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AR15.COM
5/3/2012 4:30:42 AM EDT
It's on HBO now...always liked that movie.  Maybe because the local news in Detroit got its theme from the road tar scene.  Or maybe because I like eggs....
5/3/2012 4:33:10 AM EDT
[#1]
Lots of Christologies in that film.
5/3/2012 4:33:42 AM EDT
[#2]
5/3/2012 4:35:15 AM EDT
[#3]
Her too....  :-P
5/3/2012 4:35:19 AM EDT
[#4]
What we've got here is....failure, to communicate. Some men you can't reach - so, we get what we had here last week - which is the way he wants it. Well, he gets it! I don't like it any more than you men.....


5/3/2012 4:37:00 AM EDT
[#5]
Sometimes nothin's a pretty cool hand.

I'm shakin' it, Boss!
5/3/2012 4:37:29 AM EDT
[#6]


Win!!!!!
5/3/2012 4:42:57 AM EDT
[#7]
What we have here is a failure to communicate.
5/3/2012 4:44:01 AM EDT
[#8]
"STOP FEEDIN' OFF OF ME !! "
5/3/2012 4:45:28 AM EDT
[#9]
Come on safety pin!

M
5/3/2012 4:54:41 AM EDT
[#10]
He grins like a baby but bites like a gator.
5/3/2012 4:57:29 AM EDT
[#11]
That movie caused "chain gangs" to be eliminated here in the South.  Typically, judges would ask the convict whether they wanted to work for say six months, or serve double the time (twelve months) sitting in jail.  
For some of those convicts, it was their first lesson that they should get up and work, and follow some rules.  

I think about that movie just about every time I see garbage on the road, or state employees out picking up trash.
5/3/2012 5:11:14 AM EDT
[#12]
Quoted:
That movie caused "chain gangs" to be eliminated here in the South.  Typically, judges would ask the convict whether they wanted to work for say six months, or serve double the time (twelve months) sitting in jail.  
For some of those convicts, it was their first lesson that they should get up and work, and follow some rules.  

I think about that movie just about every time I see garbage on the road, or state employees out picking up trash.


I have always understood that this book (and the ensuing motion picture) was responsible for the decline of chain gangs.


"You run one time, you got yourself a set of chains. You run twice you got yourself two sets. You ain't gonna need no third set, 'cause you gonna get your mind right."
5/3/2012 5:15:46 AM EDT
[#13]
Quoted:
What we have here is a failure to communicate.


FIFY
5/3/2012 5:18:39 AM EDT
[#14]
Naah, callin' it your job don't make it right Boss.
5/3/2012 5:22:44 AM EDT
[#15]
"Luke, why are you putt'en your dirt on the wardens lawn"?
5/3/2012 5:25:32 AM EDT
[#16]
Quoted:
"Luke, why are you putt'en your dirt on the wardens lawn"?
"I don't know, Boss."

5/3/2012 5:33:02 AM EDT
[#17]

 
 
5/3/2012 5:47:01 AM EDT
[#18]
One of the best Classics out there.
5/3/2012 5:47:49 AM EDT
[#19]
Love that movie.
5/3/2012 5:53:01 AM EDT
[#20]
I can still eat 50 eggs.

http://www.ar15.com/forums/t_1_5/1317069_How_many_eggs_can_you_eat_.html
5/3/2012 5:55:10 AM EDT
[#21]
I wathc that movie almost every time it comes on TV.  My wife hates it for some reason.
5/3/2012 6:09:52 AM EDT
[#22]
Playboy went after the chick in the car wash scene but she declined................    

I don't think she did any more movies after that either. She was as hot as the pregnant little sister in "Heat of the Night", IMO. That one disappeared as well.  
5/3/2012 6:14:49 AM EDT
[#23]
Easily in my top 5 movies of all time.

