"Grand Prix 1966", "Rush", "Le Mans '66". There exists in the history of that minor art which is cinema at least one film in which don't you throw manure on the Ferrari? "
Grand Prix (1966), Le Mans (1971), No Man's Land (1987), Cars 2 (2011), Rush (2013) and Ford v Ferrari (2019) they all throw shit at Ferrari. I don't know why Hollywood really hates Ferrari
My guess would be is that Ferrari has been King-Of-The-Hill long before the F1 format was established in 1950. Closing in on a century mark of remaining competive in professional racing is one thing, performing that in GP and WEC racing is quite another. Hence as it's been expressed time and again, everyone tries to knock down The King-Of-The-Hill. Another factor contributing to Ferrari as "The Villian" in cinema is that Enzo himself was notorious for his stubbornness with his engineers and dubious regards towards his drivers. Enzo's politics nearly cost him his existence in F1 racing during the early 1960s when his constant disruptions resulted in _"The Great Walkout."_ I admire Ferrari's longevity of remaining in the sport, but I'm no fan of the man nor the team. So I'm guilty as charged of being one of his critics. Though I do slightly, ever so slightly cut Enzo himself some slack because he was unnecessarily distracted by two goddamned women who inevitably drove him barking mad - his wife & mother.
Something I love about older racing movies is the lack of music during the racing sequences. A lot of modern racing movies put music over it, and often times it detracts from the experience. A notable exception is Ford v Ferrari, which I think uses it's music very well
James Garner did all his own driving, just like later on Rockford files. He commented at the time they made the film that the helicopter got so close to his car at times, the cameraman was hitting garners helmet with his boot.
The fact that a James Garner did his own driving also pissed off his then next door neighbour - Steve McQueen - who thought that he should've been in this movie.
I first saw this in about 1969 when I was a wee lad and other than being wowed by the extraordinary realism and rawness of the footage, was the look of anguish on Yves Montand's face when he realizes he had hit those two young lads.
In my opinion still the best motorsport film ever made, there have been some other great ones ( Le Mans, Rush, Ford V Ferrari ) but for me, nothing has topped this 👍🏻
Watch this at 7:30. In my opinion the scariest ever overtake in F1 history! Blinding spray, speeds of almost 300kph, extremely narrow road, no barriers, a ditch both sides and... a fearless Surtees in the beautiful and lovely sounding Ferrari 312.
Watch it at 6:00 and you get to see Phil Hill in a camera-weighted GT40 dodging cars and haybales behind Dan Gurney, then flying past him. That amazing pass from the helicopter shot was John Surtees passing Richie Ginther.
@jasonmoyer Phil Hill wasn't driving a GT40 it was McLaren m2 that organizers allowed to follow the grid for the first lap of the race. When he got back to pits everybody ask happen to grid because he was running 8th. Half the grid had crash.
Of the six races in the film this was one of my favorites. The spectacular photography, the shifting of gears, you name it was awesome. Still makes me melt 56 years later. Real life drivers had a lot of guts and courage.
a lots of things should not have been axed but they were... it seems to me F1 is heading down into a commercial vision and the only thing they seem to care about is how to put more money in the pocket of the shareholders, it cant end well.
@@ShitHappensRLY Interesting. I know there are photos floating around of a GT40 with the bodywork removed and cameras mounted everywhere, but they may have only used that for the staged F3 races.
@@RobertGShipley It was a M3A (chassis M3A/3, to be exact). Hill entered the race on his own to get the footage, you can see the camera car on the back of the grid at the start. The producers must be lucky that Hill didn't crash on the first lap and got the footage intact seeing that half of the field crashed out due to the unexpected rainstorm there...
Ironic really, Yves Mon tand wearing John Surtees helmet who actually won the rain affected 1966 Belgian GP, in a Ferrari. Only 6 cars completed the first lap. The rest crashed because of the rain.
I remember watching an interview of Jackie Stewart talking about the old spa circuit, he said someone had crashed and the body was thrown from the car and was laying on the circuit, and he had to drive passed the dead body on every lap
That must have happened to JS outside of F1 racing, or before he entered F1 (F3?... WSC?...), as I don't recall him mentioning that with regards to his tenure of GP racing. I know Jim Clark experienced that when Chris Bristow's body was momentarily laying on the road during the 1960 Belgian GP.
