Now, the number of the bus is 2525, it's running downtown from Venice. We can't pull that kind of money in time!įocus Jack! Your concern is the bus. If you try to take any passengers off the bus, I will detonate it. There are rules, Jack, and I want you to get this right. What do you do? What do you do?Īha, very good. Once the bus goes 50 miles an hour, the bomb is armed. No this is about me! This is about my money, this is about money due me! Which I will collect! 3.7 Million dollars! It's my nest egg, Jack, at my age you have to think ahead.
You ruined a man's life's work and you think you can walk away? You got blinders on to the world! But I got your attention now, didn't I Jack? You couldn't understand the kind of commitment that I have.
You think I wouldn't have been prepared? Two years I spent setting up that elevator job, two years I invested in it. What do you think, Jack? You think you pick up all the bus driver's teeth they'll give you another medal? (Unrated, suitable for ages 6 and older: cartoon violence, tobacco use, minor ethnic stereotypes) -Charles Solomon As the exploits of Speed, Trixie, Sparks, Spritle, and Chim Chim remain a touchstone for fans who grew up watching them, members of Gen-Y are unlikely to be troubled by these awkward moments. These edits cause some continuity problems: in "Girl Daredevil," new tires appear on the Mach-5 between two scenes, and a villain steals the car, although it was out of gas minutes earlier.
as Speed Racer in 1967, the series had been extensively re-edited to excise much of the violence. When Mach Go Go Go debuted in syndication in the U.S. In this second set of adventures, Speed and his friends race against a madman's robot-controlled car in "Race for Revenge." Trixie gets jealous when Speed pays too much attention to the pretty title character in "The Girl Daredevil." In "The Desperate Desert Race," the gang is taken prisoner by rebel army leader Ali ben Schemer, a character who may offend Arab-American viewers.