20. “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014)
If there’s one thing that dogs the modern movie car chase, it’s a sense of familiarity, of expectedness, which is why this very unexpected, fluidly shot and extremely cleverly edited seqeunce from Joe and Anthony Russo‘s ‘Captain America’ sequel was such a pleasant surprise. In a Marvel universe characterized somewhat by the relative weightlessness and anonymity of its action sequences, this stands out not just for seeming to actually happen in real place, but for the emotional stakes they manage to invest in it. It would arguably not be till the Russos own “Captain America: Civil War” that the MCU had an action sequence as effective, but where there it’s a superhero-team-up, here it’s just Nick Fury (Samuel L Jackson) and his very smart car, which is nonetheless outgunned and outrevved by the Bad Guy’s malevolent forces. It’s one of the only times we’ve felt actual peril watching a Marvel film.
19. “Smokey and the Bandit” (1977)
The daffy, magnificently dated “Smokey and the Bandit” is neither a deep nor a meaningful film, but depending on your tolerance level for “yeehaw”s and banjos on the soundtrack, the second-highest-grossing film of 1977 (after some little sci-fi bauble) may still exert considerable nostalgia-based charm. But there is one inarguably wonderful part of Hal Needham‘s honty-tonk classic and that is the whole end portion of the film which is one extended chase during which Burt Reynolds aka Bandit, completes his noble quest to smuggle a truckload of Coors across the Mississippi (something that was bizarrely illegal back then) with runaway bride Sally Field aka Frog by his side, and pursuing office Jackie Gleason, aka Buford T Justice aka Smokey, on his tail.
18. “The Dark Knight” (2008)
Perhaps the textbook example of a chase that is so skillfully concealed within a gripping, textured and highly characterful sequence that you kind of don’t notice it’s a car chase, the section of “The Dark Knight” in which Heath Ledger‘s Joker kidnaps Aaron Eckhart‘s Harvey Dent and then Christian Bale‘s Batman and Gary Oldman‘s Gordon comes to his rescue basically doesn’t contain one single extraneous beat, despite being one of the longer sequences here. Every shot is functional, everything does something: it conveys psychological information about the Joker, it provides background texture (as when the kids in the car mimic shooting at other vehicles which then unexpectedly blow up) or it just proves, once again, how Batman’s toys, especially the ineffably sexy Batpod, are the absolute best.
17. “Drive” (2011)
It’s not derivative if it’s homage, and it’s not shallow if it’s aware of its shallowness, go the two most prevalent defenses of the work of Nicolas Winding Refn. We feel like they apply to some of his films more than others, but the one movie of his for which you probably won’t need them is his acknowledged masterpiece, “Drive.” It’s not that it’s startlingly original (Refn often seems to regard his influences as ingredients that will combine into a new recipe), but it is just blisteringly cool, and for a film that is so reliant on soundtrack it’s to be commended that Refn knows exactly when to play things suddenly, eerily quiet, as in this beautifully shot car chase that raises the film’s pulse while somehow keeping the tone in that doom-drenched, throbbing neo-noir register.
16. “Fast Five” (2011)
Sometimes the best car chases, certainly to my non-purist eyes, are hybrids: they’re where a car chase fuses with a gunfight, or a desperate, heartrending bid to smuggle crateloads of anodyne domestic beer into another state. or, as here, with a heist. “The Fast and the Furious” is a franchise built on car races, chases and stunts, but if there’s a flagship moment it should go to the film that relaunched the franchise and is probably the best in the series so far. Here with the grace and elegance of a pair of prima ballerinas, human pistons Paul Walker and Vin Diesel drag an enormous vault behind their two cars letting it bounce around like a wrecking ball, yet magically only demolishing unimportant infrastructure rather than claiming innocent human life. It’s as gleefully meatheaded as anything in this franchise, but still for now, with its wheels on the ground.
15. “Vanishing Point” (1971)
Even on the rare occasions when there are no cars following the central antihero Kowalski (Barry Newman), in Richard C. Sarafian‘s absolutely essential road movie, he’s being chased–by his demons, encroaching sobriety, burgeoning celebrity, generational malaise, the Death of the American Dream, whatever you want to call it. This entire film is one long chase as a result (and fittingly we can’t find one single segment online that does it justice, so you’ll have to make do with the trailer below) but it takes on mythic overtones, as Kowalski’s pointless benzedrine-fuelled quest–to deliver a Dodge Challenger to San Francisco from Denver (a 1200 mile distance) by 3pm the next day–aided by Cleavon Little’s radio jock egging him on, becomes a symbol of dusty, open-road, big-skies American freedom. Needless to say, he’s doomed.
14. “The Bourne Identity” (2002)
The Bourne franchise may have become more closely associated with Paul Greengrass’ trademark docu-drama, handheld style, but Doug Liman‘s marginally more sedate and classical approach did the first film in the series no harm. In fact arguably his restraint is what makes this car chase the best one the series has to offer — there’s never a moment in which the human stakes of the two people inside that relatively rickety little tin can take a backseat (sorry) to flashy action. Instead, in the best advertisement for the maneuverability and versatility of the classic Mini Cooper since “The Italian Job,” Matt Damon and Franka Potente careen around Zurich in a thrilling sequence that set the high bar for realist thrills that Greengrass would then attempt to clear.
