Today I go cruising the streets of Modesto one more time with Ron Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Cindy Williams, Harrison Ford, and of course, George Lucas. These are some little-known facts about Lucas' 1973 classic, American Graffiti.
I was born Dec 1963 , my claim to excitement was cruising Yonge St in downtown Toronto , Ontario , Canada in my 1970 Oldsmobile 98 , 455 ci 2 dr with fender skirts in 1981-82 , I graduated high school June 1982 ....... way better times then then hell hole of a time and society we live in today .............
Same. I was Mackenzie’s age when AG first came out. I said, this is what my high school years are gonna be like and proceeded to emulate behaviors In the film
I was born in 1958, and when I saw this movie in 1973, it made me nostalgic for a time I'd never experienced. The first album I ever bought was the soundtrack.
What can I say? I turned 13 in 1960. I was in high school in '62, remember sock hops, drive in's, hot rods, pre-Beatles rock 'n roll (Buddy Holly will never die!) and adored all those lovely girls! What a fun movie. I've seen it several times.
One of my favorite movies!! What fun and what memories of my growing up years... I graduated HS in 1961 and seeing my DVD of this movie brings me nothing but smiles... Thanks for this video...
I wish that Lucas had kept making films with this sort of style. American Graffiti still holds up today and I always enjoy seeing it. I also look at this film and wonder why Paul LeMat didn't become a bigger star, like Ford and Dryfuss did.
I turned 16 in 74 and cruisin was such a cool thing. I saw this movie a year earlier and it made such a big impression!! I was so glad my friends and I caught the tail end of the muscle car, summer time cruisin and street racing scene. It was like a lucky once in a lifetime thing that will never happen again.
I graduated in 1962 and this is right on. The only thing that I find off is it all happened on one night. The cars and music are all spot on and I was involved in a lot of the things the movie showed. Lots of fun, of course now days most of us would probably spend a night in jail if we tried doing this LOL. It was a real good time to grow up.
I've always loved that film, even though the period depicted is a few years before I was born. But there is one question about the movie that I'm curious about. (Other than the plausibility that a guy like Toad would be in the same social circle as a guy like Steve.) I noticed in the movie that most of the songs played on the radio were a few years older than 1962. Even Milner expressed disdain for the then-current music. Was it common for the hottest stations to play "oldies" rather than contemporary hits?
Best movie of that era without a doubt. Grew up in the eighties in suburban Detroit and it was still about the same lifestyle being teenagers before cellphones. You had to drive around to find your friends. Cruising around was just a way of life.
Our group of 5 friends would go back to the theater time and time and time again during its initial run to watch this fantastic movie. One guy in our group saw it 15 times! That was before home video when the only option was the movie theater and movies would run for a long time. We knew the lines so well they became a part of our vernacular. Sweet memories of 5 best friends loving American Graffiti.
The very first but brief drag race scene between Milner and Falfa, when you can hear the v8's of the 32 and 55 giving it all they had, and the buildings in the background were flying by, is one of my favorite car scenes in a movie.
I could not go to sleep when I was sent to bed at the same time as my younger siblings so my Dad bought me a little radio that looked like a rocket and I clipped on my metal frame for a antenna. In order to bring in "channels" I had to raise and lower the little wire antenna located in the tip of the rocket. At night when Am radio stations lowered their signals around 10 pm, I could get WOLFMAN JACK and even stations from Mexico! It was great to hear his voice again when I saw this movie for the first time and all the great old classics.
For me, it was a radio that had a single wired earpiece (kind of like a modern earbud) that I could put in one ear and listen to while I pretended to be asleep. Most nights I got whomever was on WBT in Charlotte, but sometimes I could pick up others from further away on the ozone skip.
