The Roaring Road (1919) Poster

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7/10
David Jeffers - Wally Reid and the Birth of the Road Racing Film
rdjeffers28 March 2006
Before Steve McQueen, Paul Newman and Tom Cruise there was Wallace Reid, and an all but forgotten genre of road racing films from the dawn of motion pictures. Reid was arguably the original matinée idol. The dashing young action hero with chiseled good looks and a glint in his eye, Wally was the all-American boy. He rocketed to fame after being given the minor role of a blacksmith in D. W. Griffith's "The Birth of A Nation". In a series of increasingly popular roles Reid became a household name alongside the likes of Mary Pickford and Rudolph Valentino. So why does Wallace Reid remain so obscure even among film buffs today? While filming "The Valley of The Giants" in 1919, Reid badly injured his back in an accident and rather than shut down production at considerable cost the studio decided to administer pain killing narcotics, under a doctors care. This was to ensure their star could continue working. Reid eventually became addicted, but as long as he was able to perform the studio looked the other way. Only in 1923 when Reid died did the Hollywood establishment decide to vilify him as an addict. On the heels of the Fatty Arbuckle and William Desmond Taylor scandals the name of Wallace Reid became something of a pariah uttered only in whispers and was soon forgotten altogether. Treatment of addiction was a relatively unknown concept in the twenties so by the time Reid was hooked his fate was sealed. The loving, husband, father and popular actor was allowed to slip off into oblivion. Many of Reid's films are lost, as is far too often the case with silent era stars. There are however, several fine examples that survive. "The Roaring Road" may be the best example of the road-racing genre.

The four hundred-mile Santa Monica road race, known as "The Grand Prize" has never been won three times by any one make of car. President of Darco Motors, J. D. "The Bear" Ward (Theodore Roberts), longs for a third win with his "Darco Ninety". His best salesman, Walter Thomas "Toodles" Walden (Reid) wants to drive in the big race but the Bear won't have an amateur "mussing things up". Introductory shots of these two actors are wonderfully evocative. Roberts morphs from an enormous bear into a man, while Reid is first seen behind the wheel of an open car sitting at a crossroads. Toodles spends his time playing cat and mouse with the local motorcycle cops and sparking with the Bear's motherless Cub, Dorothy Ward (Ann Little). When his sales manager gives notice the Bear decides to give the job to Toodles, but only after testing him. When the test backfires Toodles quits. The three cars arriving for the big race are destroyed in a train wreck and in a twist Toodles buys the junk pile to produce the "Three-In-One" and win the big race to the consternation and then jubilation of the Bear. After the race Toodles proclaims, "This was just a bluff! What I really want is Dorothy!" Animosities between the two continue when the Bear insists the Cub must wait five years to marry and Toodles swears off racing. By now, the Bear has set his sights on the next great prize, winning the speed distance record from Los Angeles to San Francisco. With the help of his mechanic the Bear tricks Toodles into the race, taking the Cub to San Francisco on the evening train with the plan, or so Toodles thinks, of leaving for the east for a year. The climax of the film comes when Toodles overtakes them on a parallel road as the car crosses in front of the train with only inches to spare on its way to breaking the record. Their faces peppered by the engine oil from the open car, Toodles and his mechanic bomb their way to a record finish. He visits a barbershop to freshen up before the train arrives, and then confronts the Bear. The plot is revealed. Toodles gets the girl and everyone gets a happy ending. Directed by one of Paramount's best, James Cruze (The Covered Wagon, Old Ironsides), early in his career, "The Roaring Road" is the archetypal road race film and one of most entertaining from a wonderful and nearly forgotten silent star Wallace Reid.
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7/10
Good Silent Action Film
mrb198028 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Little remembered today, Wallace Reid laid the foundation for the matinée idol image that has survived him for over 85 years. One has to remember that studios in Reid's day did not generally use professional stunt men, and filming continued at a frantic pace. After an injury during filming of "Valley of the Giants", Reid was given morphine by studio doctors so that he could continue working and eventually became addicted. In those days, there was no treatment for drug addiction, and Reid died as a hopeless morphine addict in a mental hospital at the age of 31.

