bucks never killed anybody.

EV-1 funeral in Who Killed the Electric Car? Who Killed the Electric Car? (2006) — GM, big oil companies, pusillanimous politicians — they all get a share of the blame in this doc about California’s aborted effort to bring power to the people by forcing automakers to produce electric vehicles. It does for the alt-fuel movement what “An Inconvenient Truth” did for the global warming crowd.

-- Ken Bensinger and Martin Zimmerman

Photos: American Graffiti /Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Bonnie and Clyde /file photo; Repo Man /Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Road Warrior /handout; Two-Lane Blacktop /Cinema Collectors; Who Killed the Electric Car? / Matt Bohling, Sony Pictures Classics


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Comments

The Fast and the Furious.

1. Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry.
2. Grand Prix HAS to be on the list.
3. Vanishing Point has no equal.
4. The Gumball Rally has great cars AND Dean Martin. What else do you want?

How about 1974's "Dirty Mary Crazy Larry"? That film was all muscle car: 1969 Dodge Charger R/T with a 440 to be exact. And Vic Morrow to boot!

The writer is a complete moron. The tagline for American Graffiti was "Where were you in '62?" The 454 wasn't introduced until 1970.

The '55 Chevy in Two-Lane Blacktop had a transplanted 454 in it, but the movie was made in the 1970s, so that would actually be possible.

Repoman, that film rocked!

all of you missed the only equal to vanishing point
It was called Hard Driver. Jeff bridges plays a moonshiner

Untouchables, The Sting, Chinatown.

Christine

What about Boulevard Nights? - Chicano Crusin at it's best!!

Christine - a car that kills!

Vanishing Point HAS to be on the list.

Ronin - simply the best car chase ever. I fell in love with Audi 8s from that film.

No Le Mans or Grand Prix?

Having American Graffiti as a car film is like having Bobby Deerfield as a car film. Cars are a mcguffin.

And for the true connoisseurs, C'etat Un Rendevous. The single most exciting car film ever, even with the bogosity of it all.

thunder road, vanishing point, & the second italian job.

who made up this list, stupid?
Mad Max was better than Road Warrior.

What about Gone in 60 Seconds?

What about the chase scene in the French Connection

how bout Fast & Furious? Yeay maybe cheesy but you got to admit it showed everyone the culture of street racing

The Driver with Ryan O'Neal, Bruce Dern.

 


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