My 55 Chevy was in the movie, most prominently in the scene where Toad pulls out of Mel's to go buy beer and the waitress skates out with her tray and there is no car there. The entire left side of the screen is my car. You can see my right rear fender looks very dull where they sprayed something on it to cut the glare. It was very difficult to get it off. I am also in a cruising scene that was filmed in San Rafael on 3 and 4th streets where I change lanes. That same night they were filming Milner cruising in his 32. The camera was mounted on the back of an El Camino. I pulled up next to him and goosed it. He punched it too and we started going back and forth. The camera swung around and filmed me too, but that never made it into the film. I was paid $20 per night to be there from 6PM until 6AM. It cost me more to buy gas, but it was great fun. One of my best memories was when they were filming Harrison Ford in the black 55 Chevy at Mel's. They wanted him to do a burnout in the parking lot. That car was one of the Two Lane Blacktop cars, so it was a real racer. He lost control and people scattered. I am sure he soiled himself before screeching to a stop.
Coppola filmed Peggy Sue Got Married next door to my parents house in Santa Rosa...one entire week of filming...semi trucks, cables everywhere, catering trucks etc....and not one frame made it to the final edit or movie!
American Graffiti is in my top ten of favorite films, a kind of valedictory for my generation, and without any doubt the best time to come of age in America, or any place else. It has become an iconic part of cinema history, and a flashback to the best years of our lives. I still love those characters, that music, and those cars. Like the man said "the best years are the first to flee." This review includes a number of facts about the making of the film that I didn't know, and it was very interesting to watch. I remember wondering when I first saw the film whether Toad's crashing his scooter was actually in the script, and if so, admired how well he did it. But, as I suspected, it was a happy accident that occurred during shooting. Most of us, I suppose, identified with Curt, who struggled as we did, with having to leave behind what he has come to realize, even before it was gone, that those years were very special. And John, who refused to leave it behind. But, like Lucas, there's a little bit of us in each of them. It was the last of our innocence. As a kid I spun records at the local radio station, and played all that music, my dad had those cars (and yes, we dragged them), and we fell in love all the time. Returning from overseas during Vietnam, I flew into San Francisco during the Summer of Love, and I thought of those guys over in Modesto, and those times. I thought of Toad, who we thought had died in Vietnam, together with so many others. and the world turned again. I wish I had a time machine, but failing that, I still have American Graffiti. Thanks.
Need I say, I've been a fan of this movie since it hit the theaters????? "It's a great big world out there.... and here I sit... sucking on popsicles" and watching this flick for the umpteenth time!!!!
I’ve studied the picture a whole lot, but I didn’t know that it was part of a low-budget series of Universals. The film was extremely influential to the mid 70s generation. One of the reasons that all those 50s comedies happened on TV was because Lucas inspired a retro period in the mid 70s. All of this was a few years before Star Wars, which deserves it’s own program.
I never lived this life but I LOVED this movie. I was 9 in 1962 and I fell in love with this movie when I first saw it on tv but regrettably, I never saw it at a theater. My dad worked with Candy Clark's uncle.
I graduated high school in 1962. Many Saturday nights were like the movie. In 1985 I asked Wolfman do some voice tracks for my Modesto radio station for the annual summer Cruise Night there and played AG soundtrack Oldies all evening long. Lots of fun and the listeners loved it!
"It is such a grounded and 'human' film with so many interconnecting characters(great directing and acting from all the actors & actresses involved), that made everyone in the audience love it. In conclusion the epitaph: John Milner is killed by a drunk driver, Terry is missing in action in Vietnam, etc) as Curt's plane is flying away back East was so sad, on top of the fact he loses the opportunity to meet the blonde in the T-bird. The ending was bittersweet, but had me go back to see it over a dozen times because I never wanted the story to end or any of the characters to die. It was funny, happy, but also sad".
I understand what you're saying. The unpredictable paths that can happen in some people's lives can be stunning. It is understandable that you would want to see the movie over and over again, as when you're seeing all the characters together, it's real.
@@ReadingisMagicTV “True, but later in American Graffiti 2 you do get to know what Debbie, Carol & Laurie have been up to the past six years. Would have been so much better had George and Francis directed #2 . Also, in my opinion Suzanne Somers & Kathleen Quinlan should have returned for AG#2 .I think Suzanne was busy with ‘Three’s Company’ by 1977.Kathleen Quinlan became quite successful in quite a few movies(five)between 1976-1979 so most likely she was not available to reprise her character Peggy(Peg)either?
