SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT (1977) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Äas pÅ™idán 31. 05. 2024
  • Enjoy my reaction as I watch "Smokey and the Bandit" for the first time!
    You can watch the full reaction here: go.popcorninbed.com/6HJg
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    00:00 -Intro
    01:30 - Reaction
    29:17 - Review
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Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @AFMountaineer2000
    @AFMountaineer2000 PÅ™ed 16 dny +933

    Coors beer was once illegal in some states because of a provision in the Liquor Control Act that states that only pasteurized malt beverages in brewery-sealed packages may be sold for consumption. Coors beer is cold filtered, not pasteurized. Oregon had a 50-year-old statute forbidding the sale of unpasteurized beer, which was officially considered unhealthy. In 1977, it was illegal to sell Coors east of the Mississippi River without a permit.

    • @JustSomeGoy
      @JustSomeGoy PÅ™ed 16 dny

      Moonshine was illegal because it could be used as an alternative fuel source for carbureted engines...had nothing to do with people drinking it, anything that threatens the value of oil get made illegal or patented and put down in the pentagon basement.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr PÅ™ed 16 dny +68

      Coors also had to be transported in refrigerated trucks. Which made it a regional brand.

    • @arieljaquez5444
      @arieljaquez5444 PÅ™ed 16 dny +64

      Beat me to it, yes, transporting beer wasnt illegal, just transporting Coors beer was.

    • @davidgallagher6096
      @davidgallagher6096 PÅ™ed 16 dny +16

      Interesting, I always assumed it was a state tax dodge.

    • @mcgilj1
      @mcgilj1 PÅ™ed 16 dny +12

      ​@@davidgallagher6096I always thought it had to do with the alcohol content..I know until recently in Oklahoma where I live... We could not sell 5pt beer cold or outside a liquor store. Cold beer was only low point abv 3.7 I think it was beer.. so it's nice to know the why.

  • @warrencornell430
    @warrencornell430 PÅ™ed 16 dny +686

    "Cannonball Run" for more Burt Reynolds. "Convoy" for more truckers.

    • @bob_._.
      @bob_._. PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

      Oh please, any Burt Reynolds movie but Cannonball Run. Except for the sequel, of course.

    • @pleutron
      @pleutron PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

      Stroker Ace for good Burt :P

    • @TheNighthawke502
      @TheNighthawke502 PÅ™ed 16 dny +12

      And "Gumball Rally" for more cross-country racing fun! 😉

    • @nataliestclair6176
      @nataliestclair6176 PÅ™ed 15 dny +12

      ​@@TheNighthawke502beat me too it. I thought Gumball Ralley was the better movie. Although Burt Reynolds and Don Delouise is what made Canonball Run so funny

    • @djlp2212
      @djlp2212 PÅ™ed 15 dny +18

      I loved Convoy

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge PÅ™ed 15 dny +21

    Jackie Gleason was a comic legend. He had a TV Sitcom called "The Honeymooners" with Art Carney, Audrey Meadows, and Joyce Randolph. It was hilarious. "To the MOON, Alice!", "Address the ball".

  • @bekindandrewind1422
    @bekindandrewind1422 PÅ™ed 14 dny +53

    In an interview before he passed away.. Burt Reynolds said that Sally Field was the love of his life and he never should have let her go..

    • @esaedvik
      @esaedvik PÅ™ed 13 dny +9

      "Not letting her go" isn't an option if she wants to leave a controlling and emotionally abusing partner. She had history of being abused, so it's a good thing she left. She called him a "preformed rut in her road" in her book. Perfect match of flaws, so they fell into each other and it wasn't pretty.

    • @davidimrie6916
      @davidimrie6916 PÅ™ed 3 dny

      @@esaedvik Another good book that exposes the controlling and toxic relationship in Hollywood is the Sondra Locke book about Clint Eastwood called, The Good The Bad and The Very Ugly.

    • @ItsMe-vg4vj
      @ItsMe-vg4vj PÅ™ed 3 dny

      He was better off without her. She wouldn't have been faithful to him.

    • @davidimrie6916
      @davidimrie6916 PÅ™ed 3 dny +1

      @@ItsMe-vg4vj Sondra Locke or Sally Field?

  • @johnhammonds5143
    @johnhammonds5143 PÅ™ed 15 dny +343

    "Is this song made for this movie?"
    Ohhhhh, Cassie. Jerry Reed is a musical legend. (Jerry Reed played Snowman) The story goes that the director shared with him that they needed to put together some music for this film. Jerry said, "Just give me a minute." And over the weekend -- the weekend, mind you -- he wrote Eastbound And Down, The Bandit, and The Legend. And they're all in this movie, unchanged from the way they were written. Jerry Reed is a legend.

    • @patricksullivan2261
      @patricksullivan2261 PÅ™ed 15 dny +23

      And a fantastically under rated actor. Reed had real acting chops. He just wasn't that interested in it.

    • @warinsidemyhead8939
      @warinsidemyhead8939 PÅ™ed 15 dny +14

      One of the great country guitar players of all times....Jerry is a legend....

    • @ronfehr7899
      @ronfehr7899 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      I used to have a cassette tape of Dave Dudley (another country singer) music, and I remember his rendition of East Bound and Down.

    • @CarnivoreUltimateLiving
      @CarnivoreUltimateLiving PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      wow did not know that

    • @legionkahn
      @legionkahn PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

      @@patricksullivan2261 I did like it when he decided to play the bad coach in The Waterboy.

  • @kenfreeman8888
    @kenfreeman8888 PÅ™ed 16 dny +265

    16 car accidents ... but only 15 were your fault. That clarification made me laugh so much. 😊

    • @tomloft2000
      @tomloft2000 PÅ™ed 16 dny +16

      I was really interested in the 1 that wasn't her fault.

    • @Logan_Baron
      @Logan_Baron PÅ™ed 15 dny +20

      Saying "Only" for the majority of them is funny.

    • @m.hreels9822
      @m.hreels9822 PÅ™ed 15 dny +11

      I'm more concerned about the people that she supposedly hit 😮 that is not cool if she's not much of a menace on the road!! That's dangerous as hell she shouldn't even have a license.

    • @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
      @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms PÅ™ed 15 dny +9

      @@m.hreels9822 Well, she did say most of them only involved inanimate objects... though I'm really divided as to whether that is better or worse. ðŸ˜ðŸ˜

    • @leefischer5814
      @leefischer5814 PÅ™ed 15 dny +8

      ​@@tomloft2000I'm interested in why she still has a freaking license. People like that normally lose it for 5 years after a certain number in a certain time span.