13. “The Driver” (1978)
If Walter Hill‘s Ryan O’Neal-starring “The Driver” is probably the primary influence on Nicolas Winding Refn‘s “Drive,” it should also be noted that Hill’s movie was itself heavily indebted to Jean-Pierre Melville’s “Le Samourai.” However, the car chases within are all vintage Hill, impossibly slick, neon-soaked, darkly lit thrillrides with O’Neal as the taciturn calm at the center of the storm. They’re so good, in fact, that we can’t restrict ourself to just one clip, so here are two: the first builds to an absolutely classic game of chicken as its climax, and the second is just so dizzyingly well-shot and skin-of teeth exciting that there are times when you actually feel like the camera car itself must have been in grave danger.
12. “The Seven Ups” (1973)
If the classic car chase movie has a God figure, it’s probably William Friedkin, but if it has a patron saint it might very well be Philip D’Antoni, director of this now-seldom-seen 1973 title, and producer of both “Bullitt,” and “The French Connection.” Very much in the mold of those two films (it even stars Roy Scheider, as does the latter) and featuring stunts co-ordinated by Bill Hickman who also worked on those other two touchstones, it has a slightly sketchy plot, but makes up for it in the authenticity of its ’70s New York location photography, and the genuinely thrilling car chase, surely one of the most grittily real year exciting ever filmed. It’s strange that this was D’Antoni’s only directorial film, and a damn shame, on this evidence.
11. “Mad Max: The Road Warrior” (1981)
Until recently, when um, a certain other movie happened, this extraordinary, ferocious and fast-paced road movie looked likely to retain its title as the best, and most exciting film George Miller would ever make (depending on where you fall on “Happy Feet,” obviously). And most genre directors would be happy to have anything half as iconic to their name: establishing Mel Gibson as a huge star, and more or less perfecting the art of the gonzo, post-apocalyptic, quasi-punk desert car chase only to top it again five minutes later, it’s a pure hit of grimy action excellence whose greatness has not dimmed one iota since the early eighties. This sequence is pretty representative (extra marks for dog in a bandanna and bandit in a gimp mask) but really you could probably slice “The Road Warrior” up more or less at random and come out with something equally, unmistakably awesome.
Honorable mention:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rnf4v5mqHes
Bourne Identity car chase instead of Supremacy…whoever put this list together gotta be fired dawg
No way. Supremacy’s far better.
Although Bay’s bombastic Bad Boys 2 bonanza still makes my jaw drop with it’s sheer ferocity, I still think his chase in The Island is better, the way it moves from foot to truck to sky to skyscraper, all the while getting faster and faster still gives me glee.
Part of me was hoping there would be an honorable mention toward the taxi and police chase from The Fifth Element, despite the fact that all vehicles involved hover well above the actual ground.
“(seriously, if you just cut out the entire first half with the other set of girls, you get exactly the film everyone wanted).” And miss the entire point of the movie. Death Proof is meant as a double feature all by itself, to juxtapose the difference between two kinds of seventies grindhouse indies; smashing them together to make a positive statement about how women’s roles have evolved.
I know ‘best Michael Bay film’ is setting the bar low, but I recently re-watched The Rock. It is dreadful. Verging on incompetent. There’s definitely a so bad it’s good quality to it, most noticeably Cage’s performance (and his incredible vanity), but man, it is not good. It made me feel bad for Ed Harris, who’s trying really, really hard.
I love the chase in A Most Violent Year, very low key and realistic yet thrilling at the same time.
Surprised the original Mad Max didn’t make the list. As much as I love “The Road Warrior,” the car chases feel way safer to me. They sped up the film a lot, which they didn’t do in Mad Max. In Mad Max they were doing it by the seat of their pants, doing everything for real. It just feels way faster and way more dangerous, because it really was.
ha ha! I was holding my breath until I came across The Raid 2 and was going to write up a very stern comment if you guys left it out! IMO, top 5 should be (in any order):
The Raid 2
French Connection
Ronin
Death Proof
Bullitt
I suppose with some of the choices on here, you could have made room for the car chase from “Freebie and the Bean” (Richard Rush, 1974). The OTHER great San Francisco chase scene…
But what’s more interesting is that you folks, Collider, and Slashfilm all published the same article (great car chases) within 24 hours of each other. Was there a conference call made on how to capitalize on “The Fate of the Furious”? Or is this just a stunning coincidence?
One of my favorites is also the fantastic one-take inside the car chase scene in Children of Men. Great movie and incredible work of Alfonso Cuarón (arguably his best film).
“Gone in 60 Seconds” – sometimes even Halicki didn’t know what was going on.
At right about 21:00, you can see that either he or the other driver missed their mark, sending him spinning off the road and into the light pole for real.
According to his widow, his first words whenh he regained consciousness were “Did we get coverage on that?”
Have to disagree about the “Quantum of Solace” chase – it’s so incoherently edited that it makes no sense at all, visually.