Grand Prix: The Killer Years
Grand Prix: The Killer Years
| 17 March 2011 (USA)
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In the 60s and early 70s it was common for Grand Prix drivers to be killed while racing, often televised for millions to see. Mechanical failure, lethal track design, fire and incompetence snuffed out dozens of young drivers. They had become almost expendable as eager young wannabes queued up at the top teams' gates waiting to take their place. This is the story of when Grand Prix was out of control. Featuring many famous drivers including three times world champion Sir Jackie Stewart OBE, twice world champion Emerson Fittipaldi and John Surtees OBE, this exciting but shocking film explores how Grand Prix drivers grew sick of their closest friends being killed and finally took control of their destiny.

Reviews
Alicia

I love this movie so much

AniInterview

Sorry, this movie sucks

Winifred

The movie is made so realistic it has a lot of that WoW feeling at the right moments and never tooo over the top. the suspense is done so well and the emotion is felt. Very well put together with the music and all.

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Walter Sloane

Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.

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Prismark10

As a kid growing up, Grand Prix racing was regarded as the most dangerous sports in the world. Of course during the era I watched the sport on television fatalities were thankfully rare, yet a few years earlier motor racing was lethal and this documentary demonstrates it.The punch in the gut is that some of the revered team owners come across as callous, designing cars on the edge with no real testing and the drivers as guinea pigs. When it comes to safety, they turned a blind eye and deaf ears.Some ex world champions from the 1960s and 1970s are on hand to give their views of Grand Prix safety. Others are shown in archive footage or it is left to their widows. The fatal crashes and fires make this difficult viewing.The tracks were dangerous but track owners did not want to spend money on safety. There was little or no first aid and safety equipment. Team owners were unconcerned. The drivers knew that one shunt and that could be the end of them and it was left to them to make the initial moves to improve their own safety as it were their colleagues that were dying throughout the season.An interesting and informative documentary and thank goodness that Formula 1 has moved on from those years.

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James Turnbull

I have Senna on DVD and watched this documentary the other night and was quite blown away. Even if you have no interest in motor sport it is an incredible social statement about power, glory, greed and perhaps absolute egotism. Colin Chapman, especially, does not come out of this looking good.For those of us old enough, we know what is coming, but the personal insights into those who will die is quite heartbreaking.I have driven parts of Spa, the Nurburgring and Goodwood (where Moss crashed and Bruce McClaren died) and they are strange places. No birds sing, there is a feeling of dread in the air. If you watch this doco, and Senna, you get the feeling that Senna and Clark knew they were about to die.At the moment it can be downloaded at Grand Prix-The Killer Years-Video Dailymotion.

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CineNutty

John Frankenheimer directed a film called "Grand Prix" which did much to capture that era as it was released in 1966. This film is the real life documentary which shows just how dangerous it was to get into a Formula One vehicle in the early 1960s through 1970s. Packed with interviews from the surviving drivers who lived through those years, including Jackie Stewart, OBE, who pushed for change and eventually got it. The owners were less than enthusiastic about making any changes but resisted change. Spa, one of the most dangerous venues, was actually "boycotted" by the drivers before a race to get the message to the track owners that they had to make the track safer. "With the input of former F1 world champions Jackie Stewart and Emerson Fittipaldi, among others, the programme revisits a 12-year period from 1961 when 57 drivers died, among them F1 champions such as Jim Clark, who was killed in 1968, and Jochen Rindt, who died in 1970. . . . With Stewart recalling there was 'only a one in three chance I was going to live', drivers developed a 'fighter pilot mentality' and it wasn't until they threatened to strike that proper safety measures were introduced."One particularly poignant moment was the interview of Jochen Rindt's widow. He was the only F-1 driver in history to be awarded the Championship posthumously. This documentary is NOT for the squeamish. Many accidents and their aftermaths have been captured on film. It is a story which had to be told and which makes the Frankenheimer film all the more authentic.

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gilmot100

An amazing BBC doc. One of those documentaries that had me thinking about it days after Id seen it. Truly shocking how F1 drivers were expected to die and how many died in the 60's. Very sad to hear how Chapman of Lotus was so blasé in his experiments and how the races would just continue. Not sure how you'd get your hands on the documentary, but it was on TV last night and its on you tube. After watching Senna I became interested in F1 and this has made me even more interested. The interviews with Jackie Stewart are great and he comes across as a true British hero in the face of greedy and selfish F1 corporation Watch it asap!

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