"The Roaring Road" is a standard silent action movie, elevated in stature by Reid's presence. He plays a race car driver, who must win the big race to marry his girlfriend (Ann Little). Theodore Roberts plays the girlfriend's father, a burly cigar-chomping villain in the silent age tradition.

This film was followed by the sequel "Excuse My Dust!" in 1920. Three years later Reid was dead, closing one of Hollywood's saddest stories.
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5/10
Average film but Roberts is fun to watch
scsu197529 November 2022
"Toodles" Walden sells cars for J. D. Ward, aka "The Bear." Walden is in love with Ward's daughter Dorothy, aka "The Cub." Toodles wants a crack at driving Ward's racing car, but Ward refuses. When several of Ward's racing cars get wrecked in transit, Walden and his mechanic Tom Darby make a new one out of the parts from the three old ones. Then Walden enters a local race and wins, and asks Walden for Dorothy's hand. Ward says he won't let his daughter get married for five years. Walden more or less tells Ward where to get off. Ward wants to enter a car in the Los Angeles to San Francisco road race, and concocts a plan whereby he will board a train for San Francisco with his daughter, and force Toodles to race after them. Unfortunately, Toodles is in the clink on a speeding violation. So somebody has to spring him from jail. Will Toodles break the speed record for the road race? Will he finally win Dorothy's hand (and the rest of her)?

This is an OK production, with nothing much new. The story goes pretty much as expected. The first race is a letdown, as the camera is stationary and we just see cars whiz by. These scenes were filmed at the Santa Monica Race course. Press reports stated that Reid did his own driving, and exceeded speeds of 100 miles per hour. The climactic road race from LA to San Francisco has some decent camera work, with a driver's-eye view, shots from the side as Ward and his daughter watch, but with the now clichéd "car beating the train across the tracks" scene.

Theodore Roberts, as "The Bear," steals the show. His bluster, messed-up hair, and cigar-chewing are a riot to watch.
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7/10
First Dramatic Auto Racing Film
springfieldrental24 September 2021
"Ford vs. Ferrari," "Talladega Nights," "Fast and Furious," are just a few of the many race car films a select segment of theater goers lists as the best movies ever made. The fast-paced action wrapped around engaging dramatic stories make these motion pictures one of the most exciting ones appearing on the silver screen.

The first automobile racing film based around a dramatic story is April 1919's "The Roaring Road." Starring actor Wallace Reid, who had a brief stint as a race car driver, the Paramount Picture-released movie displays his immense skills behind the wheel. The movie concerns Reid, a car salesman nicknamed "Toodles," whose ambition to become a speed driver is realized when he scraps together three destroyed race cars and wins a huge competition, much to the consternation, but enjoyment of his future father-in-law, the head of an automobile manufacturing company. But another speed trial is dangling in front of Reid, and his proposed marriage to actress Ann Little depends on whether he can break that record.

Reid, called "the screen's most perfect lover," played in several race car movies, including the sequel to "The Roaring Road," 1920's "Excuse My Dust." So popular was a Wallace Reid movie that the newly-built movie palace in San Francisco, the elaborate Castro Theatre opened its doors for the first time projecting his 1922 auto-racing film "Across The Continent." Reid enjoyed car racing so much he made a valiant attempt to qualify for the 1922 Indianapolis 500, falling just short.

