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True to life or not, Brad Pitt's 'F1' movie draws on decades of racing drama

True to life or not, Brad Pitt's 'F1' movie draws on decades of racing drama

Japan Times13 hours ago

The racing scenes in Brad Pitt's new "F1" movie are impressively authentic, but the filmmakers have also made much of how the sport's past is woven into the plot — with a hefty slice of Hollywood artistic license.
"We just drew from history. A little this, a little that, then we had Lewis Hamilton keep us straight," Pitt commented at a New York premiere ahead of this week's general release in cinemas.
Apple's senior vice president of services Eddy Cue, a lifelong Formula One fan and Ferrari board member, told reporters after a media screening that "there's not a single event in here ... that hasn't happened in a real race."
That does not mean, of course, that such events could still happen now or that they served as anything more than inspiration.
The Apple Original Films blockbuster — with scenes shot during actual F1 race weekends — is a redemption story, with Pitt playing aging driver Sonny Hayes on an unlikely comeback alongside a young hotshot at a struggling team.
Seven-time world champion Hamilton provided advice and is credited as a co-producer on a movie scripted for audiences unfamiliar with the sport.
Pitt's age — he turns 62 later this year — has been called out as unrealistic for a driver in the modern era but as Hamilton, 40, said when filming started in 2023: "Brad looks like he's aging backwards."
The oldest current F1 driver is Spaniard Fernando Alonso who will be 44 next month, but in the 1950s, when physical demands were less but dangers greater, Philippe Etancelin and Louis Chiron raced at 55. Luigi Fagioli was a winner at 53.
F1 comebacks also tend to follow short absences nowadays, one or two years at most, but that was not always the case.
Dutch driver Jan Lammers raced from 1979-82 and was out for more than a decade — when he won Le Mans and raced at Daytona — before returning in 1992. Italian Luca Badoer also had 10 years between races before a short-lived comeback in 2009.
Drivers have indeed gone from last to first in barely believable circumstances, made winning strategy calls and taken triumphs with unsung teams that would not normally be considered contenders.
The 2011 Canadian Grand Prix lasted more than four hours, featured six safety car deployments and was won by Jenson Button who at one point was at the back of the field and had two collisions, including one with McLaren teammate Hamilton.
Button made five pitstops, plus had a drive-through penalty, and picked up a puncture in a race halted for two hours.
Hayes' backstory is of racing Ayrton Senna before suffering a crash so violent he was flung from the car still attached to his seat.
That is modeled on Northern Ireland's Martin Donnelly who crashed at Jerez in practice for the 1990 Spanish Grand Prix and was left inert in the middle of the track.
He survived, miraculously, but there was to be no F1 comeback.
Drivers have escaped blazing crashes, Frenchman Romain Grosjean survived after his car erupted in a fireball at the 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix while Niki Lauda suffered serious burns in a 1976 Nuerburgring crash.
The Austrian returned to racing six weeks later.
There are nods to the Crashgate scandal, when Brazilian Nelson Piquet Jr. crashed deliberately at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix and triggered a safety car that helped teammate Alonso win.
Has there been a female technical director? Not yet, but women have been team principals and currently work as strategists, race engineers and pitlane mechanics — although the movie is far from realistic in that regard.
For F1 fans of a certain age there is also an "Easter egg" of a glimpse of the Monza banking in homage to 1966 movie "Grand Prix." 'F1' director Joseph Kosinski said that classic, and Steve McQueen's 1971 movie "Le Mans," were his touchstones.
"Those movies are now almost 60 years old but you can still watch them and still marvel at the cinematography and the feeling of being there," he said.
"The whole practical nature of this film was inspired by those classics."

