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Le Mans

  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Steve McQueen in Le Mans (1971)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer3:46
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Car ActionMotorsportActionAdventureDramaSport

Two car racing champions, an American and a German, face off on the world's hardest endurance course: Le Mans in France.Two car racing champions, an American and a German, face off on the world's hardest endurance course: Le Mans in France.Two car racing champions, an American and a German, face off on the world's hardest endurance course: Le Mans in France.

  • Directors
    • Lee H. Katzin
    • John Sturges
  • Writers
    • Harry Kleiner
    • John T. Kelley
  • Stars
    • Steve McQueen
    • Siegfried Rauch
    • Elga Andersen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Lee H. Katzin
      • John Sturges
    • Writers
      • Harry Kleiner
      • John T. Kelley
    • Stars
      • Steve McQueen
      • Siegfried Rauch
      • Elga Andersen
    • 105User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:46
    Official Trailer
    How the Best Racing Films Raise the Stakes
    Clip 4:37
    How the Best Racing Films Raise the Stakes
    How the Best Racing Films Raise the Stakes
    Clip 4:37
    How the Best Racing Films Raise the Stakes

    Photos105

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    + 97
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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Steve McQueen
    Steve McQueen
    • Michael Delaney
    Siegfried Rauch
    Siegfried Rauch
    • Erich Stahler
    Elga Andersen
    Elga Andersen
    • Lisa Belgetti
    Ronald Leigh-Hunt
    Ronald Leigh-Hunt
    • David Townsend
    Fred Haltiner
    • Johann Ritter
    Luc Merenda
    Luc Merenda
    • Claude Aurac
    Christopher Waite
    • Larry Wilson
    Louise Edlind
    • Mrs. Anna Ritter
    Angelo Infanti
    • Lugo Abratte
    Jean-Claude Bercq
    Jean-Claude Bercq
    • Paul-Jacques Dion
    Michele Scalera
    • Vito Scaliso
    Gino Cassani
    • Loretto Fuselli
    Alfred Bell
    • Tommy Hopkins
    Carlo Cecchi
    • Paolo Scadenza
    Richard Rüdiger
    • Bruno Frohm
    Hal Hamilton
    • Chris Barnett
    Jonathan Williams
    • Jonathan Burton
    Peter Parten
    • Peter Wiese
    • Directors
      • Lee H. Katzin
      • John Sturges
    • Writers
      • Harry Kleiner
      • John T. Kelley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews105

    6.712.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7TakeTwoReviews

    Classic cool 70s cinema

    In parts this is classic cool 70s cinema. Widescreen jazz infused. In other parts it's down and dirty trackside racing. Never quite a documentary, but close enough to the action for anyone interested in motor racing. Le Mans is a fascinating race and this is every bit the love letter to it. Dialogue is sparse, McQueen is quiet and brooding. The plot is simple, although could've been a bit more engaging. It's about the racing though, pure and simple and with several sequences that are nothing short of staggering cinematic brilliance, it can be forgiven for any inadequacies elsewhere. With watching racing, it's as much about what's happening off the track, the strategy, the politics and it's exactly the same with this film, the production fraught with issues and squabbles, the trivia section on IMDB is riveting!
    bpm842

    Driver Swap

    jrfranklin01 mentions that it doesn't make sense to put McQueens character in the car when he's just had a crash caused by a lack of attention. I can't remember the precise dialogue, but he definitely mentions the problems of following a slower car.

    This is a typical Le Mans accident and I think the point is that the team manager knows that Delaney is his fastest driver and that even the best can get caught out by slower cars. Indead Jo Bonnier who did some of the driving for the film was killed at Le Mans (1971, I think) in an incident with a slower car.

    Also of note, my DVD copy of the movie came free with my programme when I attended the race this year. They know that many people's love of the 24 hours has a lot to do with the atmosphere created in this movie. You will appreciate this movie more if you've been woken by the sunrise and the sound of racing engines at the circuit :-) Ben
    10info-6429

    The finest motor racing film on the planet.

    If you are a petrol head and you have never seen this film you must have been born on another planet and I urge you to see it now. This film can be best described as motor racing porn. Incredible race car footage shot at the 1970 le Mans 24 hours race together with all the tensions and incidents of this famous endurance battle. Cameo appearances of famous race car drivers of the period. Full of staged crashes with cars that would now be worth $ millions. Not much of a story line and that was intentional, but who cares. This is motor racing at its best full of incident and as near to the real Le Mans as you can get. A veritable masterpiece of cinematic history.As fresh today as when it first hit the silver screen in 1971.
    9davidfrancis

    Still the most authentic motor racing movie ever made

    One of my Christmas presents last year was a copy of Michael Keyser's book "A French Kiss With Death" about the making of this movie (I had to drop a BIG hint!). Having just finished the book I watched the movie again with a much greater understanding of how it came to be made and the problems which plagued its production.

    It is probably extremely rare for a major feature film to have absolutely no script - not even an outline - and no female lead after two months of shooting, but that was indicative of the sort of movie McQueen was determined to make. The race IS the story, and the story of the race is very well told. McQueen's racing experience, his need to have credibility within the racing world and the large number of real racing drivers and real racing cars involved all add up to an authenticity which exceeded that of Frankenheimer's "Grand Prix" and which is still unequalled. A couple of minor errors in the cars' paint jobs fail to dampen the reality of the on-track action.

