Dragstrip Girl


1h 9m 1957

Brief Synopsis

Rival teens challenge themselves to a dragstrip race, and the winner runs of the girl.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Romance
Sports
Release Date
Apr 24, 1957
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 24 Apr 1957
Production Company
Golden State Productions
Distribution Company
American International Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 9m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Film Length
6,255ft (7 reels)

Synopsis

Eighteen-year-old Louise Blake, a hot rod enthusiast who has just moved to town, meets fellow hotrodders Jim Donaldson and Fred Armstrong after they are chased by a motorcycle policeman for racing on city streets and hide in a garage. Later, at a pizzeria, police lieutenant Bradley reminds the boys and other hot rod owners present that the city has provided a dragstrip for them and warns them not to race on the streets. Jim and Fred become rivals for Louise's affection and when they visit her home, Jim, the son of a bricklayer, impresses her father by showing him the car he designed while Louise's mother is much more interested in Fred because he comes from a prominent, wealthy family. When Jim takes Louise for a ride in his car, she encourages him to speed and he narrowly misses hitting a mother and baby. While out on a date with Fred, Louise learns that he and Jim have always been rivals despite their very different social backgrounds. Jim hopes to acquire a college scholarship by winning an upcoming, officially sanctioned racing tournament, while Fred intends to install an expensive, powerful engine in his car and beat him. Louise tells them both that she does not want to become romantically involved. Later, when Fred accuses Jim of being sympathetic to the police who are now threatening to close the dragstrip, a fight ensues in which Jim knocks out Fred. After Fred recovers, he challenges Jim to a "chicken run" race, but Jim declines because the big tournament begins the following day. Fred then provokes Jim by calling him a coward, forcing him to accept the challenge. After Jim wins the first race, Fred demands a rematch and asks garage attendant Rick Camden along to be his co-driver. As the race progresses, Rick is thrown from the car and suffers a broken leg. When Fred expresses no interest in Rick's condition, Louise chastises him. Later that night, Fred bribes Rick, whose leg is now in a cast, to let him test-drive Jim's car, which is housed in the garage in which Rick works. Fred and Rick drive off at top speed and, after they hit and kill a driver changing a tire, they return to the garage without stopping to replace a hubcap lost at the accident scene. A small piece of Rick's cast breaks off and lodges in the car. The next morning, Louise tells Jim that she really cares for him. Meanwhile, Bradley investigates the driver's death and determines from the tire marks on the road that the victim was hit by a hot rod. At the racing trials, Fred and Jim are among the four drivers who qualify for the final heat and, just as they are about to compete against one another, Bradley arrives with news of the fatal accident and the hubcap he found at the side of the road. While Bradley escorts Jim to another area of the track to examine Jim's supply of hubcaps, Louise discovers the piece of Rick's cast in Jim's car, surmises what transpired and decides to substitute for Jim in the race. After Rick tells Fred that Louise can implicate them in the hit-and-run fatality, Fred replies that he will make sure that Louise will never be able to incriminate them. The race, one hundred miles around a circular track, begins and soon the two other cars drop out, leaving only Louise and Fred in competition. After Fred tries to run Louise off the track, the police order the race stopped and Louise hands the piece of Rick's cast to Bradley. Crashing through a track gate, Fred attempts to escape on foot, but is caught by Jim. The police arrest Fred and Rick as Jim and Louise resume their romance.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Romance
Sports
Release Date
Apr 24, 1957
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 24 Apr 1957
Production Company
Golden State Productions
Distribution Company
American International Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 9m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Film Length
6,255ft (7 reels)

Articles

Frank Gorshin (1933-2005)


Frank Gorshin, a skilled comedian, impressionist and character actor who will forever be indentified with his role as "The Riddler" on the cult series from the '60s Batman lost his battle with lung cancer on May 17 at the Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California. He was 72.

He was born on April 5, 1933, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania into a family of modest means, his father was a railroad worker and mother a homemaker. His childhood impressions of Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney paid off when he won a local talent contest at 17, and that led to his first gig at 17 at a the prize was a one week engagement at Jackie Heller's Carousel night club, Pittsburgh's hottest downtown spot in the day. The taste was there, and after high school Frank enrolled in the Carnegie-Mellon Tech School of Drama did hone his craft.

His career was interrupted briefly when he entered the US Army in 1953. He spent two years in Special Services as an entertainer. Once he got out, Frank tried his luck in Hollywood. He made his film debut in a forgettable William Holden vehicle The Proud and Profane, but his fortunes picked up soon when he and when he hooked up with American Internation Pictures (AIP). With his charasmatic sneer and cocky bravado that belied his slender, 5' 7" frame, Frank made a great punk villian in a series of entertaining "drive-in" fare: Hot Rod Girl (1956), Dragstrip Girl, Invasion of the Saucer Men, and of course the classic Portland Expose (all 1957).