To me at least the BEST movie ever made. Real to so many lives back in the 60's. A personal favorite that I've watched more times and brings fond memories of cruising the drag, 17 cent burgers and .29 cent gasoline.
My sentiments exactly. The all time greatest movie ever made. Milner is still my hero and I still have a crush on Lorie and I'm 71 years old. The '50's and early '60's were so wonderful. I consider myself so fortunate to have lived through them. My wife and i still enjoy cruising in our hot rod with AG in the cassette player.
We use to cruise San Rafael, Petaluma and Santa Rosa every Friday night. We'd race at Ghilottis by the sewer plant at the Richmond bridge. The fastest car I knew of was a 62 vette with 2-4's...man what times we had...........
I lived in San Rafael for a few years in the late `80s, and would go to Fourth Street and pick out the buildings that I recognized in "American Graffiti".
Loved the movie and the sound track. In fact I bought the 8 track tape of the sound track to play on the 8 track player my brother installed in my 1974 Corvette. Listened to that tape all the time. Finally wore it out on my drive from Georgia to Carswell AFB outside of Ft Worth TX. Still enjoy the movie and the soundtrack today.. Good memories for this old man.
Saw it with harold & maude. Man what a double. Still high from this and that was in 73. Loved the end notes which made it bitter sweet. Brings Ned Ryerson to mind for those who didn't seize the day. And ah the music. Hello baby!!! Always wanted to join the Pharaohs. Maybe one day ...
What a great story of telling the behind the scenes of a great movie. The gentleman who told this story did a tremendous job. He is a great narrator which made this extremely interesting. Thank you.
Yes the best of times .I started cruising in 1965 and did it until the early 80s in 65 I was 13.so I cruised along time.good times bitchin cars and music. Wish I could still be in my teens yet.alas I'm heading for 70 but still love oldies muscle cars.and miss friends who aren't here anymore
Amazing how this movie became a spring board for numerous individual actors and future movies, brought to light the nostalgia movement which occurred about the time of the movie, and turned more automobiles into icons than any movie up to that time.
I Built my first 31 Ford because of this movie. Couldnt get my hands on a 32 . it was awesome ! 440 wedge motor . 500hp that was big back in the 70s. Awe memories
Oh, how the world has changed since the 50's, 60's and 70's. I was very glad to have had that experience but it seems so long ago and we were so innocent. This movie was a classic, never to be duplicated. We were very fortunate to live during those times if only to know how our world has changed and not always for the better.
@@gregoryvschmidt it wasn't all bad either... I grew up in a black neighborhood and Sonny Liston was our neighbor. Our music was different though, Motown
I was born in the summer of 62. In the late 70s we were still cruising Main Street in Turlock on Friday Nights after the football game. Suzanne Summers’ shout out was our claim to fame.
The sound track really made the movie. With the music and the theme, it put you back in time to that era. Also, what was so great, was you could associate every character with someone you knew in High School...........just a GREAT film...
I LOVED THIS MOVIE!!! I remember "Cruising" like this in Spokane WA on Riverside Ave in the late '60s in my Red '62 Impala SS "409" listening to CCR on KJRB. All windows down, tunes up....Great memories indeed!!
We Had a circuit in Janseville, Wisconsin. I drove I drove a 1969 Nova SS 396, listening to CCR, the Stones and Beatles on 8 track, or WLS Music Radio from Chicago... exactly like the movie... interesting now, I restore classic cars and have a 1957 Chevrolet Nomad and a 1966 Chevelle SS 396..
I heard a story back in about 1980, from someone passing through the Yukon, on their way to Alaska and was visiting some acquaintances. He told me he was part of the group who were the inspiration for the scene in American Graffiti, of the police car getting its wheels torn off. But instead a chain being used, like shown in the movie, they used a nylon webbing strap because it didn't make any noise. I can't remember everything he told me about it, but the description was vivid enough I could picture it actually happening that way. They then drove fast, past the police car, and it pulled out after them, in the process tearing off the rear axle and destroying their vehicle.