Four months after the completion of "The Roaring Road," Reid was involved in a train wreck while traveling to Oregon over the summer to film "The Valley of the Giants." He sustained a painful head injury that required several stitches. Because of the physicality of his movie roles and the frequency of film production his studio demanded out of him, Reid was given morphine for pain relief from the injury. He became addicted to the drug, which shortened his life considerably.
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Where's Wally?
mukava99113 May 2014
Although Wallace Reid is the star attraction in this racing picture he gets less screen time and less concentrated exposure than the secondary attraction, the much older character actor Theodore Roberts. The modest use of Reid was due to his growing morphine dependence which was beginning to show on screen at the time this adventure was filmed, though from the glimpses we get here, he didn't look bad at all at this relatively early stage of his addiction. He participates in very little physical action other than climbing in and out of a few cars, escaping from a prison window and losing his temper a couple of times. To say this movie is dated would be the understatement of the century, literally. Bicycles of the current century move faster than the racing cars of 1918.
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7/10
Very much like a typical B-movie of the 1930s.
planktonrules24 April 2022
"The Roaring Road" is an enjoyable silent movie starring the ill-fated Wallace Reid. I say ill-fated because the actor became hooked on morphine...by his own studio which gave it to him in order to get the injured actor back to work. Sadly, only a few years later, Reid died in a sanitarium trying to break his habit.

When the story begins, the very gruff J. D. Ward is preparing to have three of his drivers enter the big race...as he's hoping to have his race cars win it for the unprecidented third time. Well, disaster strikes and the three cars are damaged during shipment....and Ward's salesman, 'Toodles' (Reid), is planning on using the three damaged cars to make one roadworthy car to enter in the race. Well, Toodles manages to do it...and win the race. Now you'd THINK this would make Ward happy....but the old goat isn't. Why and what's next?

This is a fun film, though the characters are a bit one-dimensional....with Ward being a manipulative grouch and Toodles being plucky....and not much more. But it is worth seeing and very good for a film from 1919.
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2/10
Silly
gsfsu29 November 2019
Even allowing for the century that has passed since this movie was made the premise and the execution are unremarkable and unbelievable. The original showing back in 1919 must have been much better than the print I squinted through this afternoon. The B&W contrast was wiped out and it was very difficult to see what was happening. But even allowing for that this picture is a potboiler. Almost total lack of scene continuity and only the barest of story line. The constant huffing and puffing of "The Bear" threatened to overtake any semblance of plot and the "racing" scenes were nonsensical. And where did the screenwriter get "The Bear", "The Cub" and silliest of all, "Toodles"? Did they actually give actors these character nicknames back then?
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7/10
Walace Reid to the rescue!
JohnHowardReid6 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Unknown Video used to carry a double Wallace Reid DVD: The Roaring Road (1919) and its sequel, Excuse My Dust (1920).

Both films are Kodascope cutdowns and both are in very good condition. The first movie. was directed by James Cruze, and I prefer it to the sequel which has exactly the same cast (and much the same plot), but this time directed by Sam Wood.

"The Roaring Road" finds director James Cruze stepping aside and allowing Theodore Roberts to steal the movie, whereas director Sam Wood keeps Roberts firmly in his support-player place whilst he showers far more attention on Wallace Reid.

And on the other hand, in my opinion, James Cruze handles the action as well as the players in "The Roaring Road" with more gusto and finesse than Sam Wood contrives in "Excuse My Dust".
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8/10
Wallace Reid Speeds into the Box Office Lead
wes-connors26 November 2007
Car salesman Wallace Reid (as Walter Thomas "Toodles" Walden) wants to win the triple crown in a big auto race. His boss, Theodore Roberts (as J.D. "The Bear" Ward), has won two of the three races, and thinks Mr. Reid may muss up the company's winning streak. Roberts decides to test Reid's mettle; but, the plan backfires, and his crack-car salesman quits. Meanwhile, Reid courts Roberts' daughter, Ann Little (as Dorothy "The Cub" Ward). She is the only thing Reid wants more than winning the big race; however, Roberts wants her to wait five years before wedding. Can Reid win both the big race and the girl?

Scenery and cigar chewing Roberts threatens to steal the film from its star; but the likable Reid overtakes Roberts after a contest to see who can pound his desk hardest. In jail for speeding, Reid memorably asks a rat, "How fast were you going?" Car and train racing along the Los Angeles and San Francisco locale provided an exciting ending; at one point, the car and train might collide!

"The Roaring Road" brought in box office returns at great speed; and, Reid quickly became the #1 United States Box Office star; understandably, several follow-up films raced into theaters, including outright sequel "Excuse My Dust!" (1920) ******.
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