  • @ShawnTheDriver
    @ShawnTheDriver PÅ™ed 14 dny +11

    As a trucker now…this movie was the movie that made me want to do it. I’m only 26, I saw this movie when I was like 15 and it’s been my favorite movie ever since. I still watch it all of the time. 😂

  • @edoetschedoetsch
    @edoetschedoetsch PÅ™ed 15 dny +36

    Jerry Reed was also a Country Singer and absolutely shredded as a Guitarist

  • @TallBob1962
    @TallBob1962 PÅ™ed 15 dny +95

    I had forgotten. CB radios were the cell phones of the day. EVERYONE had a CB radio. LOL

    • @sprint955st
      @sprint955st PÅ™ed 14 dny +1

      Popular still nowadays, different but still a thing. Lots of YT videos on the subject. What happens when the cell network goes down…

    • @chrishenfling2182
      @chrishenfling2182 PÅ™ed 13 dny +1

      CB Radio is coming up this time ⤠so many CB Radio friends install the old Radios another in cars and houses 🎉 Nostalgic yes but its working. This is a cult Film for that ⤠Digital speak is out welcome back analog 😅

    • @cainealexander-mccord2805
      @cainealexander-mccord2805 PÅ™ed 12 dny

      You're not kidding. From Frb. '77 to late '78, there were CBs and Trans Ams from coast to coast. My Pops took me when I was 12. Man, I could watch this every night.

  • @benn454
    @benn454 PÅ™ed 16 dny +354

    Bandit's car is a 1977 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am. Because of the massive popularity of this movie, GM sold over 730,000 Firebirds between 1977-1981.

    • @onlylooksitalian
      @onlylooksitalian PÅ™ed 16 dny +10

      Actually, its a Pontiac Fire Chicken.

    • @randomthoughts5601
      @randomthoughts5601 PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

      @@onlylooksitalian Screaming Chicken

    • @vodengc520
      @vodengc520 PÅ™ed 16 dny +7

      My favorite car. Too bad I wasn't even born until 79, and never got the chance to buy one, lol.

    • @Lugnut64052
      @Lugnut64052 PÅ™ed 16 dny +10

      Also, the ones with the Pontiac engines were some of the best muscle cars of the era. Very speedy. They essentially destroyed about three of them making the movie, and they weren't modified in any way.

    • @Brett33
      @Brett33 PÅ™ed 15 dny +24

      " A pan am " 😂😂

  • @gordo608
    @gordo608 PÅ™ed 15 dny +16

    6:20 you have no idea how much every truck driver I know loves it when they see kids pumping their arm to honk at them. It's a rare occasion anymore, but it still puts a smile on their faces.

  • @wrighthousemedia
    @wrighthousemedia PÅ™ed 15 dny +53

    Back in the late 70's, if you lived between Georgia & Texas, Smokey & The Bandit was mandatory viewing. If you bought a house or did your taxes early, you got a free copy of the movie.
    Also, Pan Am old 70's airline, Trans Am is the car Bandit drove😂😂.

  • @dantedorran7715
    @dantedorran7715 PÅ™ed 16 dny +116

    "Smokey and the Bandit" is really just a live-action version of one of the old Road-Runner/Coyote cartoons. It doesn't take itself too seriously, and that's precisely why it's fun!

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +1

      yeah, seen "Smokey and the Bandit" over 20 times and I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT!! YOU ARE RIGHT!!!

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +1

      yeah, seen "Smokey and the Bandit" over 20 times and I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT!! YOU ARE RIGHT!!!

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +1

      yeah, seen "Smokey and the Bandit" over 20 times and I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT!! YOU ARE RIGHT!!!

    • @rufus5966
      @rufus5966 PÅ™ed 10 dny +1

      The Villian was too.

  • @chefskiss6179
    @chefskiss6179 PÅ™ed 15 dny +119

    It was just perfect being 10 years old in 1977: Star Wars, Smokey, Close Encounters, Sat Night Fever, Spy Who Loved Me... what a year!

    • @ShawNshawN
      @ShawNshawN PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      me too!

    • @richardlee2120
      @richardlee2120 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      and me, too!

    • @Vyp3Rau
      @Vyp3Rau PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      I was 6 and I still remember my parents taking me to all those movies at the cinema.

    • @eddiemendezjr6545
      @eddiemendezjr6545 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      And Elvis passed away

    • @marksterner7532
      @marksterner7532 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      I was 22 and in my final year at university. Loved all those great films!

  • @JimmyWilliams-qs7cx
    @JimmyWilliams-qs7cx PÅ™ed 14 dny +5

    Here are some interesting tidbits about Burt Reynolds: He shares the record with Tom Hanks, Clint Eastwood, and Bing Crosby for being the Top Box Office draw for five years. Only Tom Cruise surpasses them with a record of seven years. Burt was also a proud alumnus of Florida State University, where he not only designed but also purchased new home and away football uniforms for the team. He played football at FSU during the 1950s, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he often attended games, even suggesting plays to the then-head coach, Bobby Bowden. Reynolds frequently stated in interviews that had he not pursued acting, he would have opted for a career in football coaching.

  • @SierraBravo347
    @SierraBravo347 PÅ™ed 12 dny +4

    I watched this being filmed when I was just a kid. Jerry Reeds house was my Mom's Aunt's house, and the girl that said "Hey Uncle Bandit" was my cousin. They had Three of the Trans Ams to film with...two for stunts, and one on a trailer with cameras mounted on it. The entire movie was shot in Georgia.

  • @michelle_pgh
    @michelle_pgh PÅ™ed 15 dny +143

    My favorite part was when Cassie asked if the car was called a Pan Am. 😂 It may be long forgotten now, but back when this movie came out, it made every kid and guy on the face of the earth want a Trans Am.

    • @schroedingers_kotze
      @schroedingers_kotze PÅ™ed 15 dny +10

      There's a clear generation gap here, I guess. But the Trans Am was definitely a fancy car.

    • @islandseeker1260
      @islandseeker1260 PÅ™ed 14 dny +7

      I really wanted a Trans Am, and got caught up in the whole Firebird vs. Camaro debate. Even though I crusaded at the time for Pontiac, this many years later as my tastes have aged I gotta say I think the early pre-70's Camaro were the better looking vehicle with classic muscle car lines. Heck, Pontiac GTO (the Judge), Dodge Charger, Camaro, Firebird... I'd take any one of 'em nowadays!

    • @Chaddz3
      @Chaddz3 PÅ™ed 14 dny +3

      Pontiac in 1977 sold a car called the Can Am it was a dolled up version on a Catalina with ground effects spoiler and typical 70's ralleye stripes. very few were ever built and are collector's items today

    • @danishhald
      @danishhald PÅ™ed 14 dny

      Hilarious.

    • @wagonmaster1974
      @wagonmaster1974 PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      @@Chaddz3 The Can Am was based on the Lemans body. One year only car with just over a thousand produced.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 PÅ™ed 16 dny +337

    Well known fact that Burt Reynolds and Sally Field lived together for many years, their chemistry is very apparent in this film.
    Also, Burt Reynolds was the literal definition of cool in 1977.

