Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe story of James Garner's year with his racing team, from the time he bought the car and assembled his team, through Mexico, England, Florida, and Canada.The story of James Garner's year with his racing team, from the time he bought the car and assembled his team, through Mexico, England, Florida, and Canada.The story of James Garner's year with his racing team, from the time he bought the car and assembled his team, through Mexico, England, Florida, and Canada.
Andrea de Adamich
- Self - Driver
- (as Andrea deAdamich)
Avaliações em destaque
This film has some great in-car racing footage in it, but between the racing scenes, we're treated to James Garner walking around and doing a bunch of self-important stuff, some of it racing related. A ten minute scene devoted to Garner getting out of bed, showering, and shaving is just one of the ridiculous non-events that add up to make this film a major bore.
No, this is not LeMans, nor is it Grand Prix or the original Gumball Rally, but if you are a die-hard road racing fan, this is a great movie.
Sure, I read the prior remark - yes, it does have Garner doing Garner stuff - and that's what makes it a great show for those of us that chase road racing, and can identify with what Jim does in this movie. This takes us back to a time where yes, money was important, but unlike today, you could get by without a multi-million dollar budget, you could hang out with the race teams - they were just like us - and today you don't have that.
If you are looking for a slick Hollywood production loaded with stars, this isn't for you, but if you are looking for a great show that borders
on being a PBS documentary - you will love this show.
I'm trying to find a tape of this, I enjoyed it that much.
Sure, I read the prior remark - yes, it does have Garner doing Garner stuff - and that's what makes it a great show for those of us that chase road racing, and can identify with what Jim does in this movie. This takes us back to a time where yes, money was important, but unlike today, you could get by without a multi-million dollar budget, you could hang out with the race teams - they were just like us - and today you don't have that.
If you are looking for a slick Hollywood production loaded with stars, this isn't for you, but if you are looking for a great show that borders
on being a PBS documentary - you will love this show.
I'm trying to find a tape of this, I enjoyed it that much.
Garner's motorsports quest gave him a life of real intentionality. Here he is immersed in a community that shares his passion that oh by the way comes with the risk of death. From the love of the sport, teamed with experts he trusts, captured in close ups. Nothing is missed of the drama unfolding. And most of it happens as just matter of fact like a home movie in the Garner narration. This quest for elite performance with his team leads to a a notable denouement in Quebec. Talk about living with breakdowns. The inside story is these performers have a very short time frame to prepare anything and nothing is for certain.
Andy Sidaris directed this documentary about the racing team that James Garner sponsored. Garner narrates.
I'm not terribly interested in automobile racing, but I watched this, first because it was a movie I had never seen before, and second, to understand the attraction of it. I have known some people so into horse racing they have bought shares in a race horse, and I can understand an enthusiasm for the sport -- even though, like auto racing, it doesn't appeal to me. But my friends spent a few thousand dollars, while Garner spent hundreds of thousands of 1960s dollars. Millions by current standard. And while he talks about his enthusiasm, the calm measured tones of his narration amidst near wins and disastrous crashes, the quotes from Walt Whitman, they reveal an enthusiasm, but no clear impression of why.
I suppose if anyone asked me why I looked at every movie I can, I would be hard pressed to explain that.
I'm not terribly interested in automobile racing, but I watched this, first because it was a movie I had never seen before, and second, to understand the attraction of it. I have known some people so into horse racing they have bought shares in a race horse, and I can understand an enthusiasm for the sport -- even though, like auto racing, it doesn't appeal to me. But my friends spent a few thousand dollars, while Garner spent hundreds of thousands of 1960s dollars. Millions by current standard. And while he talks about his enthusiasm, the calm measured tones of his narration amidst near wins and disastrous crashes, the quotes from Walt Whitman, they reveal an enthusiasm, but no clear impression of why.
I suppose if anyone asked me why I looked at every movie I can, I would be hard pressed to explain that.
James Garner decides to take up racing. First, he's doing an off-road race through dusty Baja. It is a documentary following Garner's racing team, the inbetween, the garages, behind-the-scenes, and everything else. Next, he's in England and Silverstone. They eventually start racing Formula-A.
This is a buffet of racing with James Garner as the waiter. They are doing a lot of different styles of racing, mostly endurance races. I thought Garner would be the one racing, but that's mostly not the case. This is good for racing fans and Garner fans. I'm more the later and his easy charms come easily. There is a constant stream of cars although I can't always spot his car. It's a slice of the racing world with Garner doing lots of narration.
This is a buffet of racing with James Garner as the waiter. They are doing a lot of different styles of racing, mostly endurance races. I thought Garner would be the one racing, but that's mostly not the case. This is good for racing fans and Garner fans. I'm more the later and his easy charms come easily. There is a constant stream of cars although I can't always spot his car. It's a slice of the racing world with Garner doing lots of narration.
Você sabia?
- Citações
Self - Narrator: Going for a bust, alright. We made it.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Man Who Shot Chinatown: The Life and Work of John A. Alonzo (2007)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Mexican 1000
- Locações de filme
- Daytona International Speedway - 1801 W. International Speedway Boulevard, Daytona Beach, Flórida, EUA(24 Hours qualifying & race, Lola coupe)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente