What's Your Take on the Movie "Cars"
I've seen this movie three times now. The first was at the McHenry Outdoor Theater in McHenty, Illinois. It gets better each time. I see more than I had before. I've actually heard applause at two venues. I don't ever remember hearing applause at the conclusion of a movie.
Personally, I believe this movie will go a long way toward getting people out on the open road (gas-prices willing) and especially on 66 or other two lane highways.
It made a great statement about the coming of the interstates and impact on small towns. Even though the places and people were not real, they were a synthesis of what you will see and who you will meet on 66.
What's your take?
Keep on Down that Two Lane Highway. --RoadDog
I rarely see any movie more than once, but....
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Originally Posted by RoadDog
I've seen this movie three times now
I agree, it is very cute. Very funny car-humor related references. Excellent research. I will probably go see it again. Make sure if you have not seen it, to STAY TO THE VERY END -- all the way to the blue screen and the copyright notices. PIXAR is famous for those last 100 second sequences and this film does not disappoint!
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Personally, I believe this movie will go a long way toward getting people out on the open road (gas-prices willing) and especially on 66 or other two lane highways.
Um, I don't really think it will -- but they did a nice job with creating characters in the small route-66-esque town that were not "dumbed down" like often happens in movies.
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It made a great statement about the coming of the interstates and impact on small towns.
I know that it is a popular perception to view Interstates as "bad" and small blue highways as somehow being "good" they are just tools -- I still enjoy traveling on Interstate highways as much or maybe even more than the small winding two-laners out there.
But, all in all, a good, family-friendly, car-friendly summer-fun movie!
Mark
"Luigi, he only watcha the Ferrari"
OK - I have to admit to being the idiot in the movie theater that lost her mind when that was said. Perhaps it was because it had been less than a week since I had decked myself out in head to toe Ferrari gear and watched them race (and win) at Indianapolis.
It did get my sister and I thinking, though. We started to toss about the idea of seeing the US Grand Prix next year (this is assuming that it will be at Indianapolis again) and then heading over to Chicago and taking Route 66 all the way to the Texas Pandhandle and then making our way back to Louisiana. We've never traveled in the Midwest and have only been on Route 66 for short stretches at a time.
Refused to Have Anything to Do with Cars
Bob is a strict vegetarian and refused to have anything to do with the project once he heard that McDonald's was going to have a tie-in with Happy Meals.
He is one very unique person.
He stands by his beliefs regardless of whether it costs him money or not. I imagine he will be out in Clinton, Oklahoma for the Route 66 Festival in June.
I was able to meet him again, and Dean Walker, who was the influence for Mater at the Springfield Festival in September. Dean can turn his feet completely around, hence Mater's ability to drive so fast backwards.
Keep on Down that Two Lane Highway. --RoadDog