Steelyard Blues

1973 "If you can't beat 'em ... drive 'em crazy!"
5.3| 1h33m| en
Details

A group of misfits decide to leave for a place that they can all be free. There mode of transportation is a PBY flying boat. The only problem is that the PBY needs a lot of work and they will need jobs to pay for the parts. When they find that they have only 10 days before the PBY is sold for scrap, they decide on borrowing the parts for their trip

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime. Watch Now

Trailers & Clips

Reviews

Console best movie i've ever seen.
Invaderbank The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
Aubrey Hackett While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
Aiden Melton The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.
Brian T. Whitlock (GOWBTW) It's kind of ironic that someone wants to have his/her own place in this world. But if you have been in trouble with the law, you would considered to be an outcast to society. A rebel is a person who won't conform to society means. Donald Sutherland plays Jesse Veldini, a demolition driver who seems to be on the edge. Howard Hesseman plays Frank, his brother and D.A. who seems to help his brother get on the straight and narrow. Jesse is notorious for wrecking every kind of American car during his times in the demolition derby. When he sees the 1950 Studebaker, he has to wreck it. With all the other misfits he hangs with, they get to restore a plane. This movie is a barrel of laughs. And it's a reunion of Donald Sutherland and Jane Fonda. Two years ago, they did "Klute" where Sutherland played a cop. Fonda plays a prostitute again in this film. This is a story of find a place in society, more like finding your own world. What a better place to be like the junkyard. The ultimate treasure yard. I enjoyed it very much. 4 out of 5 stars.
screaminmimi Not a great movie, but the scene between Sutherland's character and his brother in the brother's office is worthy of the best Marx Brothers material. Unlike the other commentators here, I found Peter Boyle's work in this movie annoying and overwrought, and that's why I gave it an 8. But everything Sutherland did in this movie was comedy magic and totally unexpected, given his reputation as a serious actor. Fonda, on the other hand, seemed to be phoning it in, doing a watered down caricature of her Bree Daniels persona in "Klute." Too bad, there was a lot of talent in this picture.
tadenmexico I spent the entire Summer during the making of the film on the set/location of the film, and I would say that being thirteen years of age at the time, it was a heck of ride!!! I learned about racial tension on the streets of Oakland. The local African American population wasn't always crazy about the film crew's presence...lots of discernible anger and tension.I learned about how you try to shoot on location at a real demolition derby with a real live audience. It was organized chaos, and fights were breaking out in the stands and on the track....Peter Boyle was always making everybody crack up with his Marlon Brando imitations.....there was a lot of focus and preoccupation on getting scenes done correctly with pyrotechnics and explosions....hours of debate and preparations...It was the end of the sixties, and the Vietnam War was going on endlessly with no end in sight....Jane Fonda was blackballed by Hollywood and Steelyard Blues was at least a paycheck.A piece of Hollywood history during a very uncertain time....
CryMeARiver722 I recall seeing the movie in '73 and enjoying it. I was about 24 then, and it seemed like a "normal" film with "normal" people doing "normal" things, at the time! lol.What I've been trying to figure out for decades now, is if this is the Sutherland/Fonda film where he rolls the black super ball (which he refers to as a "marble") from the back of the empty bus down the aisle, past Fonda, the only other passenger, as she sat up front ignoring the ball, which was clearly, a message from him. Without turning to acknowledge him, she hurriedly gets off the bus, trying to slip away into the night. He gets off the bus, catches up with her and asks: "Why didn't you answer my marble?" Somebody! Please! Tell me if this is the film that the line came from! I'm desperate to "get closure" on this one! lol. Been using the line all these years thinking it was from "Klute", but that's wrong! Nobody I've ever known seems to recall what I would term "THE classic line" from the film.Thanks! CMAR