Hot Rod (1950) Poster

(1950)

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7/10
A cult movie for car-guys
donden312 April 2003
This was required watching in the early 50's when we were building rods & customs. Poor acting, second rate plot, but Oh Those Cars!!! Anyone building a retro-rod today should be able to see this. Too bad we can't get it on tape or DVD
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6/10
Less exploitation film than I expected.
planktonrules7 January 2020
Before watching "Hot Rod", I also watched "The Devil on Wheels". Both films are low budgeted exploitation films from so-called 'Poverty Row Studios'....small outfits who filmed by renting out space at major studios...often at night. In general, these films were very quickly made, cheap and less than stellar. "The Devil on Wheels" is worse, as it was made by tiny PRC....whereas "Hot Rod" was really not terrible and that's a bit of a surprise because it's from Monogram.



Judge Langham has two sons, David and Joe. Joe is a respectable policeman and David is a teenager who is fascinated with hot rods. The judge hates hot rods and they show him in court lecturing teens about the dangers of hot rodding. Because of his hatred of these fast cars, he only lets David have a car if it's not souped up and isn't a speedster. However, the young man is soon accused of driving recklessly and causing an accident. What's next? See the film.

While few would consider "Hot Rod" a great film, it's not nearly the bad film I'd expected. Much of it is that while it isn't subtle, it isn't nearly as preachy as other cheap hot rodding films of the era and teenage driving isn't a black & white issue in the picture. The judge's son isn't a terrible kid and the problem isn't as simplistic as it was in "The Devil on Wheels" and other roadster films of the day. The acting isn't bad considering everything and the film is a decent time-passer--not some cheap exploitation pic.

By the way, look for the character 'Jack'. He was played by Tommy Bond...a guy who in his childhood years appeared in dozens of Little Rascals films. He usually played Butch the bully.
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6/10
Pretty tame rebellious teenagers
ksf-24 August 2017
Those darn teenagers are at it again, with their fast movin' horseless carriages! Dave and Swifty are trying to get an off- road race track set up so that their friends don't have to race in the streets, but of course Dave's father is the local judge, and is set dead against it. Jimmy Lydon and Gil Stratton co-star in this teen angst shortie from Monogram, ( which is now Allied Artists). After trials and tribulations, ups and downs, mistaken identities and hold-ups, the boys hope their father will approve the track area, which would be a safer solution, and get those darn kids off the streets. The plot line is pretty inane, but worth seeing for some great oldie, jazzed up jalopies, as well as some old scenery of 1950s Los Angeles. A great chase scene right at the end, and it would be fun to see what some of those locales look like today. This shows now and then on TCM, but only 60 votes so far. Pretty tame stuff. The rebellious kids are all dressed so neatly, and speak so well... i wonder if they really were like that, or was this just Hollywood's image at the time. and you can feel the anger when the teenager's father doesn't believe when he's telling the truth, a common feeling we all had at one point. Directed by Lew Collins.... had worked on a couple shows with John Wayne.
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Hot Rodding, circa 1950
dougdoepke12 November 2013
Car culture was a big deal for post-war teens. As I recall, cool cars conferred about as much status on ambitious boys as competitive sports. The war had put a big crimp in the supply of new cars, so boys fashioned their own automotive skills by assembling 'hot rods' from spare parts wherever they could get them. As the movie shows, true hot rods were faster than normal, and when a kid won a competition, either on the street or on a track, he was not only showing off driving skills, but mechanical ability as well. In short, he built an enviable reputation among teens if not among adults.

The movie dramatizes much of this. Of course, the story's done Hollywood style. Thus, many of the rough dramatic edges are smoothed out in the end, even if it's not too plausible. For example, kids would continue to do risky street racing, despite drag strips alternatives. Nonetheless, for viewers curious about teens and the time period, Jimmy Lydon is a good example of the teen image prior to James Dean's celebrated rebelliousness. Lydon's a little overage here for the school boy part, but his basic likability and respectfulness are never in doubt.

