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Very true, and some day when I have kids and grandkids, I want stories to tell them about the crazy stuff I did. All my elders have them, I sure as heck want 'em, too!
I have plenty to tell already.
Very true, and some day when I have kids and grandkids, I want stories to tell them about the crazy stuff I did. All my elders have them, I sure as heck want 'em, too!
I don't understand what you are trying to say....please clarify.
Nice.... life insurance may cover the bills, but can't cover a lifetime of experiences spent with your family. Good luck in your death-trap........
Seems to me I remember something back in the 90s when the big push was being made for mandatory seat belt laws about the insurance industry leading the charge -- promising that such laws would lead to lower premiums, lower medical costs, and better service all around. The lobbyists had a field day with that whole deal.
Well, we're twenty years on. We're still waiting for the lower premiums, lower medical costs, and better service all around. If I didn't know better I'd swear that the whole movement had less to do with Aunt Sammy wanting to keep us all safe and secure than with protecting the interests of a certain rodentine pack in Hartford.
I don't understand what you are trying to say....please clarify.
He is saying that in Fall Guy and Dukes of Hazzard, those cars were only twenty years old and not the same status car at the time. There were plenty of them around---enough for them to mess up 300 in the filming of Dukes of Hazard.
Quite simlpe: people don't have deep-running feelings for fairly new cars. If the car is older - and rarer - that changes because they start to be more valuable, especially for collectors. Let's take The Fall Guy's GMC Sierra as an example: they crashed dozens of them and I don't think people complained. It was a current production car. If you made a movie today and crashed a 1983 Sierra, quite a few people would say "How can they do that to the car!?" The 1960 Pontiac mentioned wasn't old enough in the early 80ies, the same is true for the Duke's chargers.
Seeing really old cars destroyed in movies is always sad and in a way, it's a bit like destroying a cultural heirloom.
Quite simlpe: people don't have deep-running feelings for fairly new cars. If the car is older - and rarer - that changes because they start to be more valuable, especially for collectors. Let's take The Fall Guy's GMC Sierra as an example: they crashed dozens of them and I don't think people complained. It was a current production car. If you made a movie today and crashed a 1983 Sierra, quite a few people would say "How can they do that to the car!?" The 1960 Pontiac mentioned wasn't old enough in the early 80ies, the same is true for the Duke's chargers.
Seeing really old cars destroyed in movies is always sad and in a way, it's a bit like destroying a cultural heirloom.
I'm not questioning the veracity of your posting, but I would appreciate it if you could cite the source of your information. Thanks!Buster Keaton used to do something similar -- when he dropped a locomotive off a burning bridge in Oregon in "The General," it was a bridge that his own propmen built, and a dummy locomotive assembled from a junk chassis, rusty parts, and some paint. They did just enough to it to get it to move, and no rare artifact was actually destroyed.
I'm not questioning the veracity of your posting, but I would appreciate it if you could cite the source of your information. Thanks!
I'm not questioning the veracity of your posting, but I would appreciate it if you could cite the source of your information. Thanks!
What they ought to do is follow the example of how it was done in silent comedies -- rig up a trick "special effects" car using junk parts, and use it over and over again. Laurel and Hardy didn't wreck dozens of different Model T's over the years, it was always the same one, specially built in the Hal Roach Studios prop department. Buster Keaton used to do something similar -- his entire film "The Navigator" was based on his chance discovery that a decomissioned and unseaworthy ocean liner was about to be scrapped. He bought it for the scrap-metal price, slapped a fresh coat of paint on it, and could do anything he wanted with it, after which time it went to the scrapyard, where it was already heading anyway. And when he dropped a locomotive off a burning bridge in Oregon in "The General," it was a bridge that his own propmen built, and a dummy locomotive assembled from a junk chassis, rusty parts, and some paint. They did just enough to it to get it to move, and no rare artifact was actually destroyed.
The wonders of modern computer technology might make it possible, that no real cars need to be "killed off" any more. If they blow up a vintage car, they can do it in photoshop.
It is normal for movie directors to substitute a cheap, fake, or worthless car, building etc when one needs to be destroyed. Partly for cost reasons. But also because they always or almost always, have several cars on hand in case they need to do multiple takes. In the latest Green Lantern film they had 8 or 9 mid sixties Chryslers rebuilt into special cars. Most of them were refugees from a junk yard and would not have stood inspection from 20 feet away but were good enough for filming from a distance.
In one movie from the 40s the hero drove a brand new 1948 Lincoln Continental convertible. At the end of the picture it went over a cliff in a fiery crash. But if you look close, the crash car was a 1941 Ford coupe with the roof sawed off and a Continental tire stuck on the back.