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Discussion » Questions » Entertainment » What is your favorite song, book, or movie about a car?

What is your favorite song, book, or movie about a car?


Song - "Pink Cadillac" by Natalie Cole




"The Hearse" - 1980 Horror Movie starring Trish VanDevere




I can't think of a book. 

Only smart people read. 
I'm just pretty!

Posted - September 24, 2019

Responses




  •   September 24, 2019 2:15 PM MDT
    6

  • 2836


    And this little gem from Disney.
    I love this film!
      September 24, 2019 2:18 PM MDT
    6

  • 46117
    I wanted CHRISTINE.  


      September 24, 2019 3:59 PM MDT
    4

  • 2836
    Christine was a bish. lol

    That wasn't one of my favorite King movies OR books, but I did enjoy them
      September 24, 2019 4:01 PM MDT
    3

  • 46117
    I loved them both.   LOVED them both. But I am with you, NightShift was my first Stephen and I was floored by him.  He was amazing.  I got him right when he started to get famous.  I read everything until he got too stream of consciousness style for me. I hate that.  I don't want to read about some half-ass dream or some off the wall improbable fantasy monster zombie, I want REAL. That is his strength.  Taking the real and pointing out how nightmarish one change would be.  

    APT PUPIL?  That one still haunts me.  Ehhhh.  
      September 24, 2019 9:04 PM MDT
    0


  • Lindsay Lohan was in "Herbie: Fully Loaded".  We should watch that sometime.  LOL!


      September 24, 2019 4:45 PM MDT
    2

  • 2836
    HAH! 
    She was fully loaded
    Let's do it. Let's make it happen
    WATCH PARTY!!!
      September 24, 2019 7:16 PM MDT
    2

  • 46117
    This is not my favorite. It is just the first thing that popped in my head.  And how can you be a writer if you don't read books?  

    Setting[edit]

    "Trucks" takes place in a truck stop in the United States. The truck stop is located off a freeway and it features a diner, a gas station, and a convenience store.

    Plot summary[edit]

    The story's narrator and a handful of strangers find themselves trapped together in a freeway truck stop diner after semi-trailers and other large vehicles are suddenly brought to independent life by an unknown force and proceed to gruesomely kill every human in sight. The six survivors hiding in the diner include the narrator, as well as an elderly counterman, a trucker, a young man named Jerry, his girlfriend, and a salesman named Snodgrass.

    As the story begins, the counterman and the trucker attempt to radio any other survivors, but the two-way radio fails for unknown reasons. Snodgrass, cracking under the strain, attempts to flee across the stop's parking lot and is hit by a truck. Snodgrass gets propelled into a drainage ditch, taking hours to die from internal bleeding. The situation worsens when the diner's power goes out. The counterman instructs the survivors that they will need to consume the perishable meats and collect good potable water from the restrooms. While the employee's restroom is inside the diner, the men's and ladies' room are by the outdoor gas station, and the narrator's attempt to gather fresh water from those places nearly costs him his life when the trucks realize what he is trying to do.

    Some time later, a glimmer of hope appears when the trucks begin to run out of gas and a few literally stand still from lack of fuel. An enormous semi-truck noses up to the diner and starts blasting its horn erratically. Jerry remembers from his time in the Boy Scouts that the horn blasts are Morse Code, and translates that the trucks are demanding humans start pumping fuel. The trucks assure they will not attack people who refuel them. The narrator is out-voted when he suggests they comply with this, and a bulldozer arrives and proceeds to attack the diner. The narrator and Jerry destroy the dozer with improvised Molotov cocktails, but the diner is half-destroyed and Jerry and the trucker are killed.

    The remaining three humans surrender and, taking turns, start pumping the gas into the mile-long string of waiting trucks. When the narrator exhausts the fuel reserve of the truck stop's gas station, a fuel tanker arrives to replenish the fuel cisterns. When the narrator is at a point of collapsing, he is relieved by the counterman, who starts pumping gas for his "shift". The narrator says that he will have to show the girl how to handle a fuel pump, and that she had better stop being so dainty. The narrator thinks to himself that perhaps this will last only until the trucks run out of fuel, rust, and fall apart, but he then has a grim vision of forced assembly lines churning out new generations of trucks, and the trucks doing great efforts such as draining the Okefenokee Swamp and paving much of the wild backcountry, where much of the world, maybe even the oceans, will be flattened out and remade in its new masters' image. The story ends as a pair of planes fly overhead, and the narrator laments "I wish I could believe there are people in them".

    Adaptations[edit]

    The story has been adapted into two films. In 1986 it was adapted for cinema with the King-directed Maximum Overdrive. In 1997 it was adapted again as the TV movie Trucks, starring Timothy Busfield, which was made on a considerably smaller budget than Maximum Overdrive but was much more faithful to the original story.

