Used Cars

1980

Action / Comedy

19
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 77% · 31 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 69% · 5K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.7/10 10 17113 17.1K

Plot summary

When the owner of a struggling used car lot is killed, it's up to the lot's hot-shot salesman to save the property from falling into the hands of the owner's ruthless brother and used-car rival.


Uploaded by: OTTO
April 20, 2014 at 11:06 AM

Top cast

Kurt Russell as Rudy Russo
Michael McKean as Eddie Winslow
Joe Flaherty as Sam Slaton
Jack Warden as Roy L. Fuchs / Luke Fuchs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
815.78 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
Seeds 2
1.65 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
Seeds 24

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by rlcsljo 8 / 10

Did this movie usher in the "go-go" 80's?

I am a member of a rare breed--I like Steven Spielberg's comedies better than all of his other works, except for possibly "Schindler's List". After the wild unscrupulous business practices that cause the near collapse of the banking system, I look back on Used Cars with much admiration. Did Steve forsee something the rest of us didn't? This movie spoofed run away capitalism at its best. Although it featured everyone's favorite sleeze bag capitalists: the used card salesmen, you cant help but think that junk bond salesmen took one too many clues from them in selling us a bill of goods. But dont think this movie is anywhere near serious, it is almost entirely cinematic vaudeville--sight gags, sight gags, sight gags, some girls and profanity. This movie makes you laugh and think at the same time--assuming you are the sort that can walk and chew gum without stumbling. But dont chew gum while watching this film, you might swallow it while laughing and choke.

Reviewed by TheFearmakers 8 / 10

The Sleeper Comedy after 1941

Around the time that Steven Spielberg's WWII comedy started vanishing from the collective moviegoer memories, the entire 1941 team, also including producer John Milius co-writing with Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale, had a new movie out that bombed in theaters, unlike 1941 that, despite its maligned reputation, did turn a profit...

The irony is the Robert Zemickis directed USED CARS, co-written by Gale and produced by Milius and Spielberg, was getting the kind of "sleeper" attention within its predecessor's ebbing wake...

As the decade drove on, thanks to cable and the video boom, USED CARS became a beloved comedy classic while 1941 was mired in every "worst movie" list...

And CARS is a terrific little film taking place on a used car lot, of course... or rather two of them, each owned by twin brothers, both played by Jack Warden...

Luke Fuchs is the underdog with an underdog staff led by Kurt Russell in his first real chance to grow beyond the previous two decade's worth of Disney flicks (right before John Carpenter turned him from a bland TV Elvis into a hard-edge science-fiction Clint Eastwood ala ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK and THE THING)...

As salesman/would-be politician Rudy Russo, Russell embraces the attributes of a likeable anti-hero scumbag alongside neurotic schemer Gerritt Graham, giant black mechanic Frank McRea and a trained beagle named Toby...

They're all fighting the evil corporate-backed brother Leo (aided by lawyer Joe Flaherty and an intense Harry Northup): his "gallant" car lot economically trouncing the dilapidated "goofus" across the street...

Therein USED CARS proudly touts the unapologetic R-rating, which probably kept it from being initially successful...

A shame because the curse word overkill (in particular Jesus Christ, uttered more than a Billy Graham sermon) and a few nude shots aren't entirely necessary...

Although, as a dressed-down conventional comedy mixed with a supped-up drive-in exploitation, it's glaringly obvious Zemeckis/Gale were, before igniting the mainstream with BACK TO THE FUTURE, proving to Spielberg they could do their own raunchy thing their own raunchy way, more ANIMAL HOUSE than CLOSE ENCOUNTERS...

And in that, the first half is the most entertaining and humorous, providing glimpses into various creative/crafty stages of sheer unbridled dishonesty, wielded by these tattered lowbrow salesman...

From, right off the bat, changing a speedometer to the most involving sequences making "illegal commercials" (with the help of early hackers Michael McKean and David L. Lander of Lenny & Squiggy fame): breaking into a live football game and even President Jimmy Carter's televised address...

And while the gluttonous glee's eventually curbed by a sweet-natured yet ultimately equally-crooked woman-next-door Deborah Harmon as Russell's subtle love-interest, so much downright fun's had early on that the second half drags comparably once these lovable liars are literally taken to court...

At which point USED CARS, like 1941, goes all-out with enough action-packed/vehicle-smashing distractions to sell this gloriously addictive wreck into something that feels brand spanking new.

Reviewed by aaronlshickell 7 / 10

Underrated Comedy

Watch movie at least once a year, truly underrated. If you have never watched, take the time to do so..

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