@@Panzer_Runner They did, but it took time for anyone to get there since Spa was a relatively long circuit in those days. Stewart's dreadful accident in this race was immediately attended to by Graham Hill and a local farmer since there were no track marshals nearby to extract him from the car.
Some great helicopter shots of John Surtees in # 6 Ferrari. His last race for Ferrari before he really got pissed off at Eugenio Dragoni and Ferrari politics and quit. There was a good chance Surtee would have been world champion in 1966 if he had stuck around as Ferrari probably had the best car and engine for the start of the 3-litre formula. Also great shots of the original Spa circuit - what a monster it was.
Ok it's a movie, but the circumstances are real. Racing cars that at 300 km / h skim over trees, houses, electric poles and milesyones, with people on the track, were all real things. Maximum security.
Can’t blame a circuit for its own issues. Old Spa was in every way a fast circuit but it was one run on a public road during a time where street circuits weren’t safe. If a circuit like this were run now it would very much be as safe as any street circuit by the standards of our day, just much longer.
Monza has a greater haunting history; two mass casualties events that included spectators - not to mention the losses of (Richard) Seaman, both father & son of the Ascari family, von Trips, Rindt and Peterson.
Ahhhhh! The good ol' days when you could stand right on the track and get a good close look at the race! I'm surprised that there weren't cattle grazing on the track and a manure spreader making laps. Red flagging the race because of fatality or two is for sissies! Things have come a long way over the years...
The editing and cinematography are amazing. It’s like a musical composition. Unfortunately for this movie, it wasn’t all racing. The melodrama was really awful.
That’s called honor. Back then they died every week, so they didn’t want to put themselves, their fellow racer nor fans into a compromising position. My opinion it’s the most beautiful thing that can happen in those conditions.
Dirty driving wasn't common then, as it was since 1988 - when safety designs and components of the cars that were made to increase surviving an accident. Guisippe Farina and Innes Ireland are about the only boneheads who got stupid behind the wheel in the 1950s & 1960s.
Jean Luis Trintignan ( Sarpi) su Ferrari modello 312, 3000 CC 12 Cilindri, 3 Valvole per cilindro 310 CV con scarichi laterali , un auto progettata dal grande Ing. Mauro Forghieri scomparso qualche mese fa' purtroppo.
One death or more was expected at every Grand Prix. The cars were death Traps and some poor devils burned to death in the car. The sport has a lot to thank Sir Jackie Stewart for, for making it much safer.
@@allanm6246 Oddly enough it was this race that inspired Stewart on his crusade for safety in the sport. Quite understandably considering how close he could have been dead in this event. In another odd twist of the sport was that Stewart was somewhat criticized for his pursuit of safety by Jacky Ickx. Yet in 1969 at Le Mans, Ickx staged a safety protest of his own when he objected to the traditional starting procedures of drivers running across the circuit to their cars - when he simply walked across the track while the other competitors ran to their cars (there's footage of this btw). Amazingly enough, Ickx (and Jackie Oliver) won that event by a scant 100yds in front of the 2nd place Porsche of Hans Herman/Gerrard Larrousse.
@@allanm6246 As much as the sport is indebted towards Sir Jackie Stewart towards the deeds that improved safety, he is the most cursed driver to see all his fellow drivers, teammates either getting injured seriously or death in worse situations. Imagine the agony he has to go through all these years with so much haunting memories especially his most loved teammate François Cevert's tragic death!!
@@Panzer_Runner R.I.P. Antonio Sabato Sr. (0:05) who played italian F1 Ferrari driver Nino Barlini in John Frankenheimer´s "Grand Prix" (1966) Born on April 2, 1943, Sabato had starring roles in Spaghetti Western Films "One Dollar Too Many" and "Due Volte Guida" among many others. He died on January 10, 2021 of complications from Covid-19 at a hospice in Hemet, California. God bless him! Greetings from Venezuela and thaks for posting 1966 Belgian Grand Prix film sequences.
@@Panzer_Runner Ok it's a movie, but the circumstances are real. Racing cars that at 300 km / h skim over trees, houses, electric poles and milesyones, with people on the track, were all real things. Maximum security.
