Thunder Road
After Two Lane Blacktop and Vanishing Point there was a suggestion
to watch Thunder Road because it was often double featured with those.
Now having watched it, Thunder Road was better than Vanishing Point,
but they sure picked some bad music for drive sequences. Some scenes
came across almost as Looney Tunes with that accompaniment. It also left
me enough time to wonder, before the movie was even over, about some of
the details. A 250 gallon tank, in that car? Did they take the back seat
out to fit it? Is he getting 000 for a single 250 gallon shipment?
That's /gallon, presumably wholesale rate. Is that cheap booze for
1950-something? I'm not sure. But if it's not cheaper than taxed liquor,
there's no reason for moonshine.
I later found out that the alcohol tax in 1954 is the same as the alcohol
tax now. It's never been raised even as inflation has diluted the dollar.
So what was onerous then is not as big a deal today.
So far, for classic driving movies I have watched (roughly ranked, best to
worst, in my subjective opinion):
- Two Lane Blacktop
- The Wages of Fear
- ...
- Thunder Road
- Death Race 2000
- ...
- Vanishing Point
- Damnation Alley
Obviously "classic driving movies" is a broad and idiosyncratic
collection. I'm not including things just with good chases, like
Bullitt, Or motorcycle films (Easy Rider). Of those above, I think
only 2LB does not have a named character die. The one death is an
unknown person, shown only in the grisly aftermath of the collision.
That scene packed a punch.
Really, the only reason to watch Damnation Alley is for the vehicle
(or the unintentional humor).