1998 GMC Silverado

VEHICLES FOR ALL FILM PRODUCTION IN THE GREATER TORONTO AREA

1998 GMC Silverado

ALL ABOUT THE CAR

1998 GMC SILVERADO
• Vehicle Type: Full-size Pickup Truck
• Make & Model: GMC Silverado 1500
• Year: 1998
• Body Style: Extended Cab (2-door + rear half-doors)
• Drive: Rear-Wheel Drive
• Colour: Pewter Metallic with Chrome Trim
• Interior: Grey Cloth Bench Seats
• Transmission: 4-speed Automatic
• Condition: Excellent – Original paint, factory wheels, authentic period details

Our 1998 GMC Silverado is a pristine example of a late-90s American pickup, offering timeless ruggedness and down-to-earth authenticity. This truck features the classic squared-off styling of GM’s late 90s design era, with chrome bumpers, split grille, and halogen headlamps — all original and well-maintained.

The Silverado is ideal for productions set in the late 1990s through early 2000s, and can easily be used for settings up to the early 2010s in small-town or rural environments where older vehicles remain in daily use.

Suggested Uses in Film/TV Productions:

Crime Dramas / Procedurals: The Silverado can serve as the vehicle of a working-class character — such as a mechanic, contractor, or farmer — in shows like Breaking Bad or True Detective (Season 1 vibe). Could also be used in police stakeouts or rural crime scenes where an older pickup truck would logically appear.
• Coming-of-Age & Teen Dramas: Perfect for background or lead character vehicles in shows like Stranger Things (later seasons), Friday Night Lights, or Dawson’s Creek. Evokes a sense of nostalgia and small-town Americana, great for school parking lot scenes, party setups, or road trips.
Period-Specific Films (Late 90s / Early 2000s): Essential for movies set in 1998–2005 where authenticity matters. The Silverado fits right into rural, suburban, or small-town settings. Could appear as a background vehicle in a gas station, hardware store, or construction site.
Thrillers / Action: The Silverado’s robust, muscular frame works well for chase scenes, rural standoffs, or getaway scenes where a character uses an everyday truck. Could be outfitted with optional props (ladders, toolboxes, decals) to play a contractor’s or survivalist’s vehicle.