Joe Dirt’s Filthy, Fake Daytona Sells For as Much as a Real One
Director Dennie Gordon’s 2001 comedy, Joe Dirt, has a putrid 9 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, but I thought it was a pretty fun movie. It ain’t Citizen Kane, but the adventure comedy starring David Spade is silly enough for a few yuks. It’s also a rare Hollywood foray into storytelling for and about blue-collar workers. When released, Joe Dirt grossed $31M. At Barrett-Jackson Palm Beach this year, his Dodge Charger grossed $330,000.
The 1969 Dodge Charger Daytona that starred alongside Spade’s mullet-haired, mop-wielding hero protagonist sold for almost exactly its #2 (“Excellent”) condition value of $337,000 in the Hagerty Price Guide. That’s odd for two reasons: one, because the car isn’t a real Dodge Daytona, and two, it certainly isn’t in excellent condition.
In 1969, Chrysler built the Charger Daytona as its first “aero” car, forming a distinctive pointy-nosed and high-winged shape with the high-speed tracks of NASCAR in mind. The Daytona won its first race, the Talladega 500, and notched six total NASCAR wins during the 1969-70 seasons. Its nearly identical successor, the Plymouth Road Runner Superbird, won a further eight races in 1970. Built on the same platform as the ’69 Charger R/T, the Daytona was also available to the public in order to homologate it for NASCAR racing, and 503 of them were built in total. Of that number, 70 received a 426-cubic-inch Hemi engine. The rest got a 440 Magnum. Today, Dodge Daytonas are highly coveted collector cars, but the Mopar aero cars weren’t particularly popular when new.
Apparently the same was true in the Joe Dirt days of 2001. In the movie, his Daytona is far from his pride and joy—it’s a backup plan. Immediately after buying a pristine ’67 Hemi GTX convertible from an old lady (who just killed her husband for only the change in his pocket), Dirt accidentally gets carried away in a hot air balloon and embarks on a series of misadventures. By the time he comes back to retrieve the Competition Orange GTX, the impound fee is over three grand. All he has is $450.
The guy at the impound lot (played by the inimitable Kevin Nealon) takes the $450 and gives him a mostly yellow (but also blue, with some primer) Daytona. It’s rusty, belches smoke, has no door panels, and one of its pop-up headlights is stuck. It’s also packed with ’70s muscle car clichés like a chrome chain-rimmed steering wheel, footprint gas pedal, fluffy seat covers, 8-track player, Cragar wheels, and fuzzy 8-balls in the mirror. Even with all that, though, $450 for a Mopar wing car was a steal even in 2001. For both the GTX and the Daytona, the car pricing in this movie was a little bit of movie magic.
So was the Daytona itself. The only car used for filming, it started out as a stock Plum Crazy over white 1969 Charger, born with a 318-cu-in engine. The engine was reportedly swapped out for a 440 built by drag racer Dick Landy, so it probably doesn’t really spew smoke. Its body panels were swapped for replica Daytona skin, including the 23-inch-tall rear wing, but the patina on the paint and wheels is all stage makeup. This is not a grimy car under the skin. On the contrary, it looks quite nice.
Spade must have liked it. In 2015, he plonked down $900,000 at auction for a real-deal, four-speed Hemi Daytona. (The same one sold for a record $1.43M at Mecum Kissimmee last year.)
A year after the movie came out, according to some online sources, the studio sold the scruffy Charger to a private owner for just $18,000. What Barrett-Jackson sold it for this year is nearly 18 times higher than that.
Here are some other wrinkles. All classic cars today are more expensive than they were 23 years ago, but some have grown more than others. The value curves of the two star cars in Joe Dirt illustrate this point. Today, a 440-powered Dodge Charger Daytona like Dirt’s in #4 (“Fair”) condition is actually worth more than a ’67 Hemi GTX convertible in #2 (“Excellent”) condition like the dream car he lost to the impound lot.
When it comes to cars, putting a price on fame and celebrity is a bit more art than science. Even so, a lot of it boils down to just how famous a car or its owner is, and just because a car was in a movie or owned by a celebrity doesn’t guarantee a big price. For example, Tom Cruise’s iconic Porsche 928 from Risky Business? A slam dunk. Dennis Rodman’s Mustang? Not so much. Certain movie cars are valued more as artifacts than automobiles.
In this Dodge’s case, it’s a car very closely associated with a fairly famous (if poorly reviewed) movie character, so a lot more of its sale price is thanks to screen time rather than quarter-mile time. Finally, in an auction setting, the right buyer has to be in the room at the right time. Most people wouldn’t drop $330,000 on a dumb comedy movie prop, even if they could afford to. But if such a thing were to sell at such a price anywhere, it would be at Barrett-Jackson. And if such a thing were to sell like that to any person, it would be this guy:
I read the story on this car last week and wondered if all the ‘Dirt’ was removed, if the Plum Crazy coloured, original Charger underneath would actually be worth more? From the Hagerty story I read, when it was found for the movie and before it was modified, it was a pristine car – almost like they planned to return it to stock after the movie… probably prefer it that way, but maybe leave the Dick Landy 440 under the hood!
Only the engine bay underside of the hood and the jams were plum crazy the person that built the car started painting it and that is as far as he got before getting bored with the car the spot on the drivers door was from where he was clearing out the paint gun. The car was white and bought out of Thousand Oaks California. The window plug was made from a Vega hatchback. It was a project a friend of mine and his brother started and ended up loaning it to the production they got it back after filming completed and then sold it for $14,000.
The only thing this article forgot to mention is how plying up the whales with plenty of alcohol leads to poor decisions (for the customers) and bigger profits (for Barrett and the sellers). I’d watch a show where they find the buyers the next day, after getting sober and see if they have any “ragrets.” 😁 Well, as long as they were telling the truth.
Odd it’s listed as having been a stock Plum Crazy ’69, as FC7 debuted in 1970 and was only available that year and in 1971. The fender-top scoops on the auctioned car don’t show up on the movie car either. Weird!
One vital thing I learned after my first car deal at 13, which helped me do successful car deals for over 50 years and that is…there’s a buyer for everything.
Glad it was his money and not mine!
Hey, if you can pull it off. Why not
No one seems to know who that was that bought that car, but I am almost 100% sure its Jeff Kelderman the owner of Kelderman Air Suspension.
You would be correct.
https://kelderman.com/about/#jeff
Sounds like a bunch of jealousy here from some of the comments, while trying to hide it as that ‘guy is dumb’, or some long drawn out heavily worded explanation. One of the Koch brothers spent over $2M of a tiny, wrinkled picture of Billy the Kid. Why? Because he wanted it, he could afford it. As far as the movie, Joe Dirt, is concerned, has anyone ever seen a snooty critic praise a movie that keeps you laughing? Who listens to them anyway? If we did, we’d never see any movies!