saw Two Lane Blacktop at the Marshall Arkansas Drive in theater when it came out and the drive in is still up and running, one of the few left in America
My friend and I hopped the fence at the Starlite Drive In located in Winnipeg Manitoba Canada . We sat at the back and just cranked up the sound , we were 15 I think . We had 5 Drive In Theatres in town at that time . The last closed about 12 years ago .
We had an abandoned airport near Clio MI when I was coming up, we had scenes like this every weekend in the late 70's early 80's, I had a 70 Barracuda with the 440 Super Commando engine. I paid 2500 for that car believe it or not. The only way the three two barrels would run right was when they were wide open. Won many races, lost some too, and broke a lot of stuff. Great times. There was a fellow with a red Chevy II with a high winding small block that could beat just about anybody. Another guy had a Chevy Monza that he shoehorned a 383 stroker into. The cops shut us down about 1982, but before that they would come and watch, saying "Well, at least your not racing on the road" From there we took our action to Ubly raceway, about an hours drive north. God I wish I could go back.
Doty rd south side Chicago in the early 90s Malibus were sick quick … that bottle would hit .. tears up your soul like devils taking it .. I knew what to have in the Fbody … and today… grey primer looks at them Demons face .. and says that’s it !? Short a shot … and I can get that 3 yards guaranteed. Demons got too many shifts and fall backs to make ….
Not sure about the 10's, but anyway... James said in an interview he destroyed the car near the end of the film. He tried to do a 6500 rpm burnout launch... the car was in reverse. The rear dif exploded, the driveshaft came through the car floor. He said it almost killed some people.
Even if the "chivvy" was running an L88 and 4.88:1 Pontiac or Olds rear axle, it's probably weighing 2,900-3,000 lbs with the Lexan windows and a fiberglass trunk and nose. The Model A may be a few hundred pounds lighter depending on its interior and has what looks like a mechanically fuel injected 427. Three hundred bucks was more than an average week's pay, but the Model A owner probably figured he had the power-to-weight ratio in the bag.
@@alertgasper i spose its just a movie in the end.... kinda like falfa even having the slightest chance against milners 32... not in the slightest realistic unless milner cant drive at all
@@tradrodsandcustoms agreed on all counts. a cast iron Rat in a short wheelbase car as light as that A could have all sorts of traction issues (like the old AA/FA cars), and Milner's small block probably had more advantage against what was technically the same 55 Chevy setup. 'prolly shoulda taken on the 72 cuda, considering the luck they had on a HemiCuda back at the beginning of the movie :)
Isn't that true, the food was totally different and the people were were not as lazy, back then if you didn't work you were in big trouble, great observation my friend 👍
Literally zero processed / packaged foods back then. No snack machines etc. At most a candy bar at a gas station and a small bottle of actual sugar rich soda. Now people are snacking all day long on pure chemical rich junk. Also back then lots of drugs, pills, cigarettes were consumed which helped 🤣
3 yards, or 3 large? Back in the day, I don't recall asking for spots a thing fast guys did. On paper, the A should be significantly quicker than the '55 (with good drivers) but that isn't what the movies about.
Did anyone catch ole boy clocking them with the watch. Even today its hilarious that their is no time racing even though anyone can measure within a tenth what any car runs.
right so if you want to know or get close to how fast or slow a guy is you clock them look at any pre 1980 80's race movie you will always see a guy with clip board with 3 stopwatch's timing 3 to make sure
I ran the slicks on my '55 all the time. It was only a 13 sec. flat car but, that was enough to beat most of the street cars. Friday and Saturday night were a blast down on Lower River Road.
Back in the 70s, you made your bet with the street tires and the bad boys then changed to slicks or some real soft butyl rubber recaps on plain steel rims, not your mags. If you didn't bring enough, too bad.
@@davidkeeton6716, I commented on the thread about an L89 being a 396 cubic inch engine and not a 427.I didn't say anything about what was in the 55 Chevy from Two Lane Black Top and American Graffiti. I know the story about the car.
@@tomhowe1510 , the L89 was the aluminum headed version of the L78 375 hp 396 cubic inch big block, that was available from 1968-70, in the Nova,Camaro and Chevelle.
Note to movie directors and producers. You can't tell the size of a big block Chevy just by looking at it. Using the original Mark 4 block, that "427" could have been a 396, 427, 454 468, 496... in other words, please talk to a mechanic or car guy before writing the script. Otherwise, it really takes away from the authenticity of the movie.
