Over the past few years, street racing has steadily gained in both popularity and credibility as a sport. However, the image of street racing is not a recent one; in fact, the idea of the renegade street racer has been a prevalent image in western culture for decades now, as well as a popular subject in films. From "Rebel without a Cause" to the street racing scene in "Grease", motor racing films have captured the public consciousness through a variety of storylines.
Take George Lucas' 1973 cult hit, "American Graffiti", starring Richard Dreyfuss and former Happy Days pin-up, Ron Howard. In the film, as the two central characters are faced with leaving for college in the morning, they spend a final evening "cruising the strip" before having to face their future - ultimately helping to immortalize the status of street racing on screen.
A similar theme was captured in the public imagination by Hal Needham's 1981 film, "The Cannonball Run", which featured a medley of movie stars including Burt Reynolds, 'Charlie's Angel' Farah Fawcett, ex-James Bond Roger Moore, Sammy Davis Jr. and even martial arts icon, Jackie Chan. In the film, an illegal cross-country car race is organised, and in order to win, all the contestants stoop to newer, lower levels of dirty tricks and cheating.
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