Watched them filming this as a kid many nights in my home town of San Rafael.....loved the movie! After the movie came out....cruising down 4th street became popular and was really fun as a teenager....unfortunately they stopped it.....but I’m happy I got to experience it!!!
The film crew put a flyer out for businesses to please leave their lights on that night as well as calling for 1950's cars to come out. I still have those flyers that were put out in San Rafael.
the first time that i watched this movie was back in 1979 i was 13 years old i fell in love with the 55' Chevy like crazy in 1999 i met PAUL LE MAT in SAN DIEGO at Qualcomm Stadium i told PAUL that American Graffiti was the best Movie ever made about ROCK & ROLL he smiled at me and told me i will remember you ! he signed my album you know the soundtrack of the movie and finally in 2012 I GOT ME A 1955 BLACK CHEVY 2 DR POST I BOUGHT THE SAME WHEELS THE MOTOR SOUNDS THE SAME VINTAGE MUFFLERS AND THIS IS MY BABY MY DREAM CAR YES!!!!!!!!hahahahahahhaah every 3 to 5 years i watch this movie again and again !!!!
Brilliant documentary. Very interesting facts that I didn't know about. Graffiti is my all time favourite film, seen at the movies 10 times, have it video, DVD and on Sky+ and watch it regularly. Thank you for this. It is much appreciated.
Thanks for posting. that was so interesting. I first seen this film many years ago. I recently watched it again with my partner who hadn’t seen it. She loved it and immediately went out and bought the DVD. We absolutely love this film Probably watch it again tonight 👍👍👍
Great video. Wonderful new facts. My 18 y.o. self in 82' identified with these characters. Fun movie with great scenes. I count 4 separate stories going on at once. Wolfman Jack was such a great surprise. Cool cars. Stupid teenage decisions... life changes, romantic beginnings. Honour. Friendship. Got it all.
I just found your channel by accident and the first movie I watched was 50 things about "Its a wonderful life" I loved it and subscribed at once. Now 6 movies in I am hooked! Great channel and you are doing a GREAT Job! Thank-you so much for bringing some enjoyment into this 100% Disabled Vietnam Era Veteran.
The one thing that puzzles me is how studio executives seemingly always get it wrong. I was born in '68, I saw this movie decades ago, probably on TV when I was maybe 10 and I loved it then. Since then it just has always been one of my faves, own the dvd and the soundtrack. We didn't cruise with hot rods back then really but I have just always connected to the feel of this movie, the end of summer, pulling the all nighter, the characters are all so real and relatable. How anyone that makes a living producing and distributing movies couldn't recognize that this was going to be a hit and a classic is beyond me.
John,it's because those executives live in the crystal bubble we call Hollywood,they really aren't in touch with the real society of America,they think they are but the evidence shows that they many times aren't. American Graffiti is one of those times.
Interesting too is the end credits song that they used. 'All Summer Long' by the Beach Boys was a perfect song to put there. Problem was that, while the movie was set in '62, the song wasn't produced until 1964! George Lucas admitted he knew that, but it was the best '60's song to close the movie with. One of the best movies ever!
Where was I in '62. Living in southern California, cruising with friends, surfing and just enjoying life until '63 when it all came crashing down. Johnson, Vietnam, and drugs put an end to those times and sadly many of my friends. "Once upon a time, the world was sweeter than we knew."
A story I remember hearing once was that during the filming of THX1138 some of the crew were teasing George that , "George could't make a normal movie" George supposedly replied in that deadpan tone of his, "I think my next movie will be a musical" To which every one laughed.
I was 18 when American Graffiti debuted…we where still living in the Echo of the sixties. The local cruising scene lasted a few more years and I had a Blast ripping around in my 327 Corvette engine powered Austin Healey…never Lost a race…young and invincible 😎
In the Mid-South in the counties around Memphis Tn.,we were still cruising and street racing in the mid to late 1970s and the early to mid 1980s. It was what teenagers did on the weekends and summer evenings in the South. I wouldn't take anything for those memories.
