Follows the professional and personal life of race car driver Gino Borgesa (Douglas), as he struggles on the track and in his love life.Follows the professional and personal life of race car driver Gino Borgesa (Douglas), as he struggles on the track and in his love life.Follows the professional and personal life of race car driver Gino Borgesa (Douglas), as he struggles on the track and in his love life.
- Mechanic
- (uncredited)
- Janka
- (uncredited)
- Doorman
- (uncredited)
- Intern
- (uncredited)
- Race Official
- (uncredited)
- Gatti
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThird and final of Bella Darvi's Hollywood films, after which she continued her career in Europe.
- GoofsOn the starting grid at the Nurburgring, one of the drivers looks to his left and waves at someone in the pits. The Pit area at the Nurburgring is on drivers' right.
- Quotes
Opening Narrator: The playground of the world, Monte Carlo, is calling. The city of white villas, of sand and sea and gambling. This is how it looks once a year when even the roulette wheel seems to spin more slowly. This is how it looked on a Spring afternoon in the early fifties, the day before the annual race through its winding streets. As in every great sport, motor racing has its traditions and its heroes. As in bullfighting, the presence of death gives a special intensity to their lives. For these are the gods of the road, adored by millions, masters of a skill which approaches an art. Representing the great motor factories of England and the Continent, backed by an organisation of technical experts, they're the drivers of cars which are jewels of engineering perfection. But not all drivers are champions or part of the wealthy factory teams; others, with their secondhand cars and their unpaid helpers are poor - in everything but dreams of victory.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 66th Annual Academy Awards (1994)
Henry Hathaway assembles a very good supporting cast with Lee J. Cobb as the Italian auto manufacturer and fellow drivers Cesar Romero and Gilbert Roland giving a good account of themselves.
This must have been a chore for Douglas to make however because Darryl Zanuck was using this film to showcase his latest mistress, Bella Darvi. The woman made three films this one, Hell and High Water, and The Egyptian before Zanuck gave up.
Poor Bella couldn't act worth anything, but supposedly her other talents were legendary. Her life story would make a fascinating film, much better than The Racers. Bella did look right at home in the various jet setting locales for The Racers. It's where she spent her time and tragically died too young there.
As for The Racers, Kirk simply reprises his role in Champion and goes through the motions. Champion was a far better film. And the ending was no cop out as I believe viewers of The Racers will find to be so.
Good action scenes here. But in the sixties Grand Prix with the advantage of Cinerama would make The Racers outdated on a technical level.
- bkoganbing
- Jun 2, 2006
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.55 : 1