Advertisement

Revisiting our favorite car movies

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

The list we posted last weekend of our 10 favorite car films generated a fair amount of commentary — most of it relating to movies that posters felt were unfairly overlooked.

Up to Speed stands by its original selections, but we also understand the subjective nature of lists, rankings and popularity contests of any sort. And with that in mind, here are the four movies that got the most mentions from our readers:

Advertisement

‘Vanishing Point’ (1971) -– If, like Spinal Tap, we had gone to 11, this movie would’ve made the cut. Along with “Two-Lane Blacktop” (which did make the list), “Vanishing Point” is the car movie as existential epic -- as one poster noted, “one man, one car, one road: no exit.” (That car, by the way, was a white 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T.) If Camus had written a script for a car movie, this would have been the result. And it has one of the coolest endings in Hollywood history.

‘Thunder Road’ (1958) –- This tale of running moonshine in late ‘50s North Carolina apparently has a devoted following. Classic cars may be part of the reason, but we suspect that the presence of Robert Mitchum -- one of the great cinematic tough guys -- may also have something to do with it. (He even wrote and sang the title song!)

‘Ronin’ (1998) –- We saw this back in the dot-com era, and for some reason, the chase scenes just didn’t stay with us. But “Ronin,” with its tight European streets and slick European cars, clearly strikes a chord with many car-chase fans. We might have to put this one on Up to Speed’s Netflix list for a refresher course.

‘Grand Prix’ (1966) -– Like “Ronin,” this James Garner vehicle was directed by John Frankenheimer. The plot is basic big-screen soap opera, but it does feature spectacular footage of Formula One cars in all their mid-1960s glory, as well as cameos by some of the leading drivers of the era. When it comes to big-time racing films, some movie buffs prefer 1971’s “Le Mans,” which starred Steve McQueen and used a less-glossy, almost documentary-style approach.

-- Martin Zimmerman

After the jump: See the original theatrical trailer for ‘Vanishing Point.’

Advertisement