My Dad bought a used 59 Dodge Coronet, 2 door CHP commander car. Man was it fast and BIG. Parents, 5 kids and a dog went from California to Alabama and back at least 3 times in it. Dad was in the Navy :)
Once...Just once I'd like to see the bad guys get away! Eli Wallach played a great villain. This was shot 9 years before "The good, the bad and the ugly".
Fantastic ... period classic crime drama Love the 57 Plymouth Beautiful motor ... My dream car It's funny how the film speeded up at the end. RIP, Eli Wallach
When the Plymouth came to the end of the incompleted overpass I thought they were going to do a Blues Bros and stop at the edge and flip back through the air over a cop car.Perhaps the producers got the idea from this old classic.
Great old clip but the music at the end of the show had me laughing my head off, it sounded as if it was from a slap-stick vaudeville comedy production. Thanks for sharing, though.
A lot of the time they removed the windshield when filming from the front so light didn't reflect off of it and cause glare. They might still do this for all I know.
@@isaacsrandomvideos667 What an infantile comment, champ. My “whole argument” is emojis?? Really, champ? I clearly stated what the deal was. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
Imagine if this happen in San Francisco today. The police would need to stand back so that social workers can get it resolved. And they must remember to use the right pronouns, or they will be fired. And there would be homeless and poop everywhere.
All I can see are a bunch of Ford and Doge cars chasing that Plymouth! But do you see that Plymouth go! Must have a 383 Commando under the hood! They probably couldn't get the Chevy to start!!!!!
0:29 if the suspect ever used his vehicle as a weapon against pedestrians or officers threatening the safety, the police then has the lethal force to shoot at the engine block, driver, and/or tires.
I admire the ability of the police, sans seat belts, to sit ramrod straight in a vehicle that is careening down the street at 60 mph on cheap, bias ply tires.
Well there is one 1956 Chevrolet --a wagon parked at 2:53 as the 1957 Ford "Chevy" police car passes EDIT and 7 seconds of a 1956 Chevrolet police car at 6:01
Oh i know what you're trying to say (that people were better back then) but you're wrong. The criminals were just as cowardly back then as now, as shown by the taking of a child as cover. As for your other points, Fast food was not quite born yet in 1956, so no wrappers. Spray paint was not commonplace, either, having only been invented in 1949. Its not like there was a broad color pallette and it certainly was not inexpensive enough to use for graffiti! There were fewer people, so far less incentive to advertise your gang to people as well. Again,There were far fewer people around in 1956, and there was plenty of non-service type jobs available because the US wasn't bombed to oblivion during WW2. Lastly, If you think that they didnt clean the streets up prior to filming, there's a bridge for sale on the other side of America that you might be interested in. FWIW, everything always looks pretty spiffy in Black and White film, Its why people still use it when they want to look classy.
@@twoeightythreez Sorry Bud, our society as a whole is in decline. So don't give me this B.S. Yes, there's always been bad people, but most don't have any pride at all anymore. I'm 57 years old and remember when people had a higher moral standard overall.
@@DRILL-SGT.HARTMAN The biggest meth and fentanyl problems are in places like Missouri and Midwest. So be sure to cheer on the big Pharma and NRA buddy.
@bigblockjalopy Hahaha that's awesome!! Have you seen the one Coldwarmotors is restoring?!? The guy is doing the most insane restoration ever on one out of 3 rust cancer ridden cars.
Amazing! so sad cars lost those beautiful forms,engine sounds and boat like handling,now is just "hurr durr...safety first...plastic bumpers...airbags...leds.." pleasant driving was substituted by fear.
Poor Eli I assume he died when he hit the ground 😫 Fortunately the hostages weren't shaken due to that torsion aire ride. Push button trans couldn't get them out of their predicament.
Great clip - I especially like how they showed the use of the push button auto transmission!
Don't ya just love the rearview mirror mounted on the dash.
Yep.. we had a 57 dodge sierra station wagon with the same mirror location
Look how clean and normal San Francisco looked.
My Dad bought a used 59 Dodge Coronet, 2 door CHP commander car. Man was it fast and BIG. Parents, 5 kids and a dog went from California to Alabama and back at least 3 times in it. Dad was in the Navy :)
Fortunately, no ‘57 Plymouths were harmed or killed in the making of this film!
Loving the sped up bits at the end.of these. Always makes me chuckle.
I only saw one '56 Chevy...several shots of it, though. Plenty of '57 Fords and a '57 Dodge..maybe an Imperial towards the end....
Once...Just once I'd like to see the bad guys get away! Eli Wallach played a great villain. This was shot 9 years before "The good, the bad and the ugly".
Just thinking a car chase with modern cars would not be nearly as exciting!
i used to drive my 55 cadillac like i stole it, ahhh memories!
Being cornered between the guardrails made me laugh. I've always wondered about that happening.
Lmao!!!
Love the whitewails on the detectives Dodge. The Lineup was CBS TV counter to NBC DRAGNET. SF has changed just a tad in 65 years.
