IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
The story of the Scuderia Ferrari motor team, which was formed by race car driver Enzo Ferrari.The story of the Scuderia Ferrari motor team, which was formed by race car driver Enzo Ferrari.The story of the Scuderia Ferrari motor team, which was formed by race car driver Enzo Ferrari.
Peter Collins
- Self
- (archive footage)
Enzo Ferrari
- Self
- (archive footage)
Mike Hawthorn
- Self
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This was so disappointing it drove me to make an imdb account just to complain about it. From the title you might expect a documentary about Ferrari, but don't fool yourselves into thinking it will be. It's merely about Mike Hawthorn and Petter Collins.
A documentary of extreme British bias, where even a legend like Fangio only gets a passing mention to enalt "how nice" Petter Collins was.
If you're looking to know more about Ferrari, this will be a waste of time. There's nothing there. At most you will have a mention of other drivers here and there, and tasteless footage of dead bodies that was clearly included for shock value, without any consideration or respect towards the people involved.
I can't for the life of me understand why this was advertised as a Ferrari movie at all.
A documentary of extreme British bias, where even a legend like Fangio only gets a passing mention to enalt "how nice" Petter Collins was.
If you're looking to know more about Ferrari, this will be a waste of time. There's nothing there. At most you will have a mention of other drivers here and there, and tasteless footage of dead bodies that was clearly included for shock value, without any consideration or respect towards the people involved.
I can't for the life of me understand why this was advertised as a Ferrari movie at all.
Very interesting picture of a decade that lived this sport with such glamour and at the same time fierceness.
One of the points that I DIDN'T like is the little spotlight director puts on Juan Manuel Fangio... documentary was like "and there's Fangio, the Scuderia leader.. meanwhile Peter Collins blabla", "and there´s Fangio, the best driver of all time, anyway here we have Mike Hawthorn", and was like "I want to know more about Fangio, damn"
But anyway, documentary was interesting, I´ve enjoyed and learned from it.
Recommended.
One of the points that I DIDN'T like is the little spotlight director puts on Juan Manuel Fangio... documentary was like "and there's Fangio, the Scuderia leader.. meanwhile Peter Collins blabla", "and there´s Fangio, the best driver of all time, anyway here we have Mike Hawthorn", and was like "I want to know more about Fangio, damn"
But anyway, documentary was interesting, I´ve enjoyed and learned from it.
Recommended.
This movie is not about very badly designed and constructed racing cars in the fifties. It is more about poor judgment drivers who were regularly killed driving those flying coffins. How come this all sport was not banned at the time is beyond me. Profit above people, I guess! Enjoy if you can, but it is pure horror, if you ask me.
Glorious 16mm and specially 35mm footage from one of the most aesthetically pleasing eras in motorsports history. Harsh testimonies of what racing was all about back then. The movie is a tremendous showcase of a bygone era we will never come close to.
Of course the movie is absurdly British, specially considering the topic (they care more about Stirling Moss than about Ferrari's Alberto Ascari). If you have ever watched motorsports-related media, you would already know nothing ever gets produced if there are no Brits triumphing in it either at the wheel or as a manager.
Those cars, those courses, those people, the absolute "vibes" as the kids would say... Tremendous through and through, horrific at times, and it is all presented with great competence.
Of course the movie is absurdly British, specially considering the topic (they care more about Stirling Moss than about Ferrari's Alberto Ascari). If you have ever watched motorsports-related media, you would already know nothing ever gets produced if there are no Brits triumphing in it either at the wheel or as a manager.
Those cars, those courses, those people, the absolute "vibes" as the kids would say... Tremendous through and through, horrific at times, and it is all presented with great competence.
What a disappointment. This is not a documentary about either Ferrari the manufacturer or Enzo Ferrari, the iconic owner.
Most of the documentary is about some of the drivers in the 50's, probably 2/3 of the whole film is about Mike Hawthorn.
And a lot it's very repetitive with so many other documentaries about how dangerous was F1 in the 50s. But other documentaries, take a clear storyline on that topic, take a more broad view and show how safety in the sport improved from the 50s to the 2000s, particularly during the 70s.
In this case, they stay in the 50s.
I was expecting learning either about Enzo (his origins, how he built the empire, his personality, the way he managed the team and the company, his quirks) or learning about Ferrari team and the evolution of it and the unique philosophy to manage competition and drivers. But nothing, besides a few short quotes and recordings of Enzo Ferrari, nothing much more about Ferrari.
An absolute waste of film and time.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatures Formula 1 (1950)
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $4,433
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Color
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