That 55 is going to come on at about 1/8 of a mile. You had better be in 4th and climbing. There's no way that 55 want to beat me if I was driving that Deuce
Same car in American graffiti. And it was a stock 327. You give me that green Deuce. I would have left out of the hole in about 35. Going into second all the way to the floor with no clutch. I would have took that big block up to about 6,800 going into 3rd. And watch that 55 get smaller
@@ljsitesno it was a l-88 427 crate motor, M-22 Muncie, 4.88 Olds rear, fiberglass front end, doors, and trunk lid, straight axle front suspension when built. Used for exterior shots in Two-Lane Blacktop, modified for American Graffiti.
@@Joetrout- That would have been a bit hard, since the tag line on American Graffiti was "Where were you in '62?" That and the 327 was only out a year at this point, meaning they were new engines, and the hot rodder would have had to be well-off to afford it. Milner didn't seem to have that much wealth. More likely it would have been a bored out 283 to either 292 or 301. Now those were big block killers, as the short stroke small block could rev into the stratosphere with the right cam. Now in reality, it was a '66 327 with a Super T-10 and a '57 Chevy rear end. Neither the engine nor the transmission were available in 1962.
@@cslan4 the only actors in the movie were Warren Oates and Harry Dean Stanton . Laurie Byrd had done a little acting . It didn't help that the script was a story in a magazine , or that the movie was made on a shoestring budget .
My favorite move of all time.
Let's turn the clock back.
This scene was filmed a few blocks from my house. The drive in was called Bert's Burger Bowl. The green coupe was a local car that Id see around town.
What town?
@@makofett7404 Santa Fe NM
Thanks for the info I love behind stories like that thanks
saw Two Lane Blacktop at the Marshall Arkansas Drive in theater when it came out and the drive in is still up and running, one of the few left in America
My friend and I hopped the fence at the Starlite Drive In located in Winnipeg Manitoba Canada . We sat at the back and just cranked up the sound , we were 15 I think . We had 5 Drive In Theatres in town at that time . The last closed about 12 years ago .
Glad I found the special edition DVD years ago....
My all time favorite movie.
Stick Shifts for Life.......
Damn straight brother
This movie used to play late night often. Haven't seen it in 20 years
2 lane blacktop! Great classice from the all or nothing days.
Good times back then..
A great movie 🍿🍿 🎥.😊❤
From one Sites to another, thanks for this clip, brought back memories.
Glad you enjoyed it
Airport road then Paradise road that '55 got around.
Nice American Graffiti nod, well done😎
Well played reference.
They made 3 of these 55s for the movie and then 2 of them were used again in American Graffiti
We had an abandoned airport near Clio MI when I was coming up, we had scenes like this every weekend in the late 70's early 80's, I had a 70 Barracuda with the 440 Super Commando engine. I paid 2500 for that car believe it or not. The only way the three two barrels would run right was when they were wide open. Won many races, lost some too, and broke a lot of stuff. Great times. There was a fellow with a red Chevy II with a high winding small block that could beat just about anybody. Another guy had a Chevy Monza that he shoehorned a 383 stroker into. The cops shut us down about 1982, but before that they would come and watch, saying "Well, at least your not racing on the road"
From there we took our action to Ubly raceway, about an hours drive north. God I wish I could go back.
Just like the cursed Tri-Power rochester setup I had. End carbs leaked vacuum at the throttle plates.
Such a great movie!
A cult classic !
We did this every weekend in SMALL TOWN AMERICA
The 55 was a legit 10 teen car. A racer built the producer an exact replica of his race car. James Taylor was the driver.
James couldn't drive worth a shit. He told them that. He tore up 2 transmissions during filming.
Doty rd south side Chicago in the early 90s Malibus were sick quick … that bottle would hit .. tears up your soul like devils taking it .. I knew what to have in the Fbody … and today… grey primer looks at them
Demons face .. and says that’s it !? Short a shot … and I can get that 3 yards guaranteed.
Demons got too
many shifts and fall backs to make ….
That same '55 would be given actual black paint and star in American Graffiti two years later.
High 10’s but no time slip ever shown. Ruth claimed it went that et
Not sure about the 10's, but anyway... James said in an interview he destroyed the car near the end of the film. He tried to do a 6500 rpm burnout launch... the car was in reverse. The rear dif exploded, the driveshaft came through the car floor. He said it almost killed some people.