Fantastic ... period classic crime drama
Love the 57 Plymouth
Beautiful motor ... My dream car
It's funny how the film speeded up at the end.
RIP, Eli Wallach
No “ bow ties” were harmed in the making of this film.
Nice old Plymouth. Seems pretty quick too.
When the Plymouth came to the end of the incompleted overpass I thought they were going to do a Blues Bros and stop at the edge and flip back through the air over a cop car.Perhaps the producers got the idea from this old classic.
That plymouth had like a 1:1 steering ratio 🤣
Chipmunks get it
In the end😅
I love how revolvers can have silencers.
@Yardbirds 67 A revolver with a silencer is like having a screen door on a submarine.
I was looking For Broderick Crawford
We can't make it. We're in a Plymouth we can. Did they ever get that section of freeway finished? Every movie, it's never done.
Great old clip but the music at the end of the show had me laughing my head off, it sounded as if it was from a slap-stick vaudeville comedy production. Thanks for sharing, though.
That ending was funny as fuck
They couldn't keep up with that Plymouth......with it's V8 and torsionaire ride!
4:18 see the big dent in windshield pillar? It doesnt even look like there's glass in it!
A lot of the time they removed the windshield when filming from the front so light didn't reflect off of it and cause glare. They might still do this for all I know.
That has to be the most Ford looking 56 Chevy I've ever seen. They must be undercover detectives
super classic
Nice Desoto!
This movie was nothing like the NBC radio crime drama called “The Line-Up”.
Push button transmissions. And the bad guy ball planted on the rail after they shot him!
At 5:35 see the driver of the Plymouth push the Reverse button, and hear the "clunk" too.
It's a 1956 Ford Fairlane SFPD Patrol Car.
It was filmed in San Francisco!! oh. In the early 50’s I thought it was in the early 40’s……
California was great back then.
The plymouth sounds good.....
ALL 3 BAD GUYS WERE BIG TIME ACTORS IN THERE DAY
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Does anyone noticed that skid sound effect is the same like in Driver 1 video game?
So that's what a mouse calling for Mommy sounds like.
This was before San Francisco became the city of lunatics.
‘56 Chevy cop car looks tough ha.
should have hit reverse at the end of that freeway and pulled a "Blues Brothers" maneuver over the police
Can you add the movie names and years made please?
If i am not mistaken that is a Plymouth Plaza, noy fury belvedere or salvoy
Is that Richard Jaeckel and Eli Wallach ?
I wish Christine was added in this movie.
that's a ford chasing the plymouth.
Not bad quality for the late 50s is it?
Saw some incredibly rare cars
Fill us in on what those incredibly rare cars were. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️
@@sludge8506 how about you try if you know so much.
@@isaacsrandomvideos667 Come on, champ, you made the clownish statement. Fill us in on which cars are “incredibly rare.” 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
@@sludge8506 is your whole argument just emoji’s and one black emoji to be “not racist”? Hahaha
@@isaacsrandomvideos667 What an infantile comment, champ.
My “whole argument” is emojis?? Really, champ? I clearly stated what the deal was. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
What movie?
For a while their wasn't ' 56 chevy
The guy riding shotgun in the Plymouth might be Joe Pesci in his first movie?
what movie is this?
1:22 Wow... he doesn't even have to drive the steering wheel !
Imagine if this happen in San Francisco today. The police would need to stand back so that social workers can get it resolved. And they must remember to use the right pronouns, or they will be fired. And there would be homeless and poop everywhere.
All I can see are a bunch of Ford and Doge cars chasing that Plymouth! But do you see that Plymouth go! Must have a 383 Commando under the hood! They probably couldn't get the Chevy to start!!!!!
0:29 if the suspect ever used his vehicle as a weapon against pedestrians or officers threatening the safety, the police then has the lethal force to shoot at the engine block, driver, and/or tires.
I admire the ability of the police, sans seat belts, to sit ramrod straight in a vehicle that is careening down the street at 60 mph on cheap, bias ply tires.
Were they on the Cypress Street Viaduct?
Sure looked like it to me. May it and all those it took with it rest in peace.
This was the Embarcadero freeway under construction it opened in '59. Cypress St. Viaduct opened in the summer of '57
Movietitles?
I didn't see a 56 Chevy. I saw a Ford police car.
Where was the helium tank?😁
Nowadays, the cops would shoot the girl and let the gunman go.
Not a single anti smog device not even a pcv valve.
Who the H E L L designed those highway overpasses?????????????????
What "56 Chevy 150? Looks like a '57 Ford to me
That was an old one
Crazy that the revolvers had silencers attached; also, I love how everyone in California had a Brooklyn accent back then.
Yep no 56 Chevy on that chasing a 57 Plymouth
Where is the chevy?
4:09, champ. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
Stephen King is a FreeMason !! 😆 🤣 😂
An old car chase
Radio operator doesn't use standard phonetic alphabet...odd.
Body by plymouth
Soul by satan
Sorry but I don't see the '56 Chevy.