    • @jonc7739
      @jonc7739 PÅ™ed 16 dny +49

      Burt Reynolds once said that breaking up with Sally Field was the biggest mistake of his life.

    • @lescook9021
      @lescook9021 PÅ™ed 15 dny +12

      Burt and Sally fell in love while making this film

    • @donaldfleming5049
      @donaldfleming5049 PÅ™ed 15 dny +9

      Burt & Sally would do the sequel 'Smokey & the Bandit II' together, as well as the movie 'Hooper' in 1978, the year after this movie came out. They also were in the movie 'The End', which also starred Dom Deluise.

    • @Joan-ph2es
      @Joan-ph2es PÅ™ed 15 dny +11

      I read they broke up soon after Burt wouldn't go with Sally to the Oscars the year she won Best Actress (Norma Rae). He was too jealous to be happy for her. No going back after that.

    • @-sandman4605
      @-sandman4605 PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      They where only together for 5 years and it was not a happy relationship, Burt Reynolds was a very jealous man & addicted to pain killers & alcohol due to injuries doing his own stunts which made it very hard for Sally to be with him.
      🇦🇺🦘

  • @Biwabik223
    @Biwabik223 PÅ™ed 14 dny +6

    I used to drive a 1975 Kenworth conventional. The interior scenes of this truck brings back many memories.

  • @laudanum669
    @laudanum669 PÅ™ed 15 dny +26

    "Little Enos" is played by actor/singer/song writer Paul Williams. He wrote some of the biggest hit songs in the 70's including the Carpenters' "We've Only Just Begun" and "Rainy Days and Mondays". He also wrote "Evergreen" sung by Barbra Streisand in the film A Star Is Born, for which he won a Grammy for Song of the Year and an Academy Award for Best Original Song.

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 PÅ™ed 15 dny +5

      Williams also wrote "Just An Old Fashioned Love Song" for Three Dog Night. His acting resume is fun.

    • @sergiozammel8261
      @sergiozammel8261 PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      My God, after all the years of watching this I didn't know !! Thanks for the info great songs !!

    • @jeeves7626
      @jeeves7626 PÅ™ed 15 dny +5

      I believe he also wrote all the songs for the Muppet Christmas Carol.

    • @donaldpaluga
      @donaldpaluga PÅ™ed 14 dny

      BECAUSE HE'S THIRSTY, DUMMY!

    • @Nasty-Canasta
      @Nasty-Canasta PÅ™ed 13 dny +1

      I think he also wrote the theme for "The Love Boat" but I might be misremembering

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit PÅ™ed 16 dny +90

    Context is important:
    In 1974 the US federal government imposed a National Maximum Speed Limit of 55 MPH, supposedly to decrease fuel usage. This law was near universally hated by the driving public and it quickly created an anti law enforcement sentiment among otherwise law-abiding citizens.
    It was in that environment that this movie about a charismatic speedy driver making a fool out of a dim-witted self-important traffic cop became instantly popular.

    • @oaktree1628
      @oaktree1628 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      I would not characterize the law as near universally hated- especially among safety minded people.

    • @cullertransportation
      @cullertransportation PÅ™ed 5 dny

      @@oaktree1628I would

  • @jamesaugust7498
    @jamesaugust7498 PÅ™ed 16 dny +75

    When Cleetus stopped in that bar/restaurant, he was getting the truck filled up. Since the truck holds like 300 gallons or so, it takes a while. Plenty of time to stop in for a bite. My old man was a trucker, and he absolutely loved this movie. This is the only movie he ever went to with us, and he laughed his ass off the entire time.
    Good times.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming PÅ™ed 14 dny +3

      Shortly after I got my CDL I took my mom for a ride along.
      I'd never seen her eyes get as big as when she saw the fuel bill. 😂
      I still like to do that at a smaller truck stop in our area where you still have to go inside to pay for diesel.
      Me: _"Fuel on 20."_
      Cashier: _"Ok. That'll be $640."_
      Entire line behind me: _"Oh my god!"_
      😂

    • @andrea8130
      @andrea8130 PÅ™ed 13 dny +1

      What a wonderful memory! 😊

    • @jamesaugust7498
      @jamesaugust7498 PÅ™ed 13 dny

      @@NarwahlGaming Nice.

  • @blecccccch
    @blecccccch PÅ™ed 15 dny +10

    Fun fact, this came out one week before Star Wars, and did so well that Star Wars itself opened to only number two at the box office its first week. It still was the second best grossing movie of 1977 after Star Wars.

    • @donaldpaluga
      @donaldpaluga PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      Actually...it came out the same weekend as SW

  • @leeturiano4419
    @leeturiano4419 PÅ™ed 14 dny +8

    Jerry Reed, the Driver of the Truck, was a country singer, that Eastbound and Down song at the beginning, was written and sang by him. Also, Burt and Sally dated for 5 years, and he called her" The love of His Life" in his book.

  • @jerrywalters8885
    @jerrywalters8885 PÅ™ed 16 dny +176

    Snowman is played by Jerry Reed the writer and the singer of most songs in the movie

    • @BigTroyT
      @BigTroyT PÅ™ed 15 dny +19

      Singer, writer, and master guitarman.

    • @JPDillon
      @JPDillon PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      Jerry Reed is a Georgia music Hall of Famer. A terrific guitar player, and also known for his humorous songs. Check out "Amos Moses", "She Got The Goldmine, I Got the Shaft", "Lord Mr. Ford".

    • @RobTzu
      @RobTzu PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      @@JPDillon She got the goldmine is not so funny to me after my divorce haha

    • @jerrypeacock2234
      @jerrypeacock2234 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      Fun piece of movie trivia for everyone, can you name every movie that Jerry Reed and Burt Reynolds starred in together without Googling it

    • @Wirenfeldt1990
      @Wirenfeldt1990 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      @@JPDillonAmos Moses was one of my favorite tracks from GTA San Andreas.. Jerry Reed is a legend..

  • @Ranadicus
    @Ranadicus PÅ™ed 15 dny +15

    RIP Bandit and Snowman. Together again making that big run in the sky.

  • @PalimpsestProd
    @PalimpsestProd PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    "Hooper" is Burt Reynolds' love letter to stuntmen. He made it after making sequels to this and Cannonball Run.

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    "I've been in 16 car accidents, only 15 my fault." Oh well then lol. You are hilarious Cassie and this movie is a forever must watch on tv.

  • @donaldfleming5049
    @donaldfleming5049 PÅ™ed 15 dny +50

    Fun fact: the motorcycle cop who pulled Jerry Reed over was played by Sonny Shroyer, who would later play Deputy Enos Strate in the TV series 'Dukes of Hazzard'.

    • @filthycasual8187
      @filthycasual8187 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      Ben Jones, who played Cooter, is also in this movie and I think John Schneider (Bo Duke) was at some point too.