300 yards. Warren Oates was great. Thanks
the trash talk is great in this scene 😂
So American! No modern day BS
2 Lane Blacktop! I have the dvd. I love old school car movies
Even if the "chivvy" was running an L88 and 4.88:1 Pontiac or Olds rear axle, it's probably weighing 2,900-3,000 lbs with the Lexan windows and a fiberglass trunk and nose. The Model A may be a few hundred pounds lighter depending on its interior and has what looks like a mechanically fuel injected 427. Three hundred bucks was more than an average week's pay, but the Model A owner probably figured he had the power-to-weight ratio in the bag.
The model a is probably more like 6-800 lbs lighter
@@tradrodsandcustoms she looks to be a Sports Coupe, but her wide fenders may be fibreglass so i erred on the side of caution :)
@@alertgasper i spose its just a movie in the end.... kinda like falfa even having the slightest chance against milners 32... not in the slightest realistic unless milner cant drive at all
@@tradrodsandcustoms agreed on all counts. a cast iron Rat in a short wheelbase car as light as that A could have all sorts of traction issues (like the old AA/FA cars), and Milner's small block probably had more advantage against what was technically the same 55 Chevy setup.
'prolly shoulda taken on the 72 cuda, considering the luck they had on a HemiCuda back at the beginning of the movie :)
@@alertgasper absolutely
Zero obese people in these days.
Isn't that true, the food was totally different and the people were were not as lazy, back then if you didn't work you were in big trouble, great observation my friend 👍
Literally zero processed / packaged foods back then. No snack machines etc. At most a candy bar at a gas station and a small bottle of actual sugar rich soda. Now people are snacking all day long on pure chemical rich junk. Also back then lots of drugs, pills, cigarettes were consumed which helped 🤣
@@RustyZipper I missed the fact the scene, is at a road side burger place . St,Paul,Minnesota.
There were obese people then too, but few young people were obese, and this is a movie about young people.
GOD how I miss them days growing up !!!! TODAY IS JUST A SHIT SHOW
I agree 100%!!!!.... but i was born too late. 😞 I missed ALL the best stuff.
2 lane black top love it
How sweet it is. James Taylor was a handy man to have around our town after he saw fire and rain making this movie about racing on a country road.
😂
Two lane blacktop! One of the best movies with very very little acting or talking!
When America was America
& the billboards said "get a haircut" lol
America has always had its good points and bad points.
That 55 was a Bad Ass car
Color me Gone!
Not a 32 Ford/duece coupe… that’s a Model A
When the world was normal
American graffiti had sound problems, they used sound from this movie in both racing scenes. And i think the 55 was same car?
Yes but 3 were built. But the main car for exterior shots was also the one used in American graffiti
Airport road aint like that anymore
It looks cool when it isn't chopped too much.
Or not chopped at all!
That's Jackson Browne, the famous folk rock singer / song writer. Two Lane Blacktop
Not brown...James Taylor his side kick is Danny Wilson of the beach boys.
@@ranasneed451 Dennis Wilson
@@ranasneed451 Doh ! I knew that.
Was this a Clip for 2LBT Movie?
Thanx, Some one answered B4 I Posted.............
I’ve seen bits & pieces of this movie, but I’ve never seen the whole thing. Might have to fix that.
3 years or 3 large?
Salut my friend super car super video subscribe subscribe .. .
3 yards, or 3 large?
Back in the day, I don't recall asking for spots a thing fast guys did.
On paper, the A should be significantly quicker than the '55 (with good drivers) but that isn't what the movies about.
Did anyone catch ole boy clocking them with the watch. Even today its hilarious that their is no time racing even though anyone can measure within a tenth what any car runs.
It was the manual stopwatch for most races. Good to within a tenth second.
right so if you want to know or get close to how fast or slow a guy is you clock them look at any pre 1980 80's race movie you will always see a guy with clip board with 3 stopwatch's timing 3 to make sure
Anybody changing tires after the bet was made would be run out of town
I ran the slicks on my '55 all the time. It was only a 13 sec. flat car but, that was enough to beat most of the street cars. Friday and Saturday night were a blast down on Lower River Road.
Back in the 70s, you made your bet with the street tires and the bad boys then changed to slicks or some real soft butyl rubber recaps on plain steel rims, not your mags. If you didn't bring enough, too bad.