    See also[edit]

      September 24, 2019 3:51 PM MDT
    4

  • 2836
    I'm not so sure that either of those two films should have been made. lol

    The short story was way better This post was edited by Jon at September 24, 2019 7:38 PM MDT
      September 24, 2019 4:03 PM MDT
    3

  • 22907
    I liked that short story, too.
    :)
      September 24, 2019 7:39 PM MDT
    1

  • 2836
    Nightshift is one of my fave King books. A true classic and I dig anthologies
      September 24, 2019 8:10 PM MDT
    1

  • 22907
    I had to look up the stories in that one, even though I know I've read it and really liked it.
    :)
    I don't remember a lot of details, other than the general impression/memory that I liked the entire set.
      September 25, 2019 8:01 PM MDT
    0

  • Grrr!  When you started talking about trucks it reminded me of a movie I love about two brothers on a road trip and how they become entangled with a psychopathic trucker after teasing him over a CB Radio.  Its called "Joyride"  it came out in 2001 and stars Paul Walker and Steve Zahn.  Guess I'm locked into the hearse though.  I never have seen "Maximum Overdrive".

    Oh and about the not reading but being a writer.  Shhh.  Don't tell anybody but I'm actually smart.  Books are the best.  I started reading encyclopedias just for fun when I was a kid.  Always read comics too for the light-hearted adventurous stuff.  I was a strange little kid because I would delve into reading stories found in issues of "Reader's Digest" which my Grandfather had a subscription to.  I was a very early decipher-er of big words and excelled in kindergarten and first grade around the reading table.  LOL!  In my youth I enjoyed watching documentaries as much as I did cartoons and super hero shows and eventually I grew up spent time studying Christian theology and reading books related to the topic.  I love studying Quantum physics (just on the side) I also took Latin.  But all this is just between you and I and not for public consumption.  Just tell me I'm pretty and I'm good.
      September 24, 2019 4:17 PM MDT
    3

  • 22907
    "Joyride" terrified me!
    :)
      September 24, 2019 7:39 PM MDT
    1

  •   September 24, 2019 8:07 PM MDT
    3

  • 22907
    Yikes!

    Just that guy's voice sets me on edge  - - -   
      September 25, 2019 8:03 PM MDT
    0

  • 46117
    This is not just my favorite car song, it is one of the best songs ever.



    Warm Leatherette
    Warm leatherette,
    See the breaking glass,
    Beneath the underpass.
    Warm leatherette,
    Feel the crushing steel,
    Feel the steering wheel.
    Warm leatherette melts,
    On your burning flesh,
    You can see your reflection,
    On the luminescent dash.
    Warm leatherette,
    A tear of petrol,
    Is in your eye,
    The hand brake,
    Penetrates your thigh.
    A tear of petrol,
    Is in your eye,
    Quick let's make love,
    Before we die.
    On warm leatherette,
    Join the carcrash set.
    Source: LyricFind





    This post was edited by WM BARR . =ABSOLUTE TRASH at September 24, 2019 7:40 PM MDT
      September 24, 2019 3:54 PM MDT
    4



  • Shar!  I love that.  Jon doesn't know it yet but he's gonna be doing it with me to that song .  Of course I think its great.  Its electronic.  In my head I was imagining how it would sound if Debbie Harry sung it.  Its synthesized sounds also brought this song to mind. It has a glossier production.  Yours is raw.  Very cool.


      September 24, 2019 4:42 PM MDT
    3

  • 46117
    I was going fo Gary, and then I remembered this song.  I was visiting my friend years ago in college (1978 or so) and he played this for me and I went to the college record store and bought it.  The Normal.  They became part of the Human League who had great albums too.

    Anyway I'll give you the other side which is just as good. You will love it. If you don't know it.

    This post was edited by WM BARR . =ABSOLUTE TRASH at September 24, 2019 8:33 PM MDT
      September 24, 2019 4:53 PM MDT
    3

  • 2836
    We're gonna do it till our ears bleed. 
    I think Sharona supplied the right tune for that.
    I better double up on the viagra. Not that I need I just may need it now



      September 24, 2019 8:06 PM MDT
    3

  • 46117
    Remember now, both songs are good.  I don't know why I said that except if you get going you might forget to change the song.  
      September 24, 2019 8:48 PM MDT
    2

  • 17401
    Herbie Fully Loaded

    Cars

    This post was edited by Thriftymaid at September 24, 2019 7:40 PM MDT
      September 24, 2019 4:18 PM MDT
    4


  • OMG Thriftymaid. I was working my way down through the answers and when I got to yours I noticed you mentioned the very same things I was thinking in my responses to others.  Fully Loaded and Cars.  LOL!  Go figure.  I don't usually think of us as being on the same page but we obviously were this time.  Good choices.  Thanks for dropping in on the post.
      September 24, 2019 4:49 PM MDT
    3

  • 44231
      September 24, 2019 4:49 PM MDT
    4