Starring Matt Damon and Christian Bale, the
movie opening on Friday in U.S. theaters is based on the
little-known true story of the American and British car
designers and engineers who built the Ford GT40 to take on
Italy's fabled Ferrari team at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans
race.
"It doesn't matter if you don't know anything about racing,"
said Bale.
"That is what we really had to struggle with. ... You can get a
film where you can get absolutely devoted to beautiful shots of
bumpers and engines and all that. But this essentially comes
down to a story about this incredible friendship but told at,
you know, 230 miles an hour," he said.
Bale dropped some 70 pounds (31 kg) from his last screen outing
as former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney in "Vice" to play
eccentric British driver Ken Miles. Damon plays American racer
and designer Carroll Shelby who was hired by a curmudgeonly
Henry Ford II (Tracy Letts) to build a car with Miles that would
defeat Ferrari at Le Mans.
Different versions of the script have been around for about 10
years, but Damon said the one that made it to screen "kind of
boiled it down to Miles and to Shelby."
"I'm not into motor racing at all," Damon admitted. "I was so
moved by the script that I wanted to spend six months making it,
so hopefully the audience will feel the same."
Nevertheless, the race scenes have won plaudits. Autoweek called
the film "your new best racing movie ever," while Car and Driver
said the racing was "suspenseful" and the cars "look fantastic."
Rather than using computer-generated imagery, director James
Mangold used real cars and a team of experienced racing drivers
for stunts that put the audience inside the cramped, noisy
cockpits. Bale also completed a high-performance driving course.
"The cars and the car action on the road is 100 percent cars. We
shot cars with men in them," said Mangold.
"What we tried to do in constructing the races is take you into
the cars and into the pits ... meaning getting you involved in
the drama of what is going on inside those little cabs hurtling
at 200 miles an hour," he said.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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