    • @RltchieI
      @RltchieI PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      And Ben Jones aka Cooter is at at the start where Big & Little Enos are looking for the Bandit. Also John Schneider aka Bo Duke is in the crowd at the end when the sheriff takes off to pursue the Bandit on his mission to get clam chowder.

    • @kennethtilton6137
      @kennethtilton6137 PÅ™ed 13 dny

      So that was why he seemed familiar

    • @GUNNER67akaKelt
      @GUNNER67akaKelt PÅ™ed 9 dny +1

      Also played a small part in Forrest Gump.

    • @showcasecharlie11
      @showcasecharlie11 PÅ™ed 8 dny

      Cooter and Bo from DOH were also in this movie. But you got to catch them .. very brief appearances.

  • @ninjahandz1168
    @ninjahandz1168 PÅ™ed 16 dny +49

    Cassie’s handle: Chapstick
    Carly’s: Fetch

  • @patfleming6103
    @patfleming6103 PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

    I was selling cars at a Pontiac dealership when this movie came out. I had a couple come in and test drive a special edition Trans-Am like Bandit drove. We sat down to negotiate the price when the husband excused himself to visit the restroom. While he was gone his wife said to me "He hasn't been the same since we saw THAT movie". It was the easiest sale of my life.

  • @richardfoster2435
    @richardfoster2435 PÅ™ed 14 dny +6

    Another Fun Fact! The Guy Singing The Songs East Bound And Down And They Call You The Bandit Is Snowman Because Jerry Reed Is Actually A Country Singer And This Is His Acting Debut! MIND BLOWN!!!

  • @richardlee2120
    @richardlee2120 PÅ™ed 15 dny +46

    "Smokey and the Bandit" was the second highest grossing film in 1977 after "Star Wars." The film is filled with CB lingo, and gave Jackie Gleason a new lease on his comedic career. Billy Bob Thornton called "Smokey and the Bandit" a documentary where he came from.

    • @stankulp1008
      @stankulp1008 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      smokey was nominated for an Oscar in editing, but Star Wars took it

  • @chrisbrass8930
    @chrisbrass8930 PÅ™ed 15 dny +59

    This isn't a comedy, this is a documentary about truck drivers!
    My Dad and my grandpa we're both semi drivers when this movie was released, my dad's sister invited us to her home when HBO aired it, it was a family get together and lots of fun, I became a truck driver in 1990 once I was old enough to get my CDL and it's a popular movie with everyone in the profession!

    • @scottlyttle5586
      @scottlyttle5586 PÅ™ed 14 dny +4

      This movie was filmed in Georgia, and the director is the famous former stuntman turned director, Hal Needham. Hal went on to direct roommate Burt again in Cannonball Run, and some of his other films are Rad and Megaforce.
      Either way, the decision was shown to premiere the film in Atlanta. Someone said about Smokey and the Bandit.. "In the South, this film's a Damn Documentary!!"

    • @chrisbrass8930
      @chrisbrass8930 PÅ™ed 13 dny

      @@scottlyttle5586 don't forget, the inspiration for this movie came about because he was staying at a hotel in either Georgia or Alabama, don't remember which, and his Coors beer he brought to the hotel with him kept disappearing, come to find out his cleaning Lady kept swiping a beer from his cooler and that's how he learned that Coors beer couldn't be sold east of Texas so he thought "that would make a great storyline, some rich guy wants a truckload of beer for a shindig, so he hires Burt Reynolds to haul it to Atlanta, all while being chased by a Texas county sheriff" and from that inspiration one of the best movies of all time was born.
      If it hadn't been for some Flash Gordon rip off by George Lucas coming out the same year, it would have been the most popular movie of 1977, but don't worry, I know for a fact that every individual with a CDL has seen it, one of my best friends who drives semi has introduced his young son to the movie and last Christmas I gave his boy an authentic Bandit black diecast metal Trans-Am for Christmas last year. Dad was born almost a decade after the movie and was introduced to it by his step dad who is also a trucker

  • @donaldchapman6161
    @donaldchapman6161 PÅ™ed 6 hodinami

    I was 15 when this movie came out. My cousin had that car. I put underneath a barbwire fence playing the Bandit. 45 years later I introduced my girlfriend (from Wisconsin) to this movie😆

  • @tizer1233
    @tizer1233 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    To this day I can remember as a kid going to the drive-thru (outside) theater and watching this, this is to me one of the best slap-stick comedies of my time..and the Trans Am car iconic!

  • @joealvarez8733
    @joealvarez8733 PÅ™ed 16 dny +137

    "Junior, remind me when we get home to slap yo mama!"
    These lines cracked me up back in the day, plus The Honeymooners dialogue was chef's kiss 💋

    • @Devinn777
      @Devinn777 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      “One of these days Alice, one of these days… POW! Right in the kisser.â€

    • @joebaker2311
      @joebaker2311 PÅ™ed 2 dny +1

      The line that always gets me. "Daddy my hat blew off" "I hope your head was in it"

  • @tancar2004
    @tancar2004 PÅ™ed 15 dny +42

    "Som Bitch" came from Burt Reynolds dad. He was a sheriff in Florida and that's what he would always say. Burt told Jackie Gleason about it and thought it was perfect for the character.

    • @TheEileen
      @TheEileen PÅ™ed 12 dny

      It's absolutely a Soutern thing too. I don't think I heard Son of a ... until I left the south. Hee.

  • @ronfehr7899
    @ronfehr7899 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    Prior to this, Sally Field was already an established actress, having starred in a Gidget movie, as well as the television series The Flying Nun, from 1967-1970.

  • @jefffinn1105
    @jefffinn1105 PÅ™ed 13 dny +2

    "Snowman" = Jerry Reed, not only a good C&W singer (title song) but a killer guitarist with a distinct style who was session musician in Nashville previously, he is on some of Dylan's early electric albums.

  • @jackgilchrist
    @jackgilchrist PÅ™ed 15 dny +36

    CB radios were very popular in the '70s. Many people had at least one in their car. My parents also had a base unit in the house. If someone went somewhere they could keep in touch with home.
    It was sort of the '70s version of social media. I used to chat with people for hours on the CB as a kid.
    Part of the reason they became popular was the '73 oil crisis, and the resulting national 55 mph speed limit, which led to CBs being used to find stations with gas and the best prices, and to avoid speed traps on the highway. Pop culture stuff like Smokey and the Bandit just made them even more popular.
    They were also good for avoiding bad traffic, and in case of emergency in the days before cell phones.
    The truckers always gave you a better weather ,traffic and police report than any app today. God bless the truckers.

    • @scottcoley1906
      @scottcoley1906 PÅ™ed 12 dny

      Pretty sure the reason we have had the bad truck pile-ups in Texas and Colorado that we didn't have before is because everyone having CB's because they are faster than Google maps at updating truckers about wrecks up ahead.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles PÅ™ed 16 dny +39

    Movie was the second-biggest box-office hit of that year, behind Star Wars.