By the '60s, he graduated to supporting roles in bigger Hollywood fare: Where the Boys Are, Bells Are Ringing (both 1960), Ring of Fire, and his biggest tole to date, that of Iggy the bank robber in Disney's hugely popular That Darn Cat (1965). Better still, Frank found some parts on television: Naked City, Combat!, The Untouchables, and this would be the medium where he found his greatest success. Little did he realize that when his skeletal physique donned those green nylon tights and cackled his high pitch laugh that Frank Gorshin would be forever identified as "the Riddler," one of Batman's main nemisis. For two years (1966-68), he was a semi-regular on the show and it brought him deserved national attention.

By the '70s, Frank made his Broadway debut, as the star of Jimmy, a musical based on the life of former New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker. He spent the next two decades alternating between the stage, where he appeared regularly in national touring productions of such popular shows as: Promises, Promises, Prisoner of Second Street, and Guys and Dolls; and nightclub work in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

He recently found himself in demand for character roles on televison: Murder, She Wrote, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and film: Terry Gilliam's Twelve Monkeys (1995), and the quirky comedy Man of the Century (1999). Yet his biggest triumph was his two year stint (2002-2004) as George Burns in the Broadway smash, Say Goodnight Gracie. It ran for 364 performances and he received critical raves from even the toughest New York theater critics, proving undoubtly that he was a performer for all mediums. He is survived by his wife Christina; a son, Mitchell; grandson Brandon and sister Dottie.

by Michael T. Toole
Frank Gorshin (1933-2005)

Frank Gorshin (1933-2005)

Frank Gorshin, a skilled comedian, impressionist and character actor who will forever be indentified with his role as "The Riddler" on the cult series from the '60s Batman lost his battle with lung cancer on May 17 at the Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California. He was 72. He was born on April 5, 1933, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania into a family of modest means, his father was a railroad worker and mother a homemaker. His childhood impressions of Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney paid off when he won a local talent contest at 17, and that led to his first gig at 17 at a the prize was a one week engagement at Jackie Heller's Carousel night club, Pittsburgh's hottest downtown spot in the day. The taste was there, and after high school Frank enrolled in the Carnegie-Mellon Tech School of Drama did hone his craft. His career was interrupted briefly when he entered the US Army in 1953. He spent two years in Special Services as an entertainer. Once he got out, Frank tried his luck in Hollywood. He made his film debut in a forgettable William Holden vehicle The Proud and Profane, but his fortunes picked up soon when he and when he hooked up with American Internation Pictures (AIP). With his charasmatic sneer and cocky bravado that belied his slender, 5' 7" frame, Frank made a great punk villian in a series of entertaining "drive-in" fare: Hot Rod Girl (1956), Dragstrip Girl, Invasion of the Saucer Men, and of course the classic Portland Expose (all 1957). By the '60s, he graduated to supporting roles in bigger Hollywood fare: Where the Boys Are, Bells Are Ringing (both 1960), Ring of Fire, and his biggest tole to date, that of Iggy the bank robber in Disney's hugely popular That Darn Cat (1965). Better still, Frank found some parts on television: Naked City, Combat!, The Untouchables, and this would be the medium where he found his greatest success. Little did he realize that when his skeletal physique donned those green nylon tights and cackled his high pitch laugh that Frank Gorshin would be forever identified as "the Riddler," one of Batman's main nemisis. For two years (1966-68), he was a semi-regular on the show and it brought him deserved national attention. By the '70s, Frank made his Broadway debut, as the star of Jimmy, a musical based on the life of former New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker. He spent the next two decades alternating between the stage, where he appeared regularly in national touring productions of such popular shows as: Promises, Promises, Prisoner of Second Street, and Guys and Dolls; and nightclub work in Los Angeles and Las Vegas. He recently found himself in demand for character roles on televison: Murder, She Wrote, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and film: Terry Gilliam's Twelve Monkeys (1995), and the quirky comedy Man of the Century (1999). Yet his biggest triumph was his two year stint (2002-2004) as George Burns in the Broadway smash, Say Goodnight Gracie. It ran for 364 performances and he received critical raves from even the toughest New York theater critics, proving undoubtly that he was a performer for all mediums. He is survived by his wife Christina; a son, Mitchell; grandson Brandon and sister Dottie. by Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Although a Hollywood Reporter production chart indicated that this film's interiors were to be shot at American National Studios, a modern source states that the lot never existed and the film utilized a stage at Kling Studios. Dragstrip Girl marked Judy Bamber's and John Ashley's feature film debuts. In the early 1990s, the Showtime cable network produced a series of remakes of AIP films, and in 1994, broadcast one entitled Dragstrip Girl. The 1994 version, directed by Mary Lambert and starring Natasha Gregson Wagner and Mark Dacascos, dealt with juvenile delinquents and hot rod racing, but otherwise was completely dissimilar to the 1957 Dragstrip Girl.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States April 1957

Released in United States August 5, 1992

Released in United States on Video August 5, 1992

Released in United States Spring April 1957

Shown at Film Forum (They Came From the Arkoff Archive) in New York City October 26 - November 15, 1990.

b&w

Released in United States April 1957

Released in United States Spring April 1957

Released in United States August 5, 1992

Released in United States on Video August 5, 1992