The Choppers Explained
The Choppers |
Director: | Leigh Jason |
Producer: | Arch Hall Sr. (as Arch Hall) |
Starring: | Arch Hall Sr. |
Music: | Al Pellegrini |
Cinematography: | Clark Ramsey |
Editing: | Jack Ogilvie |
Studio: | Rushmore Productions |
Distributor: | Fairway International Pictures |
Runtime: | 66 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Choppers is a 1961 American crime film directed by Leigh Jason and starring Arch Hall Jr.
Plot
A gang of teenage greasers terrorize a small community by stealing cars and stripping them for parts, then selling the parts to a crooked junkyard owner.[1] The police and an insurance company investigator set out to break up the gang.
Cast
- Arch Hall Jr. as Jack 'Cruiser' Bryan
- Robert Paget as Torch Lester (as Robert Padget)
- Burr Middleton as Snooper (as Mickey Hoyle)
- Rex Holman as Flip Johnson (as Roye Baker)
- Chuck Barnes as Ben Shore
- Tom Brown as Tom Hart
- Marianne Gaba as Liz
- William Shaw as Police Lt. Frank Fleming (as Bill Shaw)
- Bruno VeSota as Moose McGill
- Britt Wood as Cowboy Boggs
- Dee Gee Green as Gypsy
- Richard Cowl as Torch's Father (as Richard S. Cowl)
- Patrick Hawley as Officer Jenks (as Pat Hawley)
Soundtrack
- Arch Hall Jr. - "Monkey in My Hatband" (Music and lyrics by Arch Hall Jr.)
- Arch Hall Jr. - "Konga Joe" (Music and lyrics by Arch Hall Jr.)
- Arch Hall Jr. - "Up the Creek"
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: The Choppers . www.grindhousedatabase.com . 15 August 2019.