  • @Vennegoor10
    @Vennegoor10 PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

    Trivia fun is that Little Enos was played by Paul Williams, who wrote all of the music for Muppet Christmas Carol.

  • @rosieb949
    @rosieb949 PÅ™ed 14 dny +3

    Every boy in East Texas either bought a Trans Am, or wanted to, after this movie. And oh my gosh, all the cb radios after this. I swear. I was fun.

  • @BestofItMoviedoc
    @BestofItMoviedoc PÅ™ed 16 dny +63

    😂😂😂Pan Am was an airline in its day. The car Bandit is driving is a Trans-Am

    • @tomloft2000
      @tomloft2000 PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

      I've been in both of them lol

    • @Zankaroo
      @Zankaroo PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      Speaking of Pan Am Cassie needs to watch Aviator.

  • @justinrichards7822
    @justinrichards7822 PÅ™ed 16 dny +19

    Sometimes I don't believe you're that innocent, then I see you genuinely trying to compute why a 10-100 is better than a 10-200.. so funny

  • @cbrbird
    @cbrbird PÅ™ed 13 dny +1

    Citizen's Band (CB) radio was a big craze in the mid '70s. Re -watching these clips after god knows how many years, I kind of realize that it was an early form of social media...

  • @mustang4life
    @mustang4life PÅ™ed 16 dny +190

    Jackie Gleason’s ICONIC role, as this movie would not be the same if anyone else played the role of Sheriff Buford T. Justice. 🥃🇺🇸🤘ðŸ»ðŸ‡ºðŸ‡¸ðŸ¥ƒ

    • @keithralston1133
      @keithralston1133 PÅ™ed 16 dny +21

      Jackie Gleason's ICONIC role is Ralph Cramden.

    • @ComedicPause
      @ComedicPause PÅ™ed 16 dny +14

      Perhaps his iconic film role. His _most_ iconic role was Ralph Kramden.

    • @Lugnut64052
      @Lugnut64052 PÅ™ed 16 dny +8

      @@keithralston1133 Hence his ad lib about "kicking Bandit's ass around the moon by now."

    • @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
      @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms PÅ™ed 15 dny +7

      @@keithralston1133 True, but she didn't even know who the legendary Jackie Gleason was, let alone get a "The Honeymooners" reference. That's WAY before her time. I was pretty pleased to see country singer, song writer, and actor Jerry Reed again. I always did like him for some reason.

    • @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
      @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      Also, I'm pretty sure that Fred was the reason I developed an affinity for owning Bassett Hounds. ðŸ˜

  • @DeanTheLaughingMann
    @DeanTheLaughingMann PÅ™ed 16 dny +76

    This movie was one big reason, if not the reason, why the Pontiac "Firebird" Trans Am became such a popular car for years after the film released.

    • @benn454
      @benn454 PÅ™ed 16 dny +12

      A black and gold T/A was THE car to have for blue collar folks in the late 70s - early 80s.

    • @snow3017
      @snow3017 PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

      are you sure it's not called a 'pam am' - lol. Sometimes her flubs just hit my right in the heart.

    • @gregzaffuto4507
      @gregzaffuto4507 PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      Also helped fuel the CB craze in the 70s in cars and people talking and listening to truckers on the road warning about "Smokies". Coors beer was only a fad at the time because it was illegal. There was nothing special about it but college students went crazy over it because it was hard to get in certain states and went for a premium price if you bought it off someone who made a trip and brought back a case or two.

    • @LoganFerguson
      @LoganFerguson PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      I see a rotting one in a parking lot daily on my way to work. Exact same paint job. Makes me sad.

    • @bdcollar
      @bdcollar PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      Thats why my first car was a 2nd gen Trans am martinique blue loved that car

  • @PhenomProductions-tn5fj
    @PhenomProductions-tn5fj PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    Jackie Gleason was saying Sumbitch instead of the traditional Son of a Bitch because Burt Reynolds told him that his father, Burton Reynolds Sr, who was a decorated WW2 veteran and Police Chief in Florida, used to say "Sumbitch". And Jackie decided to put that in the movie as Buford T. Justice.

  • @ThePoorBoy
    @ThePoorBoy PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    A lot of people think that Burt bore a resemblance to Brando (Burt actually played something of a parody of Brando in an episode of The Twilight Zone). Burt was arguably the biggest movie star of the '70s, especially after Smokey. It wasn't until Harrison came along as Han Solo that a male actor commanded that same level of coolness that Burt had. Smokey and A New Hope both came out in '77. Wish I would have been around back then -- these movies were such a wonderful part of the culture back then (at least according to my parents!).

  • @glenerickson358
    @glenerickson358 PÅ™ed 15 dny +13

    When Buford said he sounded taller on the radio, he meant white. 😉

    • @aebalc
      @aebalc PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

      "What in the hell is the world coming to?"

  • @chefskiss6179
    @chefskiss6179 PÅ™ed 15 dny +93

    Forrest Gump: "Mama never spoke much about Pa other than saying he was on vacation. She did talk about going on many fun rides with him."
    😂😂😂

    • @celticblacksmith
      @celticblacksmith PÅ™ed 15 dny +7

      .... whoa.... mind=🤯

    • @maxcooper6554
      @maxcooper6554 PÅ™ed 15 dny +5

      I was today years old when I made this connection...whoa

    • @rebo2610
      @rebo2610 PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

      Is that a real quote? I'll be a sum-bich!

    • @chefskiss6179
      @chefskiss6179 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      @@rebo2610 "Mama said life is like an eighteen-wheeler haul... you never know what you gonna get."
      😂😂😂

    • @Gravydog316
      @Gravydog316 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      🤯

  • @ik7578
    @ik7578 PÅ™ed 12 dny +1

    They call the state troopers bubble gum machines because of the shape of the lights on top of their cars. 😂

  • @debbiethompson3460
    @debbiethompson3460 PÅ™ed 14 dny +3

    I was in high school when this movie came out and almost every car in our parking lot were black Trans Ams. You have no idea how huge this was. Everyone was talking in CB Talk and quoting this movie. The director was Hal Needham, a stuntman. Burt Reynolds was really into stunts and actually made a movie a year later called Hooper. It was also directed by Needham and about an old washed-up stuntman still trying to stay relevant. It's a fun one! Sally Field was also in it, since they were an item for a while, they had great chemistry.

  • @glenerickson358
    @glenerickson358 PÅ™ed 15 dny +7

    The following year, Burt and Sally were in another movie, Hooper.

  • @phila3884
    @phila3884 PÅ™ed 15 dny +7

    For more than a few years, Burt Reynolds was *the* biggest movie star of the 70s.

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +1

      yeah, and he sure wrecked his life with all of his popularity and money!