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Brad Pitt reveals his favorite Japanese food, many Japanese people say they've never eaten it
Brad Pitt reveals his favorite Japanese food, many Japanese people say they've never eaten it

SoraNews24

time8 hours ago

  • SoraNews24

Brad Pitt reveals his favorite Japanese food, many Japanese people say they've never eaten it

Is Brad Pitt's favorite Japanese food really Japanese? Japan often gets Hollywood movies later than the rest of the world, but F1, starring Brad Pitt, is fittingly, arriving in Japanese theaters as quickly as possible, premiering here on June 27, the same day as it does in the U.S. To promote the movie's opening, the producers have released a promotional video in which Kenyu Horiuchi and Shintaro Morimoto, who serve as the dub actors for Pitt and co-star Damson Idris, ask Pitt, Idris, and director Joseph Kosinski some questions on behalf of Japanese fans. The first question involves special training the on-screen cast undertook for their roles, and the next deal with special efforts made during filming and the cast's most memorable scenes. The three interviewees also express regret that while F1 includes footage shot by a separate crew at Japan's Suzuka Circuit, none of them were able to travel to the country themselves for filming. The final question is a common one when overseas celebrities are making Japanese media appearances: What is you favorite Japanese food? Idris leads off with the predictable, but totally agreeable, answer of 'sushi,' with an expression of bliss washing over his face as he fine-tunes his answer to 'toro,' extra-fatty tuna. Kosinski goes a bit farther off the beaten path, saying 'I love a good hot shishito pepper,' a side-dish often found at yakitori restaurants, where they're usually grilled on a skewer over an open flame. ▼ Although, ironically, not every shishito is hot, as the number of seeds inside, which are where the heat comes from, can vary quite a bit from pepper to pepper. But it's Pitt's answer that's truly unique, as he replies, and very confidently, that his favorite Japanese food is: 'Whitefish with ponzu sauce. Always.' Pitt's answer was surprising to a lot of Japanese people. Yes, ponzu, a sauce made from mirin, bonito stock, and citrus juice (such as lemon, lime, or yuzu), and often mixed with soy sauce, is a popular condiment in Japan. ▼ Ponzu However, ponzu is most commonly used as a condiment for hotpot or other simmered foods, or as a dipping sauce for sashimi or gyoza. It's generally treated like a substitute for soy sauce, and thus isn't something that Japanese people ordinarily pour on a slice of cooked fish. So not only is it unusual to hear someone say that whitefish with ponzu is their favorite Japanese food, the 'always' is an unexpected emphasizer for an unorthodox combination that you're not likely to encounter in Japanese restaurants or kitchens. 日本人でもこの答えを1stチョイスでいう奴はあまりいねえだろ。。 — 事務カリー(大掃除垢) (@zimkalee) June 23, 2025 Because of that, online reactions to Pitt's answer have largely been some sort of variation on the one embedded above: 'I don't think there are even many Japanese people who'd give that as their first choice.' Other have included: 'Now I wanna know where he tried that.' 'This is kind of like if someone asked 'What's your favorite American food?' and you said 'Alligator steak.'' 'Brad, someone pulled a fast one on you.' 'It's so specific. Was the person who cooked it Japanese? I can't ever remember eating whitefish with ponzu poured on it.' 'I wonder if the fish was grilled, steamed, or simmered.' 'It's got to be something he had with sake.' 'This would be good for a 'try not to laugh' challenge.'' 'Ponzu really does taste good when the flavor seeps into the other ingredients you're eating it with.' More than a few commenters theorized that when Pitt said 'whitefish' he was really talking about fugu, blowfish/pufferfish, which is often eaten with ponzu. That seems unlikely, though, since fugu's international fame as a Japanese delicacy that can kill you if it's not prepared correctly means that it rarely gets linguistically lumped in with whitefish by English-speakers. So odds are that Pitt really has eaten and enjoyed whitefish with ponzu sauce, and on more than one occasion. As for where he ate it, there are a couple possibilities. First, while it's not a standard or traditional combination, it is possible to find recipes, in Japanese, for whitefish with ponzu. There's one here, for example, on Cookpad, a website where home chefs can share recipes with one another. On the website of the U.K division of soy sauce maker Kikkoman, which also produces ponzu, the company specifically recommends using ponzu 'as a marinade for fish, meat and vegetables.' If you run a search for recipes on Kikkoman's Japanese website for fish with ponzu, though, you won't find any. Likewise, Mizkan, another major ponzu maker, has 220 recipes for ponzu on its Japanese website, but not a single one that uses it as a sauce for cooked fish. With ponzu experiencing a recent surge in global popularity, it's possible that Pitt orders whitefish with ponzu at a nominally Japanese restaurant he frequents outside Japan, or that he's had it at restaurants in Japan with avant-garde sensibilities and a cosmopolitan, international clientele. 'I bet he goes to some really fancy Japanese restaurants,' mused one commenter. Or it could be that he has a personal acquaintance or private chef who's made whitefish with yuzu a part of their cooking repertoire and presented it to him as a kind of 'Japanese food,' since ponzu is a Japanese condiment and whitefish is part of Japan's culinary culture too. 'I think more so than comparing it to many other kinds of Japanese foods that he's tried, whitefish with ponzu sauce is the dish that has the strongest place in his memories,' said one commenter, and while just about everyone was surprised as Pitt's pick for his favorite Japanese food, no one seems to think it'd taste bad, even if they're not 100-percen sure it's really Japanese. Source: YouTube/ワーナー ブラザース 公式チャンネル via Hachima Kiko, Twitter/@zimkalee, Kikkoman (1, 2), Mizkan, Cookpad Top image: Pakutaso (edited by SoraNews24) Insert images: Pakutaso, SoraNews24 ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