"Grand Prix 1966", "Rush", "Le Mans '66". There exists in the history of that minor art which is cinema at least one film
in which don't you throw manure on the Ferrari? "
And Le Mans 1971
Grand Prix (1966), Le Mans (1971), No Man's Land (1987), Cars 2 (2011), Rush (2013) and Ford v Ferrari (2019) they all throw shit at Ferrari. I don't know why Hollywood really hates Ferrari
And "The Thomas Crown Affair".
My guess would be is that Ferrari has been King-Of-The-Hill long before the F1 format was established in 1950.
Closing in on a century mark of remaining competive in professional racing is one thing, performing that in GP and WEC racing is quite another. Hence as it's been expressed time and again, everyone tries to knock down The King-Of-The-Hill.
Another factor contributing to Ferrari as "The Villian" in cinema is that Enzo himself was notorious for his stubbornness with his engineers and dubious regards towards his drivers. Enzo's politics nearly cost him his existence in F1 racing during the early 1960s when his constant disruptions resulted in _"The Great Walkout."_
I admire Ferrari's longevity of remaining in the sport, but I'm no fan of the man nor the team. So I'm guilty as charged of being one of his critics.
Though I do slightly, ever so slightly cut Enzo himself some slack because he was unnecessarily distracted by two goddamned women who inevitably drove him barking mad - his wife & mother.
After last week's Monaco GP, I find throwing manure at Ferrari justified. Lol
Something I love about older racing movies is the lack of music during the racing sequences. A lot of modern racing movies put music over it, and often times it detracts from the experience. A notable exception is Ford v Ferrari, which I think uses it's music very well
Stunning Camera work for 1966.
James Garner did all his own driving, just like later on Rockford files. He commented at the time they made the film that the helicopter got so close to his car at times, the cameraman was hitting garners helmet with his boot.
The fact that a James Garner did his own driving also pissed off his then next door neighbour - Steve McQueen - who thought that he should've been in this movie.
@@bradwilliams1691
Yeah, heh heh, there's a YT video of Garner's reference of that during an interview.
This is just pure ASMR as a car guy. Glorious music to my ears.
The old circuit. Fantastic.🤘🏻
I first saw this in about 1969 when I was a wee lad and other than being wowed by the extraordinary realism and rawness of the footage, was the look of anguish on Yves Montand's face when he realizes he had hit those two young lads.
"If the Ferrari keeps going it'll be his 3rd win of the season"
Some things never change, huh
Agree, but Ferrari since Todt left has been laughable
The last time Ferrari won a championship was Raikkonen in 2007
That's my point, they've been unreliable since day one. If they ever won it was the driver, never the car.
@@mrfashionguy12002 and 2004 would CERTAINLY beg to differ lol
@@mrfashionguy1The driver? Knowing Ferrari - it was most likely cheating.
In my opinion still the best motorsport film ever made, there have been some other great ones ( Le Mans, Rush, Ford V Ferrari ) but for me, nothing has topped this 👍🏻
💯
When you realise that these cars topped out around 180mph and a current F1 car is only about 40mph faster flat out.
Watch this at 7:30. In my opinion the scariest ever overtake in F1 history! Blinding spray, speeds of almost 300kph, extremely narrow road, no barriers, a ditch both sides and... a fearless Surtees in the beautiful and lovely sounding Ferrari 312.
Watch it at 6:00 and you get to see Phil Hill in a camera-weighted GT40 dodging cars and haybales behind Dan Gurney, then flying past him.
That amazing pass from the helicopter shot was John Surtees passing Richie Ginther.
Looks more like a practice session and the other car just lifted off...
And no seatbelts (the thought was that getting ejected would be more survivable). Glad that safety standards improved.
@jasonmoyer Phil Hill wasn't driving a GT40 it was McLaren m2 that organizers allowed to follow the grid for the first lap of the race. When he got back to pits everybody ask happen to grid because he was running 8th. Half the grid had crash.
@@uap24absolutely agree, but with the ‘60s era cars I think the drivers wanted out before the engine crushed them!😢
Of the six races in the film this was one of my favorites. The spectacular photography, the shifting of gears, you name it was awesome. Still makes me melt 56 years later. Real life drivers had a lot of guts and courage.
This is heaven for all motorsport fans. Spa Francorchamps should never be axed from F1 calendar.
a lots of things should not have been axed but they were... it seems to me F1 is heading down into a commercial vision and the only thing they seem to care about is how to put more money in the pocket of the shareholders, it cant end well.