When I was in 3rd or 4th grade my teacher asked us what our favorite musical was.  My answer was Cool Hand Luke....because of when Luke sings Plastic Jesus.  At the time that was musical enough for me.
5/3/2012 6:29:27 AM EDT
[#24]
Any man not in his bunk at eight
will spend a night in the box. There
is no smoking in prone position in
bed. To smoke you must have both
legs over the side of your bunk.
Anyone caught smoking in prone
position will spend a night in the
box. You get two sheets. Every
Saturday you put the clean sheet on
the top, the top sheet on the bottom
and the bottom sheet you turn in to
the Laundry Boy. Any man who turns
in the wrong sheet spends a night in
the box. No one will sit on the bunks
with dirty pants on. Any man sitting
on a bunk with dirty pants will spend
a night in the box. Any man who don't
bring back his empty pop bottles
spends a night in the box.
5/3/2012 6:49:53 AM EDT
[#25]



Quoted:


Easily in my top 5 movies of all time.



When I was in 3rd or 4th grade my teacher asked us what our favorite musical was.  My answer was Cool Hand Luke....because of when Luke sings Plastic Jesus.  At the time that was musical enough for me.


God I hate actual musicals.  
I wonder what the average age of the guys posting in this thread.



I'm 34 and this is also in my top five favorite movies.
 
5/3/2012 7:23:10 AM EDT
[#26]
Quoted:
Quoted:
That movie caused "chain gangs" to be eliminated here in the South.  Typically, judges would ask the convict whether they wanted to work for say six months, or serve double the time (twelve months) sitting in jail.  
For some of those convicts, it was their first lesson that they should get up and work, and follow some rules.  

I think about that movie just about every time I see garbage on the road, or state employees out picking up trash.


I have always understood that this book (and the ensuing motion picture) was responsible for the decline of chain gangs.


"You run one time, you got yourself a set of chains. You run twice you got yourself two sets. You ain't gonna need no third set, 'cause you gonna get your mind right."


That movie was in the ~1930's –– chain gangs were still plentiful in Georgia and Alabama forty years later.  Ten years after Cool Hand Luke came out, they were practically gone.

Say... what kind of car was that?  I can't tell from this photo.
5/3/2012 7:34:34 AM EDT
[#27]
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
That movie caused "chain gangs" to be eliminated here in the South.  Typically, judges would ask the convict whether they wanted to work for say six months, or serve double the time (twelve months) sitting in jail.  
For some of those convicts, it was their first lesson that they should get up and work, and follow some rules.  

I think about that movie just about every time I see garbage on the road, or state employees out picking up trash.


I have always understood that this book (and the ensuing motion picture) was responsible for the decline of chain gangs.


"You run one time, you got yourself a set of chains. You run twice you got yourself two sets. You ain't gonna need no third set, 'cause you gonna get your mind right."


That movie was in the ~1930's –– chain gangs were still plentiful in Georgia and Alabama forty years later.  Ten years after Cool Hand Luke came out, they were practically gone.

Say... what kind of car was that?  I can't tell from this photo.
http://web.mac.com/macxo/public/JoyHarmon006.jpg



What's a car?

5/3/2012 7:46:02 AM EDT
[#28]

5/3/2012 7:54:33 AM EDT
[#29]
Chain gangs suffered from the Federal attempts to stamp out peonage, as well.
5/3/2012 7:57:23 AM EDT
[#30]
"Takin 'em off Boss!  The damn things is...blockin' my view!"
5/3/2012 8:17:08 AM EDT
[#31]
Quoted:
"Takin 'em off Boss!  The damn things is...blockin' my view!"


"Take 'em off".  
5/3/2012 8:24:23 AM EDT
[#32]
You got your mind right?
5/3/2012 9:00:11 AM EDT
[#33]
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
That movie caused "chain gangs" to be eliminated here in the South.  Typically, judges would ask the convict whether they wanted to work for say six months, or serve double the time (twelve months) sitting in jail.  
For some of those convicts, it was their first lesson that they should get up and work, and follow some rules.  

I think about that movie just about every time I see garbage on the road, or state employees out picking up trash.


I have always understood that this book (and the ensuing motion picture) was responsible for the decline of chain gangs.


"You run one time, you got yourself a set of chains. You run twice you got yourself two sets. You ain't gonna need no third set, 'cause you gonna get your mind right."


That movie was in the ~1930's –– chain gangs were still plentiful in Georgia and Alabama forty years later.  Ten years after Cool Hand Luke came out, they were practically gone.

Say... what kind of car was that?  I can't tell from this photo.
http://web.mac.com/macxo/public/JoyHarmon006.jpg


I think that's a '36 or a '38....not sure what make but it looks American to me.....