By Andrea RizzoFrom â?? They Drive By Nighta? to â?? Black Doga ????: The Unofficial Trucker Top Movie 10In recent years have made the art of customizing big rigs and trucks maneuvering through dangerous conditions in the reality television a much more interesting place with a series like â? My Truckâ trick? and â? Ice Road Truckers. â?? Although the truck driver and the profession of truck driving, as seems unlikely bedfellows with Hollywood, has tried in American cinema, the independent spirit of the profession in recent decades due to action sequences, adventurous cross country hauls, and romance on the road to grasp. We have scoured countless rolls of film to create an unofficial trucker movie top 10 This list follows on the heels of the last issue of CareersinGear. com magazine, where we brought you the best trucker songs ever with “We Gonna Roll This Truckinâ? Convoy: The Unofficial Trucker Top 10.” Selected in the same format, the following 10 movies Trucker somehow continue the genre in the way of the truck stop fights, romance on the road, and a lot of kitsch. This is not an absolute list, and hopefully we will see some newer movies Trucking crop up. 1. Â â? They Drive by Nighta? (1940) This classic piece of film noir stars Humphrey Bogart and George Raft as Fabrini brothers, a truck driving team struggling to make it during the Great Depression. It is one of the first films to center on truck driving as a profession, and Bogie and raft, albeit with great theatrics bring to many of the problems independent truckers face the light. Add the bold and brave Ann Sheridan as a truck stop girl doesnâ? T hold back, and the devious and cunning Ida Lupino as a murderous vixen, and there we have it: a love triangle that leads to bad things. As the movie trailer says it is, this film â?? The High-oriented tale of ruthless people who find romance on the side of the road, â?? and bogie and raft sure to give the audience a wild ride. 2. Â â? Truckstop Womenâ? (1974) And what of love on the street? This is the epitome of Seventies Flick Campy, drive-in fun that revolves around a mother and daughter run New Mexican brothel for truckers on the road. The mantra â?? No rig was too big handleâ for them? means not only the obvious sexual innuendo, but also a rallying cry for those early feminists who fought against the Mafia and won. From beginning to end, there are many big rig chase, extremely violent and inventive death scenes, and of course, seventies-style nudity. This is not a film for the faint hearted or those interested an accurate representation of an honorable profession. 3. Â â? Whiteline Feverâ? (1975) Remember when Jan-Michael Vincent was in fact a normal actor, not the freak show he has become? Hea? S is the star of the mid-seventies drama took Carroll Jo Hummer, an honest, hard-working truck driver who has finally had enough of the system. Hummerâ? S loyalty lies with his wife and his rig, lovingly called The Blue Mule. If lobster is too thinly spread through his cheatinâ? and scheminâ? Bossa? played by the iconic slim Pickensâ? he takes his anger over the U.S. The Blue Mule has an amazing show stopper at the end, and has recently Tarantinoâ immortal with a reference to Quentin? ? s campy-on-demand film, â? Death Proof, â?? released in 2007. 4. Â â? Smokey and the Bandita? (1977) ITA?? S hard to believe not in this film, first when it comes to truck-driving genre, although there are more muscle car and police cruiser scenes than anything else. With a still-hunky Burt Reynolds to play the legendary bandit truckers reluctant retirement moved once again show his nemesis, Smokeyâ? Also known to us common people as the police. This fun romp begins with the need to secure enough Coors beer to one East Coast make partyâ?? A system, a hot rod bait, which in turn attracts a runaway brideâ covers?? Appropriately performed by a young Sally Field. Although the Bandit isnâ? T driving a big rig, there are some really sweet scenes with his black 1977 Pontiac Trans Am, Cana?? T be denied. 5. Â â? Breaker! Breaker! Â?? (1977) There is no shortage of action in this play truck driving drama. Even the title is a tribute to the rise of the CB mode, the all-important form of communication on the way at the time. Find Chuck Norris stars as a former karate champion and current Alaskan truckers, who returned from a Texas vacation only to his brother, has met with a grave injustice. Once again, Smokey comes into play, and from this time, the corrupt cops from the anger and the return of a martial arts master of revenge. Perhaps this is the role, which fueled Norris to be the power plant, which we know today. 