Spa has been ruined, just a kart track now.
@@ericacarradus9152you do know that the drivers are the ones that wanted this track changed right?
@@ericacarradus9152Get with the times old man, it was dangerous, cool track but dangerous
@@deadripppVery true, they are only pleasing the corporates and the celebrities, not the fan
Loved it,think I'll go find the movie,thanks for that awesome post!. The balls this took..
This was a turbo-tastic movie! Really loved it!
I pull this out every couple of years -- saw, the original in "big screen" (at the time) and have seen it many times since... thanks for posting!
The footage from Phil Hill's GT40 camera car of the first lap craziness is some of the most amazing shit I've ever seen.
iirc it was mclaren with gt40 engine, i guess releasing actual gt40 into actual race could be to dangerous even by 60s standarts
@@ShitHappensRLY Interesting. I know there are photos floating around of a GT40 with the bodywork removed and cameras mounted everywhere, but they may have only used that for the staged F3 races.
I think the "camera car" was actually a McLaren M2B
I’m pretty sure the GT40 was used to film Le Mans in 1971 and not this. Would make sense seeing as the GT40 would be brand new in 1966
@@RobertGShipley It was a M3A (chassis M3A/3, to be exact). Hill entered the race on his own to get the footage, you can see the camera car on the back of the grid at the start. The producers must be lucky that Hill didn't crash on the first lap and got the footage intact seeing that half of the field crashed out due to the unexpected rainstorm there...
Ironic really, Yves Mon tand wearing John Surtees helmet who actually won the rain affected 1966 Belgian GP, in a Ferrari. Only 6 cars completed the first lap. The rest crashed because of the rain.
Back when racing was dangerous, and sex was safe.
A Masterpiece 🥰
Man, those things were rolling coffins.
I remember watching an interview of Jackie Stewart talking about the old spa circuit, he said someone had crashed and the body was thrown from the car and was laying on the circuit, and he had to drive passed the dead body on every lap
Why didn't anyone attend the dead body?
That must have happened to JS outside of F1 racing, or before he entered F1 (F3?... WSC?...), as I don't recall him mentioning that with regards to his tenure of GP racing.
I know Jim Clark experienced that when Chris Bristow's body was momentarily laying on the road during the 1960 Belgian GP.
@@Panzer_Runner
They did, but it took time for anyone to get there since Spa was a relatively long circuit in those days. Stewart's dreadful accident in this race was immediately attended to by Graham Hill and a local farmer since there were no track marshals nearby to extract him from the car.
What a film
Great movie
7:41 Bono, my tires are gone
I thought of that haha
Some great helicopter shots of John Surtees in # 6 Ferrari. His last race for Ferrari before he really got pissed off at Eugenio Dragoni and Ferrari politics and quit. There was a good chance Surtee would have been world champion in 1966 if he had stuck around as Ferrari probably had the best car and engine for the start of the 3-litre formula.
Also great shots of the original Spa circuit - what a monster it was.
@3:42 - that was such a Schumacher style turn!
6:47 camera man almost DIED
The balls this took.
7:04 damn to think that would be the average crash from back in the 60s
Loved it,think I'll go find the movie,thanks for that awesome post!
You're welcome
Full movie is available online th-cam.com/video/RqxMYBj8axU/w-d-xo.html
Watched it great movie,thanks again.
7:05 poor bonnier
Best motor racing movie ever made.
Jack Brabham won the real race in his approx 300 hp half ton Repco Brabham, A fuel tank on wheels
.He won the World Championship that year.
Ok it's a movie, but the circumstances are real. Racing cars that at 300 km / h skim over trees, houses, electric poles and milesyones, with people on the track, were all real things. Maximum security.
3:19 this guy just strolling on the road
7:08 beautiful scene with the v12 screamingz
Take a reason…. 🏎️🏎️🏎️🏎️🏎️
1960s spa was something else, something evil
Can’t blame a circuit for its own issues. Old Spa was in every way a fast circuit but it was one run on a public road during a time where street circuits weren’t safe. If a circuit like this were run now it would very much be as safe as any street circuit by the standards of our day, just much longer.
Monza has a greater haunting history; two mass casualties events that included spectators - not to mention the losses of (Richard) Seaman, both father & son of the Ascari family, von Trips, Rindt and Peterson.
