Ex-Special Ops officer Frank Martin (Jason Statham) is available for hire. His price is steep, but he will transport anything, no matter the risk. He’s called the transporter, and everything goes well until it doesn’t.
‘The Transporter’ hit theaters in 2003. The action-thriller also stars Matt Schulze and Qi Shu. Filmed in France and directed by French director Louis Leterrier along with director Corey Yuen, it was inspired by The Hire series from BMW Films. It’s filmed on location. The transporter’s car is a slick black BMW 735i. Some highlights are shot racing through Nice. Reviews were “meh.” It’s a packed genre, to be sure, but hot-pursuit chases by elite team-level operatives played by Statham are always fun.
Herbie Fully Loaded
The year 2019 might be the last year that Volkswagen Beetles are ever produced, but the adorable VW Bug Herbie will live forever. In 'Herbie Fully Loaded', Maggie Peyton has dreams to modify the magical Herbie into a competitive NASCAR. It’s playful and funny, a car movie the whole family will adore.
The endearing Disney movie stars Lindsay Lohan, Matt Dillon, Justin Long, Michael Keaton, and Breckin Meyer. Premiering in 2005, the movie is the sixth adventure starring Herbie. Herbie came to life first in 'The Love Bug', released in 1968. Guest appearances by NASCAR drivers Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Jimmie Johnson, and Jeff Gordon delight. The Herbie Fully Loaded soundtrack features Lindsay Lohan’s single “First,” among a spray of big name artists.
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby
'Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby' is a 2006 action-adventure comedy written and directed by Will Farrell and Adam McKay (Anchorman). Ebert & Roeper say it’s “One of the stupidest and one of the funniest movies in Will Farrell’s career.” Ricky Bobby, son of parents who conceived him in a roadside café bathroom, makes it big in life. The riotous slapstick tale traces America’s No. 1 NASCAR driver and Wonder Bread sponsor, Ricky Bobby (Will Farrell), from the height of his wealth and glory as a Wonder Bread sponsor, to his game-ending crash-and-burn.
Bobby’s fall is grand. In a fiery crash, he loses everything. Gone is his sizzling-hot trophy wife, lost to his best friend and racing partner. No more is his McMansion abode with a garage full of high-end performance machines. Stuck living with his parents, Ricky Bobby will never race again. And it’s all because of a French Formula One racer named Jean Girard (Sacha Cohen). Will he have a comeback chance?
Gran Torino
Clint Eastwood needs no introduction. In 'Grand Torino' (2008), Eastwood produces, directs, and stars as cranky old vet Walt Kowalski. Riddled with PTSD, he’s not the most pleasant man to be around, but cracks of kindness in his veneer endear the film.
You can imagine the gun-toting old man was not happy when some thieves tried to make off with his precious Grand Torino. He helped build that car on the Ford assembly line when he was a worker. The local gang members, those who torment his neighbors and steal his prized classic car, are no match for this old army dude. Audiences loved it more than critics according to Rotten Tomatoes.
The Blues Brothers
You might not think of 'The Blues Brothers' as a car flick, but its chase scenes are classic too. To wit, its many spectacular high-speed pursuit scenes ending in a smashed-up mess added to the reason this film was one of the costliest comedies ever made. The hilarious “Bluesmobile” is so famous it now lives in Tennessee at Rusty’s TV and Movie Car Museum.
The 1980 film starring legendary comics John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd created an iconic masterpiece out of a Saturday Night Live skit. The Blues Brothers band played for real, and its fictional characters lived as household names. The movie was chock full of epic scenes. Director John Landis brought the backbone of American soul music into a sprawling collage that is a musical, a comedy, a drama, a production of unmatched cinematic proportions. Aretha Franklin, James Brown, Ray Charles, to name a few, sing, dance, and make 'The Blues Brothers' live on as a gift to American culture.