Funny how guns sounded the same as they do now. Pew Pew Pew... Pew Pew ROFLMAO
Was that Joe Pesci?
That 56 Chevy sure looks a lot like a Ford. Especially the F O R D on the hood.
'57 Ford Fairlane ;)
Paul K lol
Well there is one 1956 Chevrolet --a wagon parked at 2:53 as the 1957 Ford "Chevy" police car passes
EDIT and 7 seconds of a 1956 Chevrolet police car at 6:01
antera77 and the one after is a dodge or a DeSoto 1958 or 60 probably
@@isaacsrandomvideos667 If you're referring to 2:54 - 2:56, I'm pretty sure that's the 1957 Dodge Coronet mentioned in the description box
I couldn’t help but notice there is no fast food trash everywhere. No graffiti anywhere. The city looks so clean. No homeless either.
Oh i know what you're trying to say (that people were better back then) but you're wrong. The criminals were just as cowardly back then as now, as shown by the taking of a child as cover.
As for your other points,
Fast food was not quite born yet in 1956, so no wrappers.
Spray paint was not commonplace, either, having only been invented in 1949. Its not like there was a broad color pallette and it certainly was not inexpensive enough to use for graffiti! There were fewer people, so far less incentive to advertise your gang to people as well.
Again,There were far fewer people around in 1956, and there was plenty of non-service type jobs available because the US wasn't bombed to oblivion during WW2.
Lastly, If you think that they didnt clean the streets up prior to filming, there's a bridge for sale on the other side of America that you might be interested in.
FWIW, everything always looks pretty spiffy in Black and White film, Its why people still use it when they want to look classy.
@@twoeightythreez Sorry Bud, our society as a whole is in decline. So don't give me this B.S. Yes, there's always been bad people, but most don't have any pride at all anymore. I'm 57 years old and remember when people had a higher moral standard overall.
@@twoeightythreez that's a crock of shit,but you already know that
@@DRILL-SGT.HARTMAN The biggest meth and fentanyl problems are in places like Missouri and Midwest. So be sure to cheer on the big Pharma and NRA buddy.
Plug in your electric BMW, put your mask on, drink a glass of Soy milk, everything's gonna be fine. Look around, things are so good.
56 CHEVYS WERE NICE, BUT 57 PLYMOUTHS WERE AWESOME
Ik right they looked like they could go fast
I am amazed he missed one piece of advice: "If you have to shoot, shoot! Don't talk..."
Ridin shotgun
I own a 58 Plymouth Fury. When people ask me how it handles, I say it handles like a Perry Mason rerun.
Did you know you can drive the 57 and possibly the 58 (very slowly) with either one of the front wheels removed?
I have no idea what that is, but I can imagine the car handles much like a barge with an engine and wheels
@@codyandcars I own one, they actually handle pretty damn good considering.
@@area85restorations75 I own a 60 Fury coupe over here in Germany and it handles (slightly modified) better than most new cars.
@bigblockjalopy Hahaha that's awesome!! Have you seen the one Coldwarmotors is restoring?!? The guy is doing the most insane restoration ever on one out of 3 rust cancer ridden cars.
This was an excellent movie.If you never saw it it’s worth the watch.
A theatrical version of the CBS series by that name...
Love that 57 Belvedere
That's the Grand Daddy to the Bullitt Chase seen.
I love Christine! ♡♡♡♡
That’s Not Christine
Awesome body drop at the end !
Lmao !!
Awesome video!
Drop the speed down to .075 the acting and cars are perfect..
Watched it 3 times....loved it.
That 56 chevy one fifty sure does look like the 57 Ford fairlane
great san fran chase 11 years before bullit
Amazing! so sad cars lost those beautiful forms,engine sounds and boat like handling,now is just "hurr durr...safety first...plastic bumpers...airbags...leds.." pleasant driving was substituted by fear.
ALEXANDRE SILVA Great american cars .
and not dying
AND CRUMPLE ZONES!!!
SO THE CAR TAKES THE ENERGY OF THE CRASH, NOT THE PEOPLE!!
@@paulzammataro7185 It depends whether you want to be nannied, or drive what you like, regardless.
@@rexjolles yeah, I forgot nobody ever dies in a car wreck anymore.
That looked like where the taxi chase scenes were filmed in Mad Mad Mad Mad World. And was that Burgess Meredith in the Plymouth?
First, didn't see a 56 Chevy until the end when the chase was over. Second, you cannot silence a revolver.
Cool picture of teh Cliffhouse.
Poor Eli I assume he died when he hit the ground 😫 Fortunately the hostages weren't shaken due to that torsion aire ride. Push button trans couldn't get them out of their predicament.
Isn't that blonde driver the sergeant that helped Lee Marvin's character in the Dirty Dozen?
Yes it is. Richard Jaeckel.
Yes Richard Jaeckle.
What's with the sped-up audio at the end?
At 5:25 it appears to be the same hotel they used in Bullett to hide the witness. The room faced the double decker freeway.
"The Lineup"- Now in ChipmunkSound!
Richard Jaekel driving!