  • @crimson_nimbus
    @crimson_nimbus PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Jerry Reed, the guy driving the truck, was a great musician and wrote the music for this movie.

  • @quietman71
    @quietman71 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    I believe the name "Sheriff Buford T. Justice" was a spoof on Buford Pusser, a sheriff in Tennessee who waged a one-man war against local mobsters; there was a very popular film, "Walking Tall", based on his life.

  • @rickstanford2180
    @rickstanford2180 PÅ™ed 16 dny +38

    Jerry Reed, the Showman, wrote all music for the movie. Story is that he did it practically overnight. He was a big name in country music at the time.

    • @Dman0001
      @Dman0001 PÅ™ed 16 dny +10

      Snowman not showman

    • @morbidangel2424
      @morbidangel2424 PÅ™ed 16 dny +5

      What you mean at the time still is

    • @rickstanford2180
      @rickstanford2180 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

      @@Dman0001 I know. Just my fat fingers.

    • @Dman0001
      @Dman0001 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      @@rickstanford2180 i figured it might be his accent that caused confusion

  • @chrisreinhardt5493
    @chrisreinhardt5493 PÅ™ed 16 dny +23

    Please watch Tom Selleck in Quigley Down Under.

    • @ImaCOTV
      @ImaCOTV PÅ™ed 15 dny

      I like “Quigley Down Under†an I might be the only person who kind of likes “High Wind To China.â€

    • @stevesparks2001
      @stevesparks2001 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      I keep hoping for the same thing, but I guess if you don't join the Patreon, We don't get an consideration on Suggestions! And while I love this Channel, I'm not going to pay someone to take my suggestions! No offense !

  • @donaldfleming5049
    @donaldfleming5049 PÅ™ed 5 dny

    Another fun fact: the actor who played Big Enos Burdette was Pat McCormick, who was also one of the lead writers on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and who also appeared on the show as a member of the Mighty Carson Arts Players,often showing up in costume (two of his appearances that I recall were as Cupid & as an disgruntled bunny who missed out on winning a Patsy Award (the award equivalent to the Oscar that is given to animal performers every year).

  • @yxeaviationphotog
    @yxeaviationphotog PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Bandit's job with the car was to block ...just means he gets the cops to chase him so the truck can keep going and avoid getting pulled over.

  • @jakubfabisiak9810
    @jakubfabisiak9810 PÅ™ed 16 dny +21

    You should watch "Jackie Gleeson crashes Burt Reynolds' party" - at a party for Reynolds on account of his acting career, Gleeson appeared in-character as Bufford T. Justice, made a speech about catching The Bandit, and left without acknowledging Burt, who damn near pissed himself laughing. It's absolutely hilarious...

  • @fantasycamp4000
    @fantasycamp4000 PÅ™ed 15 dny +12

    I saw this movie in the theater when I was early 20's. When we left the movie I had the urge to peel out and drive fast, but my date was not so keen on the idea. This movie was at the peek of Burt Reynolds career and the start of Sally Fields rejuvenated career. Two years later she won an oscar for "Norma Rae"and had won acclaim for a tv movie "Sybil" about a multiple personality woman. and went on to a great film career. As a boy I watched her as the "Flying Nun" on tv.

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      yeah, and think about the 'string' of surfer movies she was in, before her tv series "The Flying Nun".

    • @fantasycamp4000
      @fantasycamp4000 PÅ™ed 14 dny

      @@samuelmoulds1016 Oh and I forgot about her tv role of Giget

  • @Journeyman.71
    @Journeyman.71 PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

    Others have commented on the specific issues regarding Coors Beer, but, another factor is that, in some states it is illegal to transport significant quantities of alcoholic beverage across state lines without the proper permits and various taxes having been paid. This was especially true at the time the movie is set.

  • @PhantomLantern2814
    @PhantomLantern2814 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Congratulations Cassie, you’re one step closer to becoming an honorary citizen of the state of Georgia

  • @justwondering5651
    @justwondering5651 PÅ™ed 15 dny +10

    This is just light-hearted, simple minded fun -- and sometimes that's just what you need.

  • @jamesg.675
    @jamesg.675 PÅ™ed 16 dny +93

    I think a lot of people have forgotten that Burt Reynolds and Sally Field were an 'item' (Real couple) in the 70's!

    • @LordEriolTolkien
      @LordEriolTolkien PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      I remember the 70's

    • @tim2024-df5fu
      @tim2024-df5fu PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      This movie revived her career too. She went onto to win an Oscar for Norma Rae after this.

    • @LordEriolTolkien
      @LordEriolTolkien PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      @@tim2024-df5fu I watched her as The Flying Nun

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

      yeah, Reynolds was quite the thing! we all wanted to be like him. he was a "Playgirl Magazine" centerfold. in real life he treated all women like..... aaah..... actually.....#2, or as they said In this movie, "10-200". near the end of his life, he said Sally Field was the one true love of his life.

  • @countgeekula9143
    @countgeekula9143 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Burt Reynolds, one of THE great movie stars. Such a fun movie. If it wasn't for Star Wars this would easily have been the biggest blockbuster of 1977. It was huge.

  • @alanbayles1218
    @alanbayles1218 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    This film is probably one of my favourite films that Burt Reynolds made with Sally Field. His chemistry with her is amazing. Also Jackie Gleeson's interactions with Junior are hilarious - "There’s No Way, No Way, You Can Come From My Loins. Soon as I get home, first thing I'm gonna do is punch yo' momma in da mouth!" 🤣🤣

  • @sageortega-scott9454
    @sageortega-scott9454 PÅ™ed 15 dny +23

    If I had to give you a Handle, I feel like you’d be… Pop Mama. You just have very kind mom-vibes and you seem to really love popcorn.

  • @danlimbaugh3629
    @danlimbaugh3629 PÅ™ed 16 dny +9

    I was living overseas in 1977... we came back stateside that summer and I went and saw StarWars and Smokey And The Bandit back to back one afternoon!!! Pretty righteous day for a 13 year old!!!

    • @herbie1234567890
      @herbie1234567890 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      That’s one hard-to-top day at the movies.

  • @angelh1743
    @angelh1743 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Sally Field will always be a beautiful lady. Always. Even today. Her eyes and smile are pure sunshine.

  • @stevedavis5704
    @stevedavis5704 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

    Jerry Reed had a variety of songs with a lot of songs aimed at the truckers. About the twenty eight hours I think the song would be “Caffeine, Nicotine, Benzedrine and Wish Me Luckâ€. The truckers my dad drove with called it Driving with Benny. That’s why they so tightly regulate the hours you can drive now because they would drive until they collapsed.

  • @raybarry4307
    @raybarry4307 PÅ™ed 16 dny +6

    He had a relationship from 1976 to 1980 (then off-and-on until 1982) with Sally Field, during which time they appeared together in four films. In 2016, he regarded Field as the love of his life.

