Ford V Ferrari--Cool Racing Experience

Evelyn 2022-06-28 07:25:42

An extremely stable biographical narrative, from beginning to end, all in one go. All the renderings and depictions serve the integration of the audience and the racing car, stepping on the gear, shifting, accelerator, braking, steering, puzzled by the charm of the manual transmission after getting the driver's license, and then driving a lot of automatic transmissions during the winter vacation After I touched my father's manual transmission again, I could feel it. The feeling of shifting gears is integrated with the car and in full control. Therefore, when the racing scene in "The King of Speed" is shown with ultra-high shooting and editing techniques When it was displayed in front of me, it was a very pleasant resonance.

The super-long racing scene, the real and concise literary drama and the actors' performance in place, the two-and-a-half-hour movie viewing experience is hearty, and no matter what time of the movie, the moment the car starts, the hormones can instantly Release, this is the charm of sports, the charm of film shooting. Outside of racing, the purity of love and the time limit of life or two other aspects that hit me. Ken Miles, who passed away at 46, Michael Jackson, who passed away at 50, and Steve Jobs, who passed away at 56, all have pure love, and their lives are like bright shooting stars. I don't know when I will be able to filter out the pure crystallization of my longing, or it may be an idiot dream according to my self, but just like the sad but not sad ending of the movie, life must have regrets, and there is no need to regret it at the time.

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Extended Reading

Ford v Ferrari quotes

  • Wayne - Customer: Hey, I called you three times, and you never answer the phone.

    Ken Miles: I answer the phone every time it rings.

    Wayne - Customer: No, sir, you do not.

    Ken Miles: Yes, I do.

    Wayne - Customer: No, you don't. A month ago, this car was fun. Now, it won't even start. And when it does, it's 'Boom, boom, boom!' When I pull out of the driveway, the dog has a heart attack.

    [Ken chuckles]

    Wayne - Customer: All I'm asking is for you to make it like it was.

    Ken Miles: Yeah, you've coked up the inlet valves and the plugs. Nothing wrong with the car, just the way it's being driven.

    Wayne - Customer: The way it's being driven?

    Ken Miles: Too much fuel, not enough spark. That's what's making her misfire.

    Wayne - Customer: You wanna run that by me in English?

    Ken Miles: All right, sir.

    [Miles walks out of the car he is servicing and grabs his tin cup]

    Ken Miles: So... that there, that is a sport car. You have to drive her like a sport car. If you drive her like a school teacher, she'll clog up. All right? Try changing up at 5,000 RPM, not two. Drive like you mean it. Hard and tight. She'll run clean.

    Wayne - Customer: Are you telling me I don't know how to drive my own car?

    Ken Miles: No. But if you ask me, this isn't your car. Your car's more a Plymouth or a Studebaker.

    Wayne - Customer: You and me have a problem, buddy?

    Ken Miles: I don't have a problem. I had an MG. Mine just ran fine.

    Wayne - Customer: Screw you, you limey prick! I want my money back.

    Ken Miles: Oh, behave. I'd give it to ya. But you haven't paid for last month's service yet.

    Wayne - Customer: This country, the customer's always right. You ever hear that?

    [Wayne enters his MG A]

    Ken Miles: Yeah, yeah. Utter nonsense. Now remember, I advanced the timing, so a smidge twitchy in first.

    [Wayne speeds off, struggling to control his MG A]

    Ken Miles: Get the revs up. Good lad. Revs up. Ta-ra.

  • Ken Miles: Well, you promised me the drive. Not the win.