SinceSteve McQueen’s iconic 10-minute car chase scene in the 1968 filmBullitt(widely considered to be the first proper car chase in movie history), things have gotten really out of hand — in the best possible way. It now seems well within the realm of possibility to jump a muscle car ...
chase high high-speed shag slam-bang References in periodicals archive ? 1BULLITT (1968) TWO Mustang cars and two Dodge Chargers were used in the famous car chase in this actionpacked crime movie starring Steve McQueen, but only one Mustang survived filming. 7of the best... car chase movi...
To the point that Dean, playing Jim Stark, immortalized the 1949 Mercury Coupe in the halls of cool, despite the fact it was considered a middle-class family sedan prior to filming. Bullitt 'Bullitt' was billed with its chase scene, rightfully so. It’s one of the most famous car chase...
To the point that Dean, playing Jim Stark, immortalized the 1949 Mercury Coupe in the halls of cool, despite the fact it was considered a middle-class family sedan prior to filming. Bullitt 'Bullitt' was billed with its chase scene, rightfully so. It’s one of the most famous car chase...
The car chase inBullittis one of the greatest in movie history. It shows Steve McQueen racing a 1968 Ford Mustang through San Francisco’s steep latticework of streets. He drifts around corners, runs stop signs, and catches air on a regular basis. The movie and the chase scene remain so ...
When New Hollywood auteurs started making boundary-pushing road movies in the late 1960s and 1970s, cars became the ultimate symbol of the freedom they so openly yearned for. And then, of course, you have the car chase movie. People pursuing each other in very fast cars is one of ...
Every film in the Bad Boys action-comedy trilogy features awesome vehicles, but we're most fond of the second movie because the Ferrari 550 Maranello director Michael Bay chose as the star car is so darn pretty. Plus, the freeway chase scene is unmatched. Bad Boys II: BUY NOW Advertisem...
including in this 9-minute chase scene in the desert. This sequence is, in many ways, the film in microcosm: there’s action, terror, and even a bit of comedy. So many parts of this scene could’ve gone wrong, but Steven Spielberg knows exactly how to ratchet up the tension, put In...
did in the first film Miller touches on horror movie imagery as Max is compelled for a moment by the scream of a berserker trapped in his wrecked vehicle, his gnarled hand reaching out but falling limp, and then the gnarled and rotting corpse of the semi’s driver falling from the cab....
About 10 years prior, the car chase sequences in Don Siegel’s film noirThe Lineupcovered more of San Francisco thanBullitt. As a movie packed with hardcore crooks, cops, and cars, The Lineup starts with the destruction of a 1954 Plymouth Plaza taxi, keeping you at the edge of your se...