  • @robertjames-life4768
    @robertjames-life4768 PÅ™ed 15 dny +4

    Junior, played by Mike Henry, had played professional football and was Tarzan in several 60’s movie versions.

  • @chaddnewman2699
    @chaddnewman2699 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    My grandfather was a trucker. I rode all over the Southeast with him during summers in the late 70s, not long after this movie came out. This movie brings back a lot of nostalgia.

  • @fjmj1980
    @fjmj1980 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

    My mind was blown when I leaned that little Enos wrote Rainbow Connection. Yes that song!

    • @stankulp1008
      @stankulp1008 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      he wrote a lot of TV music, including The Partridge Family and Muppets...

  • @loucad1802
    @loucad1802 PÅ™ed 16 dny +143

    Movie legend:
    10-4 means, understood
    Whats your 20? means where are you?
    Whats your handle? your CB nickname
    Honey-hush? This means wow!
    Pedal to the metal means push gas pedal to the floor
    Sum bitch means son of a bitch.
    Enjoy the film!

    • @TroyConvers5000
      @TroyConvers5000 PÅ™ed 16 dny +25

      Bear in the air = Police helicopter.

    •  PÅ™ed 16 dny +13

      @@TroyConvers5000 10-100 taking a leak.

    • @jeremy63391
      @jeremy63391 PÅ™ed 16 dny +13

      Evel Knievel = Cop on motorcycle
      Smokey Bear = Police cars
      Bear in the hardware = Police Military force
      Gear Jammers = Truckers
      10-100 = loitering
      10-200 = restroom
      Choke and puke = restaurant- truck stop
      F O = **** off

    • @Lugnut64052
      @Lugnut64052 PÅ™ed 16 dny +13

      Choke and puke = road side restaurant

    • @curtisberard7831
      @curtisberard7831 PÅ™ed 15 dny +7

      Chicken coop -- weigh station
      Swindle sheet -- log book

  • @parrothd007
    @parrothd007 PÅ™ed 16 dny +66

    In case no one has mentioned it, look up Jackie Gleason. He’s one of the greats. He was on TV when TV was broadcast live on a show called The Honeymooners.

    • @pvanukoff
      @pvanukoff PÅ™ed 16 dny +1

      Always felt he was overrated.

    • @CCFONESOL
      @CCFONESOL PÅ™ed 16 dny +2

      The Toy

    • @pleutron
      @pleutron PÅ™ed 16 dny +8

      @@pvanukoff you watch your mouth Jr.

    • @TobyBaker-hz3rw
      @TobyBaker-hz3rw PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      😂

    • @ImaCOTV
      @ImaCOTV PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      He did so many great movies, including some dramas like “The Hustler†where he played Minnesota Fats, and “Requiem for a Heavyweight.â€

  • @ImaCOTV
    @ImaCOTV PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    At the time this movie was made it was illegal to transport Coors Beer east of the Mississippi River.
    Burt Reynolds and Sally Field were in a relationship when they made this movie.
    A couple of other Burt Reynolds movies you might find fun are “Cannonball Run†and “Hooper.†“Cannonball Run†co-starred Farrah Fawcett and Dom DeLuise with appearances by a number of other people, including Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Jackie Chan, and Roger Moore. “Hopper†is a comedy about a movie stuntman nearing the end of his career. It co-stars Sally Field, Jan Michael Vincent, and a host of others. His movie, as well as “Smokey and the Bandit†and “Cannonball Run,†was directed by Hal Needham who was a retired stuntman.

  • @zepedrofd
    @zepedrofd PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    The making of documentary of the movie is as epic as the movie! A must watch!!!

  • @calebwilliams7659
    @calebwilliams7659 PÅ™ed 16 dny +87

    @Cassie: Yes, in the 70's it was illegal to transport Coors beer east of the Mississippi River. The reason was because Coors was not pasteurized and it was shipped from the brewery in Golden, Colorado cold and had to reach its destination within 12 hours by law to prevent it from potentially spoiling. There were refrigeration semi trucks back then, but for some reason the Federal government still didn't allow Coors to be shipped beyond the 12 hour limit. So there were some kinds of bootlegging laws still in effect in the late 70's and this was one of them.

    • @TheJereld
      @TheJereld PÅ™ed 16 dny +8

      Thanks for that info.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr PÅ™ed 16 dny +7

      Coors didn't want to deal with the licensing out of their region. Regional brand always kept cold.

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 PÅ™ed 16 dny +4

      I grew up in Kansas & Coors was fairly big there. When I was 16, I moved to Michigan, right when they’d been allowed to bring Coors East of the Mississippi. I was all excited to get Molson & Labatts & all the people I was hanging out with wanted to get Coors all the time😞

    • @evanhoffman8730
      @evanhoffman8730 PÅ™ed 16 dny +8

      Also, I don’t know if this applies too, but some counties across America are still to this day, dry counties, meaning no alcohol. Fun fact, the county where Jack Daniel’s is made, is a dry county. Weird…

    • @williamhirschi3334
      @williamhirschi3334 PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      I rode Amtrak’s San Francisco Zephyr (now the California Zephyr) from Chicago to Reno and back in 1978. They had Coors beer in the lounge car, but couldn’t serve any until the train crossed the Mississippi on the way out west, and had to stop serving it when the train crossed the Mississippi headed back east.

  • @coltonfolkers2611
    @coltonfolkers2611 PÅ™ed 16 dny +4

    As a truck driver, I'm so glad you reacted to this movie. It's a classic!

  • @TrackMaster844
    @TrackMaster844 PÅ™ed 15 dny +3

    10:16 - Yes. Bo/Bandit was “running blocker†for the truck, basically he was the distraction for the cops to chase after while Cletus/Snowman avoided getting pulled over.

  • @brianbooker8724
    @brianbooker8724 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

    Smokey and the Bandit was an unexpected hit when it came out. I think it cost less than 5 million to make and ended up grossing 300 million worldwide. In North America it was second only to Star Wars as the highest grossing film in 1977.

  • @Fisherpriest
    @Fisherpriest PÅ™ed 16 dny +114

    There is no way to describe when movies like this came out.
    We had 3 television channels. Not much on except for Saturday mornings or late night VHF stuff for teens. None of this bombardment of media.
    I'm afraid cultural events that unified everyone are long gone.
    Sad, really.
    I hope you enjoy the movie!

    • @LadyIarConnacht
      @LadyIarConnacht PÅ™ed 16 dny +24

      Yes, we ALL had a handle, CB owner or not, and we all cheered for the rebel truckers. It was one of those times when you could start to feel the restrictions bearing down on you. Since 9/11 it's off the chain and feels like a prison system to those of us who grew up in the 70's.

