Cheap Driver's Ed. DVD Collection - Drivers Education and Driving Safety Films (DVD) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
Here at Cheap-price.net we have Driver's Ed. DVD Collection - Drivers Education and Driving Safety Films at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| MANUFACTURER: | www.yumheart.com |
| MPAA RATING: | Unrated |
| FEATURES: | NTSC, Black & White, Color, Compilation, Classic 20th Century Driver's Ed Films, Good quality transfers to digital format, DVD Menu system to navigate the films, DVD will play in ALL regions - it is region free. |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 689076433150 |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of Driver's Ed. DVD Collection - Drivers Education and Driving Safety Films
Full list of films on this DVD Tomorrow's Drivers 1954 10:58<
><
>Socialization through driver education begins at a tender age in Phoenix.<
><
><
><
>We Drivers 1936 10:30<
><
>Early driving safety film showing good and bad sides of a driver's mind.<
><
><
><
>Knights on the Highway 1938 8:55<
><
>How drivers (especially truckers) can drive safely at night.<
><
><
><
>A Cool Hot Rod 1953<
><
>Uses narration by a teen-ager to show how a hot-rod club contributes to safe driving through its strict membership rules and restriction of speed runs to 'DRAG STRIPS.'.<
><
><
><
>The Other Fellow 1937 8:14<
><
>Comedian Edgar Kennedy teaches a driving safety lesson.<
><
><
><
>Signal 30 (Part I) 1959 13:02<
><
>Signal 30 (Part II) 1959 14:04<
><
>Legendary 'shock' driving safety film featuring numerous scenes of mutilated cars and injured/dead people and a voiceover lacking in compassion. Produced in cooperation with the Ohio State Highway Patrol and shown to millions of young drivers for over 40 years. CONTENT ADVISORY: Many disturbing scenes of violent deaths and accident scenes; cries of crash victims on soundtrack.<
><
><
><
>Safe Roads 1935 7:37<
><
>Driving is compared with running a railroad train. With excellent images of steam-era passenger trains.<
><
><
><
>Formations 1936 8:42<
><
>Defensive driving film explaining the importance of awareness of surrounding vehicles.<
><
><
><
>The Safest Place 1935 6:23<
><
>How the automobile is the safest place a person can be.<
><
><
><
>When You Are a Pedestrian 1948 9:55<
><
>Pedestrians and motorists share the responsibility for accident prevention. Filmed on the streets and sidewalks of Oakland, California, and on a tabletop with model cars and dolls representing pedestrians. The film that began the Prelinger Archives collection.<
><
><
><
>Your Permit to Drive 1951 10:17<
><
>Talking driver's license narrates this hymn to the beneficial effects of highways, cars, and driving.<
><
><
><
>Stop Driving Us Crazy! 1959 9:51<
><
>Rusty, a spy from Mars, pays a visit to Earth and discovers how its inhabitants disrespect one another by driving poorly. The film espouses a Christian viewpoint on safety, stating that 'reckless driving is a sin.' The 1950s-style animation is great<
><
><
><
>Turnabout Man 1936 7:01<
><
>What happens when bad driving habits are mirrored in other parts of a driver's life.<
><
><
><
>Live and Let Live 1947 10:15<
><
>Set in a toy tabletop town, this film uses brightly colored model cars and trucks to demonstrate a range of driving safety scenarios. The number of near-misses and accidents would make for an extremely violent film if real vehicles and people were used, but the models keep the feeling of mayhem at a distance. An unusual example of a rich tradition within the safety film genre: the tabletop model.<
><
><
><
>Show 'Em the Road (Part I) 1954 13:13<
><
>Show 'Em the Road (Part II) 1954 12:52<
><
>Southern California teenagers join the Mobilgas 'Safety and Economy' competition, driving from the Los Angeles area to the Inland Empire, the desert, to Las Vegas, Nevada and Hoover Dam, then back home again. Producers and Directors: Sid Davis and Arthur L. Swerdloff.<
><
><
><
>What's The Big Hurry?<
><
>Another journey into the frightening world of Sid Davis. The film is a just a bunch of footage taken at a junk yard. As the shots linger on the destroyed cars, we hear ominous dialogue... the last things the drivers said. Not too much visually, the film's creepy, dissonant electronic score is excellent, and really adds to the film.<
><
><
><
>Drive Your Bicycle 1955 10:47<
><
>Slow-moving bicycle safety film shot in Glendale and Burbank, California by a family-owned film production company. Encourages boys and girls to 'drive their bicycles' and prepare for becoming automobile drivers by learning to practice the 'rules of the road.' Good views of the mid-1950s suburban Southern California landscape.