Here too in Sacramento, Ca. Cruising J street and K all around and under the Macy's breezeway. Kids stopping and parking, going up in the parking garage to the top to make out. Guys were innocent... girls, not so much, right Street Tease?
I know I've seen that movie a hundred times at least, probably the cause of my car addiction. Built my first in 1987, an old Ford Maverick, then I fell in love with the Chevy small block and built several Monte Carlo and Cutlassesover the next ten or twelve years. Finally built my first bastard, 66 Fairlane 500 4 Dr with a 383 stroker. Life always has a way of putting your back against a wall, and every car was sold for bills, school clothes or an unexpected third child when I was 40 yrs old 😎. Hang on to your youth tight and live your dreams, failing at something you love beats success at something you hate any day. Thanks for the trip down memory lane, alot of history in these early George Lucas film's.....🤔
@@mr.intensity2685 Hot rod people know this: Chevy is the better motor. Purists will usually keep their Fords all Ford. These days all the motors are technologically superior and come in all flavours-even electric! Enjoy!
This was a great movie. Thank you for doing this. It's one of those great movies that seems to fade farther and farther into the dark as the years go by,,,,it's simply a great piece of cinematic history. I love it. Thanks again.
This is terrific. Thanks. The use of songs. 50s and 60s beach and youth movies always included songs 3-4, some were written for the movies, but I think most pre-dated the movies. I saw American Grafitti the day it was released. (Driving out of the parking lot at the Quo Vadis multiplex in Wasteland, Michigan was an experience! Everyone was still living the movie.) 50s music was always popular, but there was so much terrific new music being made in the 60s and early 70s that it didn't get used much in movies and TV, but it was around, still on the radio ( but not in rotation). 50s days at school and dances I think started with American Grafitti. Even before American Grafitti you could be at party and people are listening to Cream and King Crimson and then someone will put on some 50s music and everyone will start popping. Haskell Wexler told me some things about shooting it but I'm blanking on most of it. He said he was shooting something else during the day and would be driven up to Modesto for the all night shooting. The film was important for it's extensive night shooting and the terrific depth of lighting that was achieved. I think he said they used a new faster Kodak film (and I think I remember him saying that they pushed everything a stop.) Haskell's work I think is notable for his ability to get details in the deepest shadows. Except for my comment about his shadow detail, better info is in the old American Cinematographer issue on the movie.
I lived in Ceres, Ca. Just a couple of years before this movie was being made. I know that a lot of spots in the movie were shot in Petaluma. Mel’s drive in was an actual place. It had closed down and George Lucius thought it would great in the Movie. When the owners were asked about it, they said that they had been talking about reopening the place. Well, one thing led to another and it opened up. The movie was filmed and afterward Mel’s was so popular that they stayed opened. I think it is even today. I saw many places in the film that I knew of, it brought me back to when I lived there.
I live in Minnesota and downtown St.Paul was going strong just like the movie. It was called the loop from the late 1950s to 1975. life couldn't get any better back then. The cars did the racing from one light to the next. Hot chics with halter tops and short shorts. We had other places to cruise but nothing could compare to downtown. We even had a Porkys drive in back then. I will always miss all them good times.
I cruised the loop also in downtown St. Paul in the mid 70s also! The big empty space where we parked and cruised around would eventually be the World Trade Center. The cops didn't mess with us and often came into "gravel parking lot" to check up on us and chat. It was so fun. We went to the White Castle that was next to the St. Paul Civic Center on 7th St. after cruising! Great memories!
I'm not from Minnesota but went there in 1963 only 14 years old but I remember listening to top 40 radio WDGY...Weedgee 1140 I think. WDGY was a Storz radio and he and another guy are the ones who invented TOP 40 radio format in Omaha, Nebraska. From then on it caught like wildfire and soon there was Top 40 radio all over the country. You can look it up.
