Showing posts with label Steve McQueen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve McQueen. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Five Great Racing Movies


Senna (2010 Dir: Asif Kapadia)

The life of Ayrton Senna was no ordinary thing and in 2010 British director Asif Kapadia finally shed light on one of F1's finest. Treading a fine line, Senna shows its subject as both hero and villain who although one of the finest drivers of his time was at times one of the most stubborn. Best of all, it goes deep into the Brazilians psyche and undercovers a deeply conflicted soul. Possibly the finest movie that motorsport will ever produce.




Rush (2013 Dir: Asif Kapadia)

Winner of this blog's Film of The Year in 2013, Ron Howard finally succeeded in bringing an excited F1 movie into the 21st century. Replaying the sheer drama and chaos that was the 1976 season, the battle between playboy James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and calculated Niki Lauda (Daniel Bruhl) was captivating. Effortlessly capturing the drivers vastly different persona's, it also brought forward the painfully recover of Lauda after his fiery crash at the Nurburgring. Live action racing has a front runner.





Le Mans (1971 Dir: Lee H Katzin)

Steve McQueen's love of Le Mans was well known throughout his life, so who better to star in a motion picture version. Story wise there is little other than McQueen looking his trademark cool self, but on the track is where the picture really sizzles. Driver Michael Delaney is still guilt-ridden over the death of a rival but the thriller of racing is still an addiction. Drawn into a battle with rival Erich Stahler, the pair of do battle on for the crown of sportscar racing.



Grand Prix (1966 Dir: John Frankenheimer)

Before Rush, this picture was considered the pinnacle of F1 films by director John Frankenheimer. Demonstrating the kamikaze feel of racing in the 1960's, star James Garner makes for an interesting centerpiece as American Pete Amon. A former star who is fading away, Amon has competition from world champion Jean-Pierre Sarti (Yves Montand) and recovering team Scott Stoddard (Brian Bedford). Featuring cameos from greats Stirling Moss, Juan Manual Fangio and Graham Hill, Garner was the real star as he did all his own driving which drew admiration for many drivers.




Days of Thunder (1990 Dir: Tony Scott)

Tom Cruise and Tony Scott's second outing together may have unimpressed critics, but the action on the track is still great. This may be Top Gun in a Chevrolet but together Cruise and Scott make you want to attempt Daytona on impulse. The early action scenes between hot shot rookie Cole Trickle and underhanded champ Rowdy Burns (Michael Rooker) set up the late drama. However, it is his rivalry with cocky new boy Russ Wheeler (Cary Elwes) that provides the real interest. Try watching the final Daytona 500 sequence with grinning from ear to ear.




Friday, 5 June 2015

Top 5 Movie Escapes

The Shawshank Redemption

The most iconic escape on this list see Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins) conduct what is the most unlikely plan. Who would have thought that scraping a wall with a rock hammer would prove so effect? Well that and a giant poster. But Andy's break for freedom is picnic, just listen to the Morgan Freeman narration. However, as we see the famous image on Robbins stood bare chested in the rain, it is a moment that uplifts our hearts.



The Silence of the Lambs

Hannibal Lector's (Anthony Hopkins) escape from Memphis Police Custody is by far the most terrifying on the list. What starts as a routine check becomes something scary as hell. Who would have thought the most banal object could have the biggest effect on lives? What comes afterwards though, is clever trickery by director Jonathan Demme. "After you Sergeant Pembrey!"



The Great Escape 

 One of the 1960's truly great escape plans sees the Allies outsmarting their German captors at every turn. Seems their idea to put all the great escape artists into one camp was one that backfired spectacularly. But of all the various escapes on show, it is Virgil Hilt (Steve McQueen) and his daring motorcycle ride that amaze the most.


Ocean's Eleven

The finale of Steven Soderbergh's excellent remake is one to savor 14 years after release. The thing that makes this robbery so memorable is the misdirection that fools Bellagio owner, Terry Benedict (Andy Garcia). His quiet horror at realizing just what video tape he has in front of him sets up a cunning dupe by Danny Ocean (George Clooney).



Raiders of the Lost Ark 

Steven Spielberg started this legendary franchise with a bang back in 1981, and his breathtaking opening still stuns us to this day. Watching Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) risk life and limb to recover his precious artifact whilst the entire temple shakes is death dying stuff. But just when you think he safe, the ultimate challenge arrives- a huge rolling boulder!