    It is true that the off-track storyline is a little weak, and some of the performances are a bit hammy, but McQueen absolutely nailed the "feel" of the Le Mans race. For this reason it is many race fans' favourite movie. It's certainly mine .
    rrichr

    Les 24 Heures

    Fans of motor racing will appreciate this semi-documentary film based on the legendary 24-hour French road race. The film is set during a period in motor sports just prior to its almost total usurpation by corporate culture, in this case 1970, when there was still a tolerable balance between sponsorship and the particular form of nobility that pervaded racing. As a film, LeMans is remarkable for a sense of restraint that is so unwavering that even the incomparable Steve McQueen seems almost normal inside its cool envelope. No movie on the subject has ever equaled its transparency and authenticity. Motor sports have become so sophisticated and big-time that if you cut the average driver with a knife he might bleed only contact cleaner, or Mello Yello. Modern drivers are still courageous and skilled, but something essential has been lost to the hype and the inevitability of high technology. In LeMans, you can almost smell the 100 octane Supershell and the hot Castrol. People look at one another, not at computer displays. They converse directly over the rasp of tightly-wound 12-cylinder engines, not through headsets and mikes. It's a human thing. Overwrought genre siblings like Days of Thunder are ludicrous and crass compared to LeMans' pure, almost ascetic spirit. Tom Cruise's Cole Trickle could not buy a pit pass into its world.

    LeMans is, essentially, about racing. But as a film in the American narrative style, it must have at least some back story and, in this case, that story is romantic. As a safeguard against terminal mushiness, the back story is duplexed into a pair of similar boy/girl situations, thereby keeping each from acquiring excessive density while satisfying the needs of the form. In one, a European driver and his tres charmant, preternaturally understanding wife, work through to a conclusion that it is time for him to walk away while he is still able. The other focuses on the hesitating and mutual attraction between McQueen's American racing star and the widow of an Italian driver who died in the previous year's LeMans race. The night-time accident that claimed her husband also involved McQueen's character; a no-fault event. It was just racing. The lady, who still misses her late husband but is ready to move on, desperately needs someone to talk to, someone who fully understands the nature of her loss and who might possibly, to some discernible degree, justify it. Steve McQueen thrived on characters who required no external validation, from women or men, but who were never arrogant about it. He was the real deal. Few of us have the courage or motivation to be as authentic, or to weather the storms that can result from being so, though I think we should still try. McQueen's racing driver carries this same authenticity and he sutures the widow's aching heart with it during a meal break (LeMans cars were driven around the clock by two-driver teams) while sitting across the table from the lady. She is resisting a strong desire to run and protect herself from her own feelings. But McQueen's character is so self-effacing and contained, yet so completely and unthreateningly there, that she cannot pull away from him. Only part of the dialog is audible. The rest of the scene is viewed from outside the dining area as the camera pulls back through its window. It's a brief scene but excellently acted, adding itself into the film's humanity, a quality that is never lost against the backdrop of hurtling cars and screaming engines.

    The racing sequences are beautifully staged. The final seconds before the race starts, drivers in the cars, fidgeting with shifters, one by one switching ignitions on as the countdown closes against a stethoscopic heartbeat sound, puts you right in the cockpits. At-speed scenes were driven by actual racing luminaries of the time, including McQueen himself, and they go as fast camera mounts will allow. A couple of spectacular crashes take place, both filmed in an interwoven stop-action style that lets you watch every rivet pop as the cars unpeel like grapes. Near the end, entirely plausible circumstance pits McQueen and his main rival, a great German driver in a gripping last-lap duel. (the German driver, played by Sigfried Rauch, also played the wily Wehrmacht Sergeant in Sam Fuller's The Big Red One.) These two characters meet briefly during mutual down-time early in the race and establish the obvious respect and fraternal affection they hold for one another. The camaraderie established here underpins the entire film from that point and also transforms their last-lap duel into pure contest. And the cars. open-class LeMans machines of this period still sourced much of the sinuous design style of the preceding decade and they are gorgeous to the appreciative eye, especially McQueen's ride, the Gulf Porsche 917, possibly the most charismatic car ever raced. Interestingly, one of the cars used in the film (a Lola as I recall) was recently discovered languishing in a German barn, sans motor and transmission. Both had been loaned by Porsche for the production.

    Fire up LeMans on a system with decent audio capabilities, EQ a bit toward the bass to compensate for accurate but slightly raspy 70's recording technology, and crank it up. You may not feel the burn, but you'll definitely hear it. Only the somewhat too Rat-Pack score detracts from this super little film and that only slightly. Otherwise it's as time-proof as one of those molded spoons you get in Chinese restaurants. Any true fan of the sport, certainly as it was in the film's time-set, should collect it. If you appreciate the compact, character-driven, semi-documentary style, try Downhill Racer. Released the year before LeMans, it's about skiing. Robert Redford's Kiss-My-Ass ski god isn't remotely noble but is entirely believable, as are Gene Hackman and Dabney Coleman as his coaches. It was one of the late John Simon's favorite films, and for good reason.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Hal Hamilton exclaimed, "We had the star, we had the drivers. We had an incredible array of technical support, we had everything. Except a script", while Haig Alltounian, Steve McQueen's chief mechanic, recalled "We were winging it".
    • Goofs
      During a night pit stop, you can see the breaths of McQueen and his manager, even though the race takes place in June. This may have been due to the movie shoot running well past schedule, ending in November.
    • Quotes

      Lisa Belgetti: When people risk their lives, shouldn't it be for something very important?

      Michael Delaney: Well, it better be.

      Lisa Belgetti: But what is so important about driving faster than anyone else?

      Michael Delaney: Lotta people go through life doing things badly. Racing's important to men who do it well. When you're racing, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just waiting.

    • Connections
      Edited into Steve McQueen: The Man & Le Mans (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      The Shooting Gallery
      Music by Michel Legrand

      Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman

      Performed by Gene Morford

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Le Mans?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 24, 1971 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Italian
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Las 24 horas de Le Mans
    • Filming locations
      • Le Mans, Sarthe, France
    • Production companies
      • Cinema Center Films
      • Solar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $7,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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