6. Â â? Every Which Way But Looseâ? (1978) Clint Eastwood This includes the classical character of Philo Beddoe, a semi-professional boxer and pipe suppliers truckers, along with his lovely and really hairy sidekick, Clyde. Beddoe meets his romantic match with the Country and Western singer wannabe, (Lynn Halsey-Taylor, played by Sondra Locke), and finds mishaps on the road, while pursuing her. Although their love doesnâ? T prove the value of hunting, enough kookiness turned the way for â?? Any Which Way You Cana do?? two years later, another classic monkey and human adventure. 7. Â â? Convoyâ? (1978) Director: Sam Peckinpah, â? Convoyâ? was inspired by Bill Friesâ? 1975 song shines with the same name. Just as the song relays, the film is a rough â?? Nâ? Dryer epic of truck drivers who break the law in a mile long caravan through the southwestern states for Mexico. Like all good, campy seventies flicks, this is a not free of sex appeal. Muscle bound by the then named Kris Kristofferson stars as the leader, Rubber Duck for his CB handle, and a more beautiful Ali McGraw plays his love interest. The soundtrack contains some great driving music, from a single recording of â?? Convoyâ? Crystal Gayleâ? s â?? Dona made?? t It Make Your Brown Eyes Blueâ? and â? Okie from Muskogeeâ? by Merle Haggard. 8. Â â? Pee WEEA? Big S Adventureâ? Forgot (1985), the large margin of this saga was Pee Wee? Although they only had a two-song cameo to three minutes, it was hardened Truck Driving terror, no doubt an allusion to the story-telling, â? Phantom 309A? by Red Sovine. Poor Pee Wee was just looking for a ride, as he had expected more than he by this female trucker. After her eerie story of the worst accident she’d have still seen ten years ago this night, it may large margin at the Wheel Inn truck stop with an ominous, â? Be sure and say, â?? Em Large Marge sent ya, â?? together with a giggle, can your toes. Somehow Sovineâ? Big Joe’s seemed like a benign spirit of a colleague. 9. Â â? Maximum Overdriveâ? (1986) One of Stephen Kinga? S goofiest releases, â?? Maximum Overdriveâ? Is a campy horror film about a group of trucks (and machines in general) that tries to come alive, just revenge against mankind. Although it is based on the well-written? Trucksâ? of his â?? Night Shifta? Collection, Kinga? s directorial debut brought him the disgrace of the Golden Raspberry Awardsâ? â?? Worst Directora? Title in 1987. Sometimes prose doesnâ? T translate well as in film, but thatâ? S, which makes the classic special offer. Emilio Estevez stars as the main man and the soundtrack is stellarator? Performed exclusively by metal connoisseurs and Kinga?? S favorite band, AC / DC. Although most of the songs were already released a few years earlier, â? Chase The Ace, â?? â?? D. T. â?? and the underlying theme of the film, â? Who Made Who, â?? written specifically for this film. 10. Â â? Black Doga? (1998) Nearly a decade after Swayze found his fame as a nea? He-do-well done good â?? Dirty Dancing, â?? he continued to find roles within the roughened likes of â? Point Breaka? and â? Roadhouse. â?? In â?? Black Dog, â?? Drag Swayze stars as Jack Crews, another ex-con-turned-good drivers over the U.S. with what he comes to understand, is a dangerous one. If itâ? S clear that his family and his life in danger, Swayze has more than malevolence customer in mind. Country crooner Randy Travis and opera-rock god Meat Loaf also star in this offering. Although most truck driving thematic films are more of a fun romp in the United States as an accurate representation of the profession, thatâ? S, what makes these films so escaped. The campiness factor kicks just the adventure, one or two steps and gives us memorable characters at the end. Fabrini heroes like brothers, Philo Beddoe, Carroll Jo Hummer and Jack Crews managed to save the day, get the girl (or keep their family protect), and hate, despite the payment easy, and the pervasive corrupt rogue cops. Perhaps The Bandit has it best when describing his livelihood, and why he does it: â?? In the good old American lifestyle: For the money, for fame, and for the fun. . . especially for the money. â??