I really really enjoyed your synopsis of " American Grafitt "...as the " English " say you were " Spot On" I am now a customer..I guess people call us followers in 2022...I am 63 years old..overweight..and lost my looks and live with a 20 year old fat cat 🐈 Thank you so much for taking me back to my favorite movie.. ever
Always one of my favorite movies I saw at the drive-in theater in 1973 in Milwaukee Wisconsin I was 8 years old I have seen it no less than 75 times always loved the music and it too
I was a teenager when this film came out. I was in my late teens. This film as huge. The 1950s nostalgia was strong. And this film spoke to the youth. I could of course, well remember that era. But the assassinations , Vietnam, race riots, campus riots, Manson murders all had taken place since. America’s innocence was gone, then came this beautiful tribute, this colorful memory of that era.
It is my favorite movie of all time, I have the soundtrack on cassette tape which I still have in my cassette collection. And I have the movie on DVD which I still watch frequently. Thank You, George Lucas
In 62' I was three years old and I still remember the Edsel that my Parents had, I had to mention that because before then, they had a 55' or 57' Chevy Convertible. God Bless You.
In 62 I was growing up in my small town's version of Mel's drive in. My family owned the A&W drive in restaurant and we lived in a small apartment above the business. It was a unique situation, living in American Graffiti with all the fast cars, car hops, etc. Dad knew all the cops so we never had any rough stuff or trouble. There were some good aspects and some bad about growing up so visibly.
This movie changed a culture of the 70s. I remember everyone beginning to listen to and reference oldies, we called them. I saw this movie in the local theater. Yeah, did a little street racing, too, wound up in the ditch a couple of times, too. I first started riding a motorcycle back then. Many of us at my little country school did, we would ride a lot and had a blast. Motorcycles were cheap transportation back then, not a rich man's toy. Now I've been riding ever since and now own an Indian Roadmaster...oh yeah, got the soundtrack on album and did have it on 8 track!
German born 1965 here. Saw the film in 1984 when the 50s revival was in full swing, totally identified with it. I remember when I saw Back to the Future then, was late to the show, entered the theater right when Marty found himself in the 1950s past, amazing feeling, like I was time traveling myself, same here with American Graffiti. Never understood the title though, as I knew graffiti as a 1980s "no future" thing, total opposite to the film's reality. Btw there is an interesting sequel, American Graffiti II, which I only saw on DVD much later. Shows how the Rock'n'Roll spirit ushered in the late sixties Flower Power years, nice character portraits of many of the folks from part I. Would love to see it discussed on this channel too, excellent work, thanks a lot.
Thanks for the insight on this great movie. The cars, the music and the dialog make this movie fun to watch over and over. I graduated high school in 1967.
Awesome movie!! A true American Classic.... This kind of (cruising) activity was still going strong in small mid-western towns until about 1980! In Junction City Kansas it was a part of the daily routine, depending on your work schedule... The "driving age" for a "permit" was 14...Driver's-Ed class was split between Hunter's-Safety class in 8th grade, then all ya needed was a job...and a set of hand tools!! When "off" during the day, we'd start by washing our cars, then going to a Park to apply wax, take a cruise around da Loop, go back to Park, polish off the wax then cruise da Loop again, go to the Lake, or Drive-in. At sunset, we would turn-on our Parking Lights & start to cruise da Loop, at very slow speeds, with the "turn-arounds" being at 7/11 & Sonic Drive-in (still love that place!). Then we would park in the lots of the closed retail stores to watch cars go by or get picked-up by one of our friends to do a Loop. Everyone would chip-in a $1 for gas & a "dime-bag" and let the good times roll!! When I came to California in the early 80's cruising was already "outlawed" in many cities and often led to violent (gun) encounters, which seemed confusing contradictory to the whole (happy) concept. I actually still "cruise", but these days I'm solo with several (mapped-out) "cruise Loops" to take-me-back (mentally) to a happier/safer place & time. Hey, "perception is reality" right? So don't mess with my denial LMAO!! Keep da greasy-side down!! Rebel Yell........Road Trip!!
From what I've read about the making of the movie that was not the first take. Lucas had him do multiple takes. It was the last take where he almost dropped the bottle.
