Brad Pitt Takes the Wheel in High-Octane, High-Stakes F1: The Movie

From the team behind Top Gun: Maverick comes F1: The Movie, a turbo-charged tale of redemption and grit starring Brad Pitt as a washed-up racer with one last shot to win.

Damson Idris and Brad Pitt co-star in F1: The Movie

Itโ€™s a Tom Cruise kinda movie, but it stars Brad Pitt. Heโ€™s the protagonist in this tale about an ageing, washed-up race car driver who everyoneโ€™s counted out. Except for a dear friend and the driver, himself: โ€œIf the last thing I ever do is drive that car, I will take that life man, 1000 times.โ€

So, what are the Cruise/Pitt common denominators in this production? Director/screenwriter Joseph Kosinski also helmed Top Gun: Maverick, a $1.49B juggernaut, which broke a global total box office record for Cruise. That filmโ€™s producer Jerry Bruckheimer and screenwriter Ehren Kruger are onboard too. Together they evolve the TG:M formula: Add a worldwide movie star whoโ€™s never headlined a film that made that much bank. Toss in a multicultural cast, underdog challenges, lots of action and stir. Then create a big-budget extravaganza that should become a big-box-office summer movie. 

Brad Pitt in F1: The Movie

After an accident in the 1990s, former Formula 1 racer Sonny Hayes (Pitt) keeps to himself. Still driving and winning for various NASCAR teams, but his personal life is under the radar. The loner lives in a van and goes from place to place, like a nomad. Things change the day his old buddy Ruben Cervantes (Javier Bardem) looks him up and begs him to join his floundering Formula 1 racing team, APX. Begs is an understatement. 

The day the wrinkled and weathered Sonny shows up for onboarding the rest of Rubenโ€™s team is in shock. Especially his young, star driver Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris, Farming). Sparks fly between the cocky twentysomething and the older man. Other kinds of sparks fly between the teamโ€™s tech expert Kate (Kerry Condon, Better Call Saul) and Sonny. Can they all just box up their feelings and win a damn race?

Damson Idris in F1 The Movieย ย 

It’s rare that a filmโ€™s score and playlist rivals the lead actors for the spotlight. But whether it was musical composer Hans Zimmer (Dune: Part One) or someone else, whoever wrangled the hits for this movie, was feeling it. Opening scenes get the party started with Led Zeppelinโ€™s โ€œWhole Lotta Love.โ€ Lead vocalist Robert Plant screeches his heart out as Jimmy Page shreds his lead guitar: โ€œYou need coolinโ€™, Baby, Iโ€™m not foolinโ€™. Iโ€™m gonna send ya, Back to schoolin.โ€ In due time blues guitarist extraordinaire Gary Clark Jr. warns those who doubt him on the song โ€œBright Lights:โ€ โ€œYou gonna know my name by the end of the night.โ€ And if there are any questions left, Chris Stapleton setโ€™s everyone straight as he bellows over a groove-setting rhythm guitar and a whiny lead guitar: โ€œI bet you thought youโ€™d seen the last of me. I canโ€™t change the way I am, you see. I think itโ€™s my responsibility, To tell you Iโ€™m just as bad as I used to be!โ€

Those songs, with their lyrics, capsulize Sonnyโ€™s journey and attitude. There he is, in his 60s, trying to convince a crew half his age that he can lead them to a checkered flag win. He schools โ€˜em, demands respect and showโ€™s them how badass he can be. That spirit propels the movie forward as the rest of the characters follow him, albeit cautiously, wherever he leads them. 

Sara Niles and Damson Idris costar in F1: The Movie

Kosinski uses Krugerโ€™s screenplay to guide him as he creates a story that is compelling for 2h 35m, straight (editors Stephen Mirrione and Patrick J Smith). Scenes either have action, drama, laughter, flirtations, anger or fear. Rivalries are exacerbated, romance kindled, and teammates encouraged. Some sequences will surprise audiences as they expose the kind of foxy strategy race car drivers use to win, when winning may look like it will never happen. The machinations on view are as cunning and cutthroat as those of a pool shark. 

Pitt works the Cruise-type persona like a champ. Smart mouthed, mature in areas where others arenโ€™t. He flirts well and uses his megawatt smile to tame the masses. Idris makes a great counterpart, giving lip service as well as he gets it. With smirks that warrant responses, Joshua challenges: โ€œWhen was the last time you won a race!?โ€  Sonny, gives it back: โ€œSame as you!โ€ Both actors had experiences driving in cars reaching nearly 200mph, and it shows in their performances. Sara Niles (Ted Lasso) as Joshuaโ€™s mom has the right amount of strength and concern. Hard to believe that Kerry Condon is the same actor who played the crime abetting girlfriend in Better Call Saul. She exhibits a nice blend of brainy nerd and woman in need of love. 

Damson Idris and Brad Pitt costar in F1: The Movie

The visuals help this $200M movie become all the action and verve a summer audience could want. Claudio Mirandaโ€™s (Life of Pi) clear and colorful cinematography captures the driverโ€™s point of view, overhead big picture shots and the intimacy of ice baths too. Does the footage distinguish itself greatly from other recent car race films like Gran Turismo (2023), Ferrari (2023) or Ford v Ferrari (2019)? Not much. Except it might be slicker and feel bigger. Credit the dazzling production design by Ben Munro and Mark Tildesley and the contemporary costumes by Julian Day (Bohemian Rhapsody) for that assist.

F1: The movie has the formula for success. Itโ€™s got the fuel. Cruise must be smiling as Pitt takes the checkered flag. 

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69ffwl-8pCU

Dwight Brown is a film critic for NNPA Newswire and travel writer. Read more movie reviews by Brown at DwightBrownInk.com.

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