    • @jennifermichelleswanson3797
      @jennifermichelleswanson3797 PÅ™ed 16 dny +19

      The kids now a days don't have a clue as to what 'TRUE' imagination is. You had to think and do things with your siblings or your close neighbor kids to have a lot of fun. Because there wasn't much on tv to really watch until later in the evening, and you still had to have your homework done and you still had to be ready for bed by a certain time. I don't know about you, but I lived around the Detroit area, so we only had like 6 channels to watch, and 3 of them were the same as the other 3.

    • @kd5you1
      @kd5you1 PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

      We had 4 VHF channels including PBS and 2 UHF which were independent stations. Later we got one more UHF, and years later those UHF became FOX, UPN, and The WB (now CW).

    • @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
      @Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms PÅ™ed 15 dny +5

      @@kd5you1 I'm trying to remember... we had (of course) channels 4, 5, and 9 along with the VHF channels 41 and 19 (when we had a good reception day). It's slightly depressing to realize that most of the folks in this channel have NO idea what we are talking about.

    • @Ernwaldo
      @Ernwaldo PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      @@Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms19 & 41 would be UHF channels. The lower numbers (& sepepate dia) would be VHF.

  • @Nasty-Canasta
    @Nasty-Canasta PÅ™ed 16 dny +46

    "Lemme have a Diablo Sandwich and a Dr. Pepper, and make it fast, im in a goddamn hurry!"
    Oh and Richard Petty is "The King"

    • @not_that_Jared
      @not_that_Jared PÅ™ed 16 dny

      "You want something?"
      "Hush puppies Daddy!"
      "We got no time for that crap! Dumb sumbitch!"

    • @michaellynch3502
      @michaellynch3502 PÅ™ed 16 dny +11

      Buford (shouting out the door): "You want somethin!?"
      Junior (from the car): "Hush puppies Daddy!"
      Buford: "WE GOT NO TIME FOR THAT CRAP! Damn sumbitch!"

    • @donaldpaluga
      @donaldpaluga PÅ™ed 14 dny

      ​@@michaellynch3502dollar and a half

  • @teeheeteeheeish
    @teeheeteeheeish PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

    It’s perfectly acceptable to refer to Burt as Turd Ferguson

  • @natskivna
    @natskivna PÅ™ed 14 dny +2

    I"ll always remember the first time I saw this movie. I was 13 years old in 1977 and was on a big trip across the country from Montana to NY to take part as best man in my brothers wedding. My mom and dad and I made it to NYC and watched Smokey and the Bandit at Radio City Music Hall. Great memories.

  • @EdiCemalovic
    @EdiCemalovic PÅ™ed 16 dny +37

    This movie was filmed in State of Georgia. My home state! Coors beer was illegal in Georgia and other border line. This was real life in 1970s.

    • @SquirminHermanthe1eyedGerman
      @SquirminHermanthe1eyedGerman PÅ™ed 15 dny +2

      yup, I lived just 2 miles from Snowmans house in Jonesboro the summer of '76 & seen a lot of the filming! Moved to Covington in '77 & got to be in the 1st episode of Dukes of Hazzard 1978 & an extra in Cannonball Run 1981

    • @bengilbert7655
      @bengilbert7655 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      They even mentioned my hometown of Conyers. Selling any alcohol was illegal in a lot of Georgia counties. Mail order and online sales of wine was also prohibited in Georgia.

    • @Jaserocks2
      @Jaserocks2 PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      I lived in Coweta county where they filmed some of the driving scenes

    • @matthewtarpley7613
      @matthewtarpley7613 PÅ™ed 15 dny

      A few scenes were filmed in McDonough. I live no more than a few blocks from the square and also Highway 42.

  • @mattstanford9673
    @mattstanford9673 PÅ™ed 7 dny

    Burt Reynold's mustache is iconic. He looks...alien when he doesn't have one ("The Longest Yard").

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 PÅ™ed 23 hodinami

    27:36 Funny how Snowman's truck suddenly has a massive ram bumper *just* when he hits the cars, and it vanishes again instantly.

  • @marvinsarracino116
    @marvinsarracino116 PÅ™ed 16 dny +106

    Can't get better than Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jackie Gleason and Jerry Reed! Ok add in fast cars, trucker talk and great lines... "I'm gonna get that som bich"! 😠Lastly the unforgettable song "Eastbound and Down!" Thanks for sharing Cassie... PiB ðŸ¿

    • @Instantphojo
      @Instantphojo PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

      10-4!!

    • @aprilnewsome1932
      @aprilnewsome1932 PÅ™ed 15 dny +6

      That's a great handle for her. PIB 😂

    • @SanJoseBob
      @SanJoseBob PÅ™ed 15 dny +1

      Miss Cassie, just so you know, Burt and Sally were a couple for about 4-6 yrs, Burt said afterwards “she was the one who got awayâ€. There’s also a “ Bandit II†sequel. The car is a ‘77 Pontiac Firebird “Trans-Amâ€. Everybody wanted one after this movie….. SanJoséBob

  • @Airihi
    @Airihi PÅ™ed 15 dny +8

    All these songs were sung by Jerry Reed who also played Snowman. You may recognize him as the mean football coach from the Adam Sandler film, Waterboy

  • @oharadt
    @oharadt PÅ™ed 12 dny +1

    'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' connection: Brad Pitt's stuntman character is an amalgam of several real people, but primarily Hal Needham, who directed 'Smokey and the Bandit' and Leonardo DiCaprio's character primarily based on Burt Reynolds, including the friendship. Jerry Reed, who played Snowman here, was primarily known as a (very funny) Country Musician and he wrote the songs for 'Smokey and the Bandit', with "Eastbound and Down" becoming one of the most famous in his repertoire. This film was also in theaters the same summer the original 'Star Wars' - the two films were the highest grossing films of 1977.

  • @EarmonkeyMusic
    @EarmonkeyMusic PÅ™ed 11 dny

    Paul Williams, who played Little Enos, is an uber-talented actor, songwriter, performer. He wrote Kermit's song "The Rainbow Connection" and had a track ("Touch") on Daft Punk's album of the year, Random Access Memories. He also wrote several of the Carpenters' hits amongst other accomplishments.

  • @toiletduk
    @toiletduk PÅ™ed 15 dny +9

    We don't have state border checkpoints, but a truck can be stopped and checked by a cop at will. You have to present your manifest when asked and allow the cargo to be checked. On top of that, there's weigh stations that are required to pass through, and cops can check you there.

  • @ryanweintraub9448
    @ryanweintraub9448 PÅ™ed 16 dny +10

    Im 22 and grew up on this. Not gonna lie, this is 100% one of those fun movies that never gets old how many times I watch it. Fun fact: the dude who played the sheriff is Jackie Gleason. The dude who played Ralph on the Honeymooners in the 50s. The inspiration for characters like Fred Flintstone and the likes. Also, Cleetus' actor is Jerry Reed. He did all of the music for the movie