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FASTER
FASTER
- MotoGP Movie DVD
DVD by
Spark Productions
Written and Directed by Mark Neale
Narrated by Ewan McGregor
103 minutes,
color, stereo, standard aspect ratio
All regions compatible
Photo by webBikeWorld
FASTER was produced during the
2001 and 2002 MotoGP world championship motorcycle racing
series, and is an attempt at bringing the excitement and
adventure of this incredible sport to the masses. It
claims to be the "definitive story of motorcycle racing at the
highest level...".
I'm a huge fan of MotoGP racing,
which is probably the best and most exciting motorsport racing
series anywhere in the world (especially compared to the boring
Formula 1 series, which I also follow). I think the story
of MotoGP definitely needs to be told. Unfortunately, this
DVD doesn't do it.
It's really too bad, because there probably won't be very many chances for
the general public to learn about MotoGP via film. Investors may
only try once to test the
waters and see how the public responds, and if this film doesn't
make a profit, we may not see the
definitive MotoGP story on film for a very long time, if ever.
There is so very much that could
have been told about this sport, and a film about the MotoGP
series could have been made so
much more exciting. Anyone who has followed the series
over the last couple of years knows what a fantastic subject
MotoGP racing would be for film.
Maybe the budget for this production just
wasn't big enough to do justice to the subject. There are
a couple of problems;
the movie was made just at the end of the two-stroke MotoGP era,
even before the series was referred to as "MotoGP". So
it's immediately old news; after all, with everything that's
been happening in the incredible four-stroke MotoGP series over
the last couple of years, who wants to hear about 500cc oil
burners and one washed-up rider?
The movie also doesn't have a
consistent theme flowing through it to hold the viewer's
interest. It's more like a few scenarios touching on a
couple of somewhat unrelated and secondary issues, rather than
"the definitive story of motorcycle racing at the highest
level". It doesn't really develop any excitement up front
that captures one's
interest and motivation to want to learn more. It also suffers from a typical
problem with films of this type; i.e., films that attempt to
explain a sport or technology that is somewhat obscure and
esoteric to an audience who doesn't know anything about it.
MotoGP terminology, background and racing issues aren't discussed, so
unless the viewer knows about the series, it's hard to
understand what the narrator is talking about.
An example of the rather
disjointed story line is the time spent with Rossi,
Biaggi and Loris Capirossi driving in cars while talking to the
camera. I'm not sure, but I assume that this segment is
meant to generate excitement about the Rossi vs. Biaggi battle,
but a non-MotoGP fan would not understand the background from
the dialog. This segment adds nothing to the film, not to
mention the obvious question: why is the camera filming them as
they are driving cars? In
an unsuccessful attempt to try and
capture the interest of the non-MotoGP audience, the director
spends far too much time at the beginning of the film focused on
the television film series strategy of trying to capture viewer attention by
focusing on accidents, broken bones and crash drama instead of
using the valuable time in the beginning of the film to tell the
real story and history of MotoGP racing.
The film then moves on to the
hyped-for-the-media
Rossi vs. Biaggi battle, which is more drama used in an
unproductive way and which never really goes anywhere.
There are endless repeats of the Rossi/Biaggi "elbow" incident,
which is interesting but way too repetitive in the film. There's a chapter on
the 2001 Catalunya GP, but which leaves out virtually all
narration so that the rookie viewer doesn't even know what's
happening. The silence is supposed to add tension to the
segment, but instead it seems to be some random TV footage of
the race spliced into the film.
Viewers should know that the movie was made in cooperation with Dorna,
the owners of the MotoGP franchise, and almost all the track
footage is made up of clips from TV coverage, and it's obvious
that the movie was made around the leftover film, rather than
writing the story and then filming to match.
There's a little bit on Garry McCoy,
whose MotoGP career never really went anywhere and who, as of
this writing, has been relegated to a second-string World
Superbike ride. Then there's a quick cut to a
segment on John Hopkins, which basically has nothing to do with
the rest of the film and almost seems like it was directed by
someone else and spliced into the film to add some content.
I can hear the Director saying "Hey, John Hopkins is new and
he's from the U.S., let's throw some film in there in case he
gets hot over the next year".
There's no tie at all to John Hopkins and the rest of the story;
what does a few minutes about a young and not very good back-marker rider have to do with the real story of MotoGP?
Again, the non-MotoGP audience couldn't care less.
I previewed the movie with a mixed
audience of MotoGP and non-MotoGP fans, and no one liked it, nor
did the non-MotoGP fans understand the series or the passion any
more after the film than they did before it.
The bottom line is that MotoGP
racing is probably one of the most incredible, action-packed
motorsport racing series on the planet, but this movie doesn't
come close to doing it justice. Hopefully someone will do
it up right sometime soon.
wBW
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