Ahhhhh! The good ol' days when you could stand right on the track and get a good close look at the race! I'm surprised that there weren't cattle grazing on the track and a manure spreader making laps. Red flagging the race because of fatality or two is for sissies!
Things have come a long way over the years...
The editing and cinematography are amazing. It’s like a musical composition. Unfortunately for this movie, it wasn’t all racing. The melodrama was really awful.
Isn’t it funny how none of the drivers defend the overtakes? They just kinda let it happen
That’s called honor. Back then they died every week, so they didn’t want to put themselves, their fellow racer nor fans into a compromising position. My opinion it’s the most beautiful thing that can happen in those conditions.
They're also being lapped.
Last thing you want to happen as a racing driver is to die in a crash while driving in a movie about your exploits in the faster cars.
Dirty driving wasn't common then, as it was since 1988 - when safety designs and components of the cars that were made to increase surviving an accident.
Guisippe Farina and Innes Ireland are about the only boneheads who got stupid behind the wheel in the 1950s & 1960s.
7:41 Brendon, are you ok?
No track infringements in those days!
The only thing stopping you from cutting a corner was either a building, people, or the terrain
Automobilista2&Project Cars1、2has this historic track!
And Grand Prix Legends, modders even built a more accurate version of the course of 8 years! th-cam.com/video/e0ykJgs02nQ/w-d-xo.html
which movie?
Wdym which movie? It's in the title
@@Panzer_Runner ow i dont know, seen this scene first tym. thnku btw
3:25 3:26
F1 antes: Hay que correr con lluvia.
F2 ahora: Se suspende la carrera 😭
Jean Luis Trintignan ( Sarpi) su Ferrari modello 312, 3000 CC 12 Cilindri, 3 Valvole per cilindro 310 CV con scarichi laterali , un auto progettata dal grande Ing. Mauro Forghieri scomparso qualche mese fa' purtroppo.
i gotta ask did they feel safe back then? or did they know the danger.
Safe? They were aware of the danger and were willing to die to be famous
Or they just like racing and ignored all the risks
One death or more was expected at every Grand Prix. The cars were death Traps and some poor devils burned to death in the car. The sport has a lot to thank Sir Jackie Stewart for, for making it much safer.
@@allanm6246
Oddly enough it was this race that inspired Stewart on his crusade for safety in the sport. Quite understandably considering how close he could have been dead in this event.
In another odd twist of the sport was that Stewart was somewhat criticized for his pursuit of safety by Jacky Ickx. Yet in 1969 at Le Mans, Ickx staged a safety protest of his own when he objected to the traditional starting procedures of drivers running across the circuit to their cars - when he simply walked across the track while the other competitors ran to their cars (there's footage of this btw).
Amazingly enough, Ickx (and Jackie Oliver) won that event by a scant 100yds in front of the 2nd place Porsche of Hans Herman/Gerrard Larrousse.
@@allanm6246 As much as the sport is indebted towards Sir Jackie Stewart towards the deeds that improved safety, he is the most cursed driver to see all his fellow drivers, teammates either getting injured seriously or death in worse situations. Imagine the agony he has to go through all these years with so much haunting memories especially his most loved teammate François Cevert's tragic death!!
So we not gonna talk about the 2 kids who died?
No.
No more beauty and bravery,it's gone
What’s the movie called?
Grand Prix (1966)
Keren
what movie is this?
Grand Prix 1966
F1
F1
@@Panzer_Runner
R.I.P. Antonio Sabato Sr. (0:05) who played italian F1 Ferrari driver Nino Barlini in John Frankenheimer´s "Grand Prix" (1966)
Born on April 2, 1943, Sabato had starring roles in Spaghetti Western Films "One Dollar Too Many" and "Due Volte Guida" among many others. He died on January 10, 2021 of complications from Covid-19 at a hospice in Hemet, California. God bless him!
Greetings from Venezuela and thaks for posting 1966 Belgian Grand Prix film sequences.
@@Panzer_Runner Ok it's a movie, but the circumstances are real. Racing cars that at 300 km / h skim over trees, houses, electric poles and milesyones, with people on the track, were all real things. Maximum security.
Red White Stripe car on the freak, MUDWALL BY THE villagers 20🔴