Hannah Elliott here, and I’ve got a disclaimer for you: This is not a movie review. I’m not here to critique the dialogue, the character development or the perfunctory love connection in F1: The Movie, in theaters on June 27. I didn’t go in looking for chitchat. I wanted racing. That’s what I got. Starring Brad Pitt, Damson Idris and Javier Bardem, the film shines brightest when it’s speaking to those who don’t think they’re into motor sports while winking at those of us who do. (Our film critic said it made her feel like a Formula One fan.) It uses real F1 announcers to explain technicalities such as race strategy and tire management to the masses while satiating insiders with cameos of the sport’s stars, including Stefano Domenicali, Toto Wolff, Fred Vasseur, Zak Brown, Max Verstappen, Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton, among many others. Die-hards will notice that even Porsche factory driver Patrick Long has a cameo during the opening scenes at the 24 Hours of Daytona. Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce and Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes face off in F1. Source: Warner Bros. Pictures It felt incredible to see a film reflecting the sport’s growing diversity rather than one that’s a painful reminder of what a monoculture it was back in the day. F1 nails the chaos and glory of the scenes on the grid; the look and dynamics of the pit crews feel accurate, even if they left me wanting a deeper exploration of some of those characters. Tiny cameras, courtesy of Apple Original Films, and CGI effects make for thrilling first-person vantage-point driving shots that have totally recalibrated what I now expect from any car-related film. But I was most impressed with how producer Jerry Bruckheimer got the key players in the sport to work together. These drivers aren’t exactly known for their, uh, willingness to cooperate. “F1 drivers are the most selfish,” former F1 world champion Jenson Button told me last weekend at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. I’d asked him about the differences among the drivers in Nascar, IndyCar, endurance racing and Formula One. Wolff, team principal and chief executive officer of the Mercedes-AMG Petronas team, took it a few steps further. “These guys are traumatized little 6-year-olds,” he said when we spoke this week on the Hot Pursuit! podcast. “They’ve been put in a go-kart as basically toddlers. That’s scary. You’re being told to drive fast—these karts go a hundred kilometers an hour. Maybe it’s raining. You have accidents, and you need to rely on yourself. You find out that you are alone, and you need to survive. And only the best do.” Getting every team on board and moving in the same direction was the biggest obstacle to getting the film made, according to Bruckheimer. It didn’t help that planning unfolded in 2022, at the height of the rivalry between Mercedes-AMG Petronas and Oracle Red Bull Racing. “They were concerned about being a villain in the film,” he says. “Who was gonna be the villain? Since Lewis was at Mercedes at the time and Mercedes built our car, they expected that Red Bull was for sure gonna be the villain.” It took a year just to make everyone comfortable with the idea of sharing screen time, Bruckheimer says. But he stayed patient, repeatedly discussing specifics with Red Bull team principal Christian Horner, Verstappen and the other teams to assure them the film was about something deeper. He flew to London to meet with Domenicali, the CEO of Formula One Group. He leaned on Hamilton to make key introductions; Pitt and director Joseph Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick) took additional meetings to help assuage concerns. Apple Original Films’ F1: The Movie gives a thrilling depiction of the grit and glory of high-speed racing. Source: Warner Bros. Pictures “We said, ‘You’ve got to believe us and trust us.’ Our movie is about how two people can’t get along and figure out a way to actually work together and win. It’s about teamwork,” says Bruckheimer. “If two people who really don’t like each other figure out a way to work together and create a team to win, that message could resonate everywhere.” After he got the green light, Bruckheimer used a multipronged strategy for coordinating the outsize personalities and egos of F1. It started with staying direct about the process. He showed drivers and other stakeholders early clips, teasers and trailers, gaining feedback for the final result. “Our policy was to be straightforward and honest and show them exactly how we’re gonna do it and what we’re gonna do, and tell them, ‘Here’s the story, and here’s how we’re gonna make it,’” he says. Authenticity was a significant concern. So Kosinski created short videos demonstrating how he’d developed scenes and planes for Top Gun: Maverick, especially how they re-created the Sukhoi Su-57 Russian jet by skinning an F-18 fighter to match the aerodynamics of the other plane. The idea was to show proof of concept for a film about race cars. “We said, ‘We’re gonna embed ourselves into your world and make the most authentic movie possible about it.’ They were our true partners in this, otherwise we wouldn’t have got the access that we got,” Bruckheimer says. The crew shot scenes on real F1 tracks in Abu Dhabi, Belgium, England, Italy, Japan, Las Vegas, Mexico City and the Netherlands; they earned access to garages, pit lanes and inner sanctums. The fictional race team in the movie, APXGP, is based at the real-life McLaren Automotive headquarters in Woking, England. If you’ve been there, you’ll instantly identify the long driveway that wraps around the pond in front. A few drivers have nitpicked details. I, too, quibbled with how the film portrays them deliberately running into one another in multiple races; that doesn’t happen in real-life F1 without serious consequences. Some even questioned Verstappen’s missing the official premiere in New York City and skipping a screening before the Monaco Grand Prix, but I’m not reading into it. He’s being a good dad: His wife, Kelly Piquet, just gave birth to their first child. Ultimately, Bruckheimer’s efforts effect a symphony of sound and color, with the most thrilling depictions of track time this motor sports fan has yet seen. It made me excited about the future of F1 here in the US—and it’s only going to get better. Follow Hannah via her reporting and podcast. |