Anyway, whatever else, the movie remains a showcase for hot-rodding, circa 1950.
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1/10
Back in the day when the streets were paved with '32 roadster bodies and slingshot manifolds...
J_Frank_Parnell7 November 2021
The writing and acting are deeply cheesy (but in an endearing way- It's actually pretty funny, at times) but the historic cars in the opening 4 minutes alone are worth the price of admission- The McGee Roadster, the Bill Burke Belly-tank, rare footage of the early, Lake Muroc SCTA trials.

The cars in the main storyline aren't show-rods; Really, the modifications are pretty basic- '32 flathead-powered roadsters with fenders removed, dropped front axle, a hot camshaft, a 2x2bbl, or maybe 3x2bbl manifold, and finned aluminium heads- chromed on the fancier cars. But they're realistic for what a teenager with limited skills and limited budget could do in 1950 California- Back when you could pay for a hot rod build, with the earning from a before-school paper-route... before you needed to OWN the newspaper, to afford an A-V8, or Deuce Roadster.

(This movie is so early in the hot rod era, that there isn't even a Deuce Coupe in the whole film- Why would a kid bother with a big, heavy, undesirable 3-window coupe, when you couldn't throw a rock without hitting a 32 roadster, selling for under $100?)
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5/10
Talks Out of Both Sides of Its Mouth
radbond13 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Although the location shooting and nostalgia is entertaining, this two-faced film is dangerous. The thrust of the movie is that operating a hot rod at high speeds on city streets is a danger to the public - doing so should only be allowed in areas specifically set up for it. After all the sermonizing, however, the "juvenile" protagonist pursues a robber through the streets at high speed and contributes to his capture. For this he is rewarded. If any of us was to do this in real life, we might be facing reckless driving charges, cause a car accident or injuries to another person or suffer injury or attack by the other driver.
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3/10
Just plain awful
rooster_davis1 January 2024
This is a really poor film. It features two alleged teenagers, reference is made to going to school, and they're way way past their sell-by date to be teens. Jimmy Lydon, who was really good in the Henry Aldrich movies, was playing a teenager NINE YEARS earlier than this movie was made, and even then he was almost past his teens. Gil Stratton as his sidekick 'Swifty' is even older. Neither of them really could pass for a teenager or high school student. In fact it's kinda laughable. Lydon plays it low key; he's pretty skinny and still does have a bit of baby-face to him but Stratton is absolutely not believable in his role.

There are so many old hot rod movies out there and this is one which disappointed me. How about getting character roles played by people who are believable in them?
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4/10
lame hot rod B-movie
SnoopyStyle31 July 2023
A narrator describes the world of the hot rod as a new and developing sport. He then describes the problematic world of illegal hot rod racing. A motorcycle cop confronts a group of racers. He catches a couple of racers after their car breaks down. Judge Langham sentences the first time offenders and revokes their licenses for a year. His son David Langham gets a car and gets caught up in an incident.

This starts basically as one of those government films that get shown in high schools. It turns into something else. It does have characters and a story. I don't care about the characters. The story is not that compelling and it ends in the least compelling way. This is a movie trying to placate the hot rod crowd, but they would never fall for a lame movie like this. The government film warning against hot rods would be more fun.
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Fun Jimmy Lydon Vehicle A Treasure Trove Of Souped Up Cars
lchadbou-326-2659217 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Hot Rod is a fun little Monogram, shot by the great silent cinematographer Gilbert Warrenton (Lonesome) and starring Jimmy Lydon, who'd played Henry Aldrich in that film series, as a likable school kid who is frustrated when his rival for the girls can show him off by driving faster in a souped up hot rod. The boy's father, played by Art Baker, is a strict judge who doesn't approve of such hot rods and only reluctantly allows his son even to get a car for his new job delivering the paper. In a somewhat contrived Hollywood plot detail the boy's older brother is one of the small town's cops. All works out well when the boy uses his car, which he has fixed up into a hot rod without his father knowing, to help apprehend a robber. Then the judge gives his OK to the opening of a legal timing strip, where the youth can work out their energies without getting into as much trouble. The boy's sidekick, Swifty, is played by a squeaky voiced Gil Stratton, who delivers some amusing humor, which reminded me a bit of the more well known smart aleck kid actor William Tracy. Those who are more into car culture than I am will get a kick out of seeing the period postwar automobiles that are used.
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