Love the movie! Even grew to like and appreciate the sequel, which is much darker. Terry the "Toad's" scenes in 'Nam are funny, except during the medivac mission, which is pretty intense. Anyways, I was born in 64. We "cruised" plenty in the late seventies and mid- 80's in Bridgeport, CT. Definitely inspired by this movie! We hung out in and around the Merritt Canteen (still there) on Main St and watched the cars come and go. I worked at the grocery store next door for 5 years during and after H.S. and that was "our" lot. That was our meeting place, our base. You went "out" from there. No cell phones back then. You had to drive around to find someone. You "cruised" to see who was where, with who and where the action was. No texting or FB or whatever they use now. You "cruised" because you or friends were old enough to drive, but not old enough to get into bars... legally! Lol. When we got bored we cruised down Main St. to Seaside Park Beach and hung out there and at "The Point", where it was totally dark at night. Lol Then "cruised" back, up Park Ave, which runs parallel to Main St... One big loop it was! Approximately 14 miles total. I had a '74 Monte Carlo with a moonroof and a '69 GTO hardtop. Every so often cars would leave the Canteen and go drag race on Park Ave near what was then, Ninety Acres Park, now Veterans Memorial Park. Good times. I'm sure some kids still "cruise". Maybe not as many. Social media probably has replaced it in many ways? But I still do! In my 1970 GTO convertible. Just not at night anymore, but still to the beach and mostly with the wife and kid...HAHAHAHA!
I just watched Richard Dreyfuss's latest movie with Chevy Chase "The last laugh", and he still has the same youthful voice and trademark chuckle at age 72, that he's always had.
Class of 62 here. Everything that happened in the movie also happened on the east coast. Cruising, drag racing especially at E-Town. Gonna watch the movie next week on Starz.
there is absolutely no way this movie works at all without the songs in them... my personal favorite was Del Shannon's 'Runway' near the beginning of the movie with Terry the Toad cruising in the car singing it..
@@AMillionMovies -- great song -- it's right up there with me also. Green Onions playing as the dawn breaks and Milner heads out to Paradise Road for his race is also brilliant ..
This is not an exaggeration but I think I've seen that movie Fifty times. It was a wonderful time. $0.25 gallons of gas five cent candy bars $0.05 pops 15 Cent hamburgers and so on. How did the world get to where we are today so screwed up. I was lucky to have grown up in that time. We have the best cars and the best music
I lived through those times as a teenager in NY. We would cruise at night, drag racing and trying to meet girls. One of the best times in my life!! miss those times a lot!.
i loved cruising in the 70's & 80's.Gas was about 77cents in the 70's & about a dollars in the early 80's.My senior year I drove a black Trans Amwith the 6.6 engine my senior year.I had a 77 mustang after I graduated.coke's were 25 cents and chips were 15 cents.I have the movie and have had a copy since 1987.I have Smokey & the Bandit & this movie memorized.
My buddy and I went to see Easy Rider in our small town local theater. Both of our moms came in and sat right behind us. How terribly uncomfortable it was when the guys were in the brothel in New Orleans. When I went to the brothel in New Orleans years later I made sure mom was still in California.
Right On! In Woodstock, Illinois we cruised around the Square…see Groundhog Day as it was shot there. All the rest of the stories of we HS grads of 1962 were right on too!
Naw, George Lucas used to hang out in the studio w Wolfman as a kid and cut tapes of all Wolfman’s phone calls, which he loved the most. Wolfman got pissed off at him at first for “messin with” his tapes. He was a hanger-on, not just an outside listener. That’s how he knew him. Told by the Wolfman himself in a ‘90s BBC interview. ✌️
I lived in a town of about 2000. Late seventies. Main Street was three blocks with two more residential blocks, then 2nd main, so you could drive in a loop all night if you wanted. In this era, there were still big baby boomers families. So, a lot of kids hangin out between the pool hall, the bowling alley, and yes, we had a drive in! Some guys would just cruise that loop all night. We would joke that you could set your watch by when he drove by. 1978, you could still buy 5 bucks worth of gas and cruise most of the night. Of course the music was the best! Great time to grow up!