This movie was made over 18 months at over a dozen East coast race tracks events and show a great variety of racing cars, from extremely expensive to very affordable (less than 10 thousand dollars) and is arranged in chapters that cover the race tracks, getting into racing, growing up in racing families, and the overall story line is that the movie maker went along with the Zapata racing team to these various tracks.
this Bugatti was imported into the US when new, and stayed int he US racing ever since. Not restored, just raced. 1930 something type 37
a lot of humor is covered by the movie, the various off track moments,
the three wheel around corners traction ability of several cars
Even on two wheels around a corner... without lifting off the accelerator.. wow.
the feeling of being on the track, the thrill of racing, and the real emotional reaction to the cars getting in the way of the car that the camera in mounted to... "Get out of the WAY!"
I yelled at my screen.
I did.
Slow drivers upset me.
Great rare expensive cars
even the ones that are racing against Pintos! Dan Gurney drove this Denzel in 1959
these are Denzel 1500 International Sports cars
I was surprised to learn that some of the race track events include the towns they are at with parades and race cars driving through or stopping in for lunch so the locals can check out the cars. Good free advertising to get people interested in the racing and buy tickets to the tracks. You'll add Elkhart Lake, Road America, Sebring and Watkins Glen to your life list / Bucket list if you are anything like me, once you've seen this movie. Yeah, you've been warned you'll like it that much
the above nun is "Partial to Porches" when interviewed on camera
from the chapter on growing up in a racing family
from the chapter on racing as a lifetime hobby
damn, Corvairs can look really cool in full racing battle gear
a bit of a look around in the pits shows innovation like the above engine hoist
and the only Shelby signature I've seen on a hood (wow cool)
and there is a chapter on how to get into racing cars, advice on buying cars like where.. . Bring a Trailer and Wirewheels dot coms, Vintage Motorsports and Grassroots Motorsports magazines, and looking around at the racetrack in the paddocks and clubhouse
the movie is made by Ben Cissell http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/
with the generous time commitment and racing of the Zapata racing team http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/pages/zapata-racing
the tracks that they went to
the racing sanctioning bodies that operate the race tracks
the wonderful sponsors that helped the filmmakers get this movie produced, filmed, etc!
the hobby of vintage racing, focuses on the Zapata Racing Team. Director Ben Cissell follows the team to 17 events in the span of 18 months, capturing the excitement and sense of community that has hooked thousands of drivers and spectators to this riveting sport. Rather than put their race cars behind museum velvet ropes, these car owners have opted to race their historic cars the way they were designed and purposed...at over 100 mph around world- famous race tracks. Vintage racing is a unique and captivating sport, one that gets in your blood and carries a life-long love.
http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/pages/the-film
In review, the music is mellow, well editted, and perfectly timed to the action, the movie editing is great, the action is damn good, and plenty of it with a good variety of the trackside culture like parts helping, a bit of wrenching, some camaraderie, and after watching the movie lock up your checkbook... the desire to get a Formula V is overwhelming. The need to go to your local track and get involved is huge. Damn good movie.
this Bugatti was imported into the US when new, and stayed int he US racing ever since. Not restored, just raced. 1930 something type 37
a lot of humor is covered by the movie, the various off track moments,
the three wheel around corners traction ability of several cars
Even on two wheels around a corner... without lifting off the accelerator.. wow.
the feeling of being on the track, the thrill of racing, and the real emotional reaction to the cars getting in the way of the car that the camera in mounted to... "Get out of the WAY!"
I yelled at my screen.
I did.
Slow drivers upset me.
Great rare expensive cars
even the ones that are racing against Pintos! Dan Gurney drove this Denzel in 1959
these are Denzel 1500 International Sports cars
I was surprised to learn that some of the race track events include the towns they are at with parades and race cars driving through or stopping in for lunch so the locals can check out the cars. Good free advertising to get people interested in the racing and buy tickets to the tracks. You'll add Elkhart Lake, Road America, Sebring and Watkins Glen to your life list / Bucket list if you are anything like me, once you've seen this movie. Yeah, you've been warned you'll like it that much
the above nun is "Partial to Porches" when interviewed on camera
from the chapter on growing up in a racing family
from the chapter on racing as a lifetime hobby
damn, Corvairs can look really cool in full racing battle gear
a bit of a look around in the pits shows innovation like the above engine hoist
and the only Shelby signature I've seen on a hood (wow cool)
and there is a chapter on how to get into racing cars, advice on buying cars like where.. . Bring a Trailer and Wirewheels dot coms, Vintage Motorsports and Grassroots Motorsports magazines, and looking around at the racetrack in the paddocks and clubhouse
the movie is made by Ben Cissell http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/
with the generous time commitment and racing of the Zapata racing team http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/pages/zapata-racing
the tracks that they went to
the racing sanctioning bodies that operate the race tracks
the wonderful sponsors that helped the filmmakers get this movie produced, filmed, etc!
the hobby of vintage racing, focuses on the Zapata Racing Team. Director Ben Cissell follows the team to 17 events in the span of 18 months, capturing the excitement and sense of community that has hooked thousands of drivers and spectators to this riveting sport. Rather than put their race cars behind museum velvet ropes, these car owners have opted to race their historic cars the way they were designed and purposed...at over 100 mph around world- famous race tracks. Vintage racing is a unique and captivating sport, one that gets in your blood and carries a life-long love.
http://www.vintageracingtoday.com/pages/the-film
In review, the music is mellow, well editted, and perfectly timed to the action, the movie editing is great, the action is damn good, and plenty of it with a good variety of the trackside culture like parts helping, a bit of wrenching, some camaraderie, and after watching the movie lock up your checkbook... the desire to get a Formula V is overwhelming. The need to go to your local track and get involved is huge. Damn good movie.
No comments:
Post a Comment