Showing posts with label le mans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label le mans. Show all posts

Winning (1969) Review

Winning  (1969)
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Now and then, it can be a real pleasure to dip into the years and pull up an older movie for a night of "couch tatering." Not that this is such an "old" movie... but old enough that the differences between today's special effect dazzle and flash and 1969 are evident in pacing, dialogue, general style. Today's movies sometimes are lost in technical fireworks. This movie pleases with its simple quality of good actors who interact well with each other and stand on their own acting strength without too many fireworks.
And still, the director, James Goldstone, deserves kudos for his creativity and innovativeness throughout the movie. The opening scenes are original for 1969, beginning with a close-up of a buttery yellow dandelion, moving through clips of families and racing fans gathering together. Of note are clips at the Indianapolis race track - a scene of a misty morning at the track the day of the Indy 500, scenes of fans entering the park, race car drivers and mechanics in tense preparations, increasing adrenalin, burgeoning crowds. I have yet to attend the Indy 500, but seeing these scenes certainly made me hope that soon enough I might.
My fellow "couch taterer" and I had interesting conversations offering the male/female viewpoint on the scene of infidelity that centers the plot - the reasons behind the betrayal, if not excuses, the ramifications to all involved, including the son played by Richard Thomas, the responsibilities befalling all, the likelihood of a reuniting at movie's end.
In short, when a movie catches your imagination, makes you want to visit the place and event portrayed, and gives food for thought and discussion at its end, then this is a movie worth adding to a collection, whether one is a race fan or not.

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GT Racer - Season 2 Review

GT Racer - Season 2
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GT Racer, Season II just premiered on Discovery's 'HD Theater' channel in the US and on 'Discovery HD International' worldwide.
This is the four-disc box-set of that season.
It is awesome.
Just like Season I GT-Racer: The Series 6 x 1 hr Classics (DVD) it follows a number of race teams that drive all sorts of classic dream race-cars, like Ferraris, Cobras, Jaguars, Aston Martins, Mustangs, Morgans, Bizzarrinis and others in historic racing series at the major international tracks and events.
The beauty is the 'cinema verite' style that the individual documentaries where shot in. Even though they are contemporary (the races happened last year, 2008) the show has the feeling of '60s 'cinema verite' movies like 'Le Mans' Le Mans or 'A Man and a Woman' A Man and a Woman. It even reminds of John Frankenheimer's 'Grand Prix' Grand Prix (Two-Disc Special Edition). But the whole thing is off-set by very modern editing and modern music and modern remixes of older music. There is no annoying commentary that tells you things you don't want to hear anyway. Watching feels like you are stepping inside the pit-lane and/or slip next to the drivers to experience the racing as they do.
Its a totally new style of filmmaking that is almost the true "reality TV" as it is so genuinely real.
The characters (drivers, mechanics, race-teams etc) are wonderful. You experience their passion that is the common denominator in all installments of this series. The enthusiasm and excitement comes across the screen almost raw, just like you want it.
The races that are covered in Season II are:
1.) The Le Mans Classic, in France that only happens biannually. This is the number one international event for historic racing and just breathtakingly exiting as it goes through the night and the teams suffer major setbacks including engine failure, loss of oil, loss of breaks, cars don't start up at the famous "'Le Mans Start' where drivers have to run to their cars to take off.
2.) The 500 KM Marathon on the Nurburgring that includes the 22 KM stretch of the Nordschleife totaling the track to 25 KM (15.5 miles). This race goes through a major rain downpour, where cars slip off the track with it's 80+ turns left and right. A playboyish German count battles against - but at the same time with - a british pro-driver for the win. Very cool.
3.) Magny Cours, also in France, sees the classic racers drift on a modern formula-one track. Its so great to experience all the variations of these different events. This one features a super rare Morgan Le Mans Streamliner car. I think they say that only three where ever build.
4.) Is the legendary Carrera Panamerican where over the course of seven days 100+ classic race-cars cross entire Mexico (2,000 miles) on a street race (!!!) This is true adventure and people still doing it.
I think any car fan (and even people who thought that they where indifferent to cars) will enjoy these films. The cars are the most beautiful cars ever built, the people are cool and sometimes very funny, the tracks are glamorous and the way the whole thing is shot (with HD technology, progressive with a 16:9 movie-format)) and put together just absolutely top, top quality.
Until now the general public had just now idea that this is happening. This is 10 times cooler than modern F1 racing or nascar - in my book anyway. I certainly will go to such an event in the near future. These people seem like super fun and totally approachable, which modern racing just cannot deliver anymore.
And for the die-hard car-nut the DVDs have a great feature where you can toggle between sound tracks, using the audio button on you remote-control to switch the background music (which is great) on and off, so you can get the glorious 60's race engine noise full blast if you want to.
The GT Racer series should be in anybody's collection.

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Historic racing is a worldwide, fast growing phenomenon where colorful characters live out their most sophisticated, car-crazed dreams. GT RACER takes the viewer literally inside the cars and onto the tracks. In Season II twelve idiosyncratic race teams give a peek at the most spectacular series of international classic racing, where the most beautiful classic racers ever built battle it out on the world's most glamorous racing circuits: Bizzarrinis, Ferraris, Jaguars, Morgans, Mustangs and Cobras race at the great circuits of Europe and America.The first episode, shot at the 2008 Le Mans Classic , takes a look at what it s like to race classic race cars day and night at the single most iconic tracks of all times - immortalized by none other than Steve McQueen himself: LE MANS. Its the most brutal endurance test for historic cars and crews.The second episode shot at the 500KM Marathon on the Germany s Nürburgring takes one onto the Nordschleife. This is the most complicated track in the world. In the hills, up and down, changing pavements all together 25km in length with some 80 plus turns. It s a race of 500 treacherous and dangerous kilometers.The third episode brings one to Magny Cours, France s grand prix circuit. Built for formula-one cars, this track makes an interesting playground for historic racers. The Masters Series Festival at Magny Cours is a showdown in sideways drifts with its three-hour endurance race as the main highliThe final installment follows the legendary Carrera Panamericana. This is the toughest classic race in the world, spanning seven days and 3,200km through Mexico. Special speed sections feature 550km of closed public roads for full speed racing. The roll-cages are thicker as one sometimes races along the edge of a 500 foot cliff.

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