@@davidkeeton6716run wutcha brung. This would never fly when i grew up
@@cousineddie3302now "street racing" around my area is a bunch of sub 4 second 1/8 mile drag cars being trailered everywhere.
Name of movie please 🙏
2 lane black top
@@jeffhesse8415 cool thanks 👍
Did Dennis give that $300 to the Manson Family ??
I could be wrong but wasn't that Brian
@@ghostboatsofsouthernmichig3773It was Dennis. Manson was already in jail by then.
Is that Dennis Wilson in the passenger seat?
Yes
What is this movie called? I'll buy it once i find out
2 lane black top.
That was not an l88 in that 55 it was an l 89 aluminum head 427. 67 Corvette engine
The L88 427 was available in 1967 Corvettes. The L89 was a 396 cubic inch big block Chevy.
@hk45c62 Richard Ruth, the man that built the car says it's an open chamber 454, he did back then, and the story didn't change 20 years later.
@@davidkeeton6716, I commented on the thread about an L89 being a 396 cubic inch engine and not a 427.I didn't say anything about what was in the 55 Chevy from Two Lane Black Top and American Graffiti. I know the story about the car.
@@tomhowe1510 , the L89 was the aluminum headed version of the L78 375 hp 396 cubic inch big block, that was available from 1968-70, in the Nova,Camaro and Chevelle.
@@tomhowe1510 , the L71 was the 435hp 427 cubic inch big block with aluminum heads.
2 lane blacktop
Note to movie directors and producers. You can't tell the size of a big block Chevy just by looking at it. Using the original Mark 4 block, that "427" could have been a 396, 427, 454 468, 496... in other words, please talk to a mechanic or car guy before writing the script. Otherwise, it really takes away from the authenticity of the movie.
Juicy clunkers.
I thought he said 3 large as in hundreds. 300$
You hear someone say 300 bucks
3 yards= 300 bucks.
Genuine ( stolen ) Chevrolet parts. Old car or no car.
Ain't no need for Viagra.
That 55 is going to come on at about 1/8 of a mile. You had better be in 4th and climbing. There's no way that 55 want to beat me if I was driving that Deuce
You're high
Yeah very HIGH.
Same car in American graffiti. And it was a stock 327. You give me that green Deuce. I would have left out of the hole in about 35. Going into second all the way to the floor with no clutch. I would have took that big block up to about 6,800 going into 3rd. And watch that 55 get smaller
That 55 was a big block car in both movies, it ran low 10s. Neither that model A or the 32 could touch it.
@@dangarrison3503right, it was a 454 with aluminum heads
Definitely a big block...
@@ljsitesno it was a l-88 427 crate motor, M-22 Muncie, 4.88 Olds rear, fiberglass front end, doors, and trunk lid, straight axle front suspension when built. Used for exterior shots in Two-Lane Blacktop, modified for American Graffiti.
Nothing stock about the 55 in American graffiti..was this a bad remake
This movie was made first, genius.
LOL Was anything stock on Milner's coupe? Or on Steve's '58? They are called Hot Rods for a reason.
@@tommissouri4871Milners 32 had a 64 vette 327 known as the big block killer back in the day!
@@Joetrout- That would have been a bit hard, since the tag line on American Graffiti was "Where were you in '62?" That and the 327 was only out a year at this point, meaning they were new engines, and the hot rodder would have had to be well-off to afford it. Milner didn't seem to have that much wealth. More likely it would have been a bored out 283 to either 292 or 301. Now those were big block killers, as the short stroke small block could rev into the stratosphere with the right cam.
Now in reality, it was a '66 327 with a Super T-10 and a '57 Chevy rear end. Neither the engine nor the transmission were available in 1962.
Black top was the stupidest car movie ever.Boring.
It was the purest. The 55 Chevy was the star with its m22 transmission.
Spoken like someone who let's their wife pick the color of their electric car....
If it was so bad , then why are you watching a clip of it now ?
Loved the cars but the acting really,really ,really sucks!!!!!!
@@cslan4 the only actors in the movie were Warren Oates and Harry Dean Stanton . Laurie Byrd had done a little acting . It didn't help that the script was a story in a magazine , or that the movie was made on a shoestring budget .
great classic, there was another chevy one like this, hm, white line fever? dunno, its late, I go.