True to life or not, Brad Pitt's 'F1' movie draws on decades of racing drama
True to life or not, Brad Pitt's 'F1' movie draws on decades of racing drama

Japan Times

time13 hours ago

  • Japan Times

True to life or not, Brad Pitt's 'F1' movie draws on decades of racing drama

The racing scenes in Brad Pitt's new "F1" movie are impressively authentic, but the filmmakers have also made much of how the sport's past is woven into the plot — with a hefty slice of Hollywood artistic license. "We just drew from history. A little this, a little that, then we had Lewis Hamilton keep us straight," Pitt commented at a New York premiere ahead of this week's general release in cinemas. Apple's senior vice president of services Eddy Cue, a lifelong Formula One fan and Ferrari board member, told reporters after a media screening that "there's not a single event in here ... that hasn't happened in a real race." That does not mean, of course, that such events could still happen now or that they served as anything more than inspiration. The Apple Original Films blockbuster — with scenes shot during actual F1 race weekends — is a redemption story, with Pitt playing aging driver Sonny Hayes on an unlikely comeback alongside a young hotshot at a struggling team. Seven-time world champion Hamilton provided advice and is credited as a co-producer on a movie scripted for audiences unfamiliar with the sport. Pitt's age — he turns 62 later this year — has been called out as unrealistic for a driver in the modern era but as Hamilton, 40, said when filming started in 2023: "Brad looks like he's aging backwards." The oldest current F1 driver is Spaniard Fernando Alonso who will be 44 next month, but in the 1950s, when physical demands were less but dangers greater, Philippe Etancelin and Louis Chiron raced at 55. Luigi Fagioli was a winner at 53. F1 comebacks also tend to follow short absences nowadays, one or two years at most, but that was not always the case. Dutch driver Jan Lammers raced from 1979-82 and was out for more than a decade — when he won Le Mans and raced at Daytona — before returning in 1992. Italian Luca Badoer also had 10 years between races before a short-lived comeback in 2009. Drivers have indeed gone from last to first in barely believable circumstances, made winning strategy calls and taken triumphs with unsung teams that would not normally be considered contenders. The 2011 Canadian Grand Prix lasted more than four hours, featured six safety car deployments and was won by Jenson Button who at one point was at the back of the field and had two collisions, including one with McLaren teammate Hamilton. Button made five pitstops, plus had a drive-through penalty, and picked up a puncture in a race halted for two hours. Hayes' backstory is of racing Ayrton Senna before suffering a crash so violent he was flung from the car still attached to his seat. That is modeled on Northern Ireland's Martin Donnelly who crashed at Jerez in practice for the 1990 Spanish Grand Prix and was left inert in the middle of the track. He survived, miraculously, but there was to be no F1 comeback. Drivers have escaped blazing crashes, Frenchman Romain Grosjean survived after his car erupted in a fireball at the 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix while Niki Lauda suffered serious burns in a 1976 Nuerburgring crash. The Austrian returned to racing six weeks later. There are nods to the Crashgate scandal, when Brazilian Nelson Piquet Jr. crashed deliberately at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix and triggered a safety car that helped teammate Alonso win. Has there been a female technical director? Not yet, but women have been team principals and currently work as strategists, race engineers and pitlane mechanics — although the movie is far from realistic in that regard. For F1 fans of a certain age there is also an "Easter egg" of a glimpse of the Monza banking in homage to 1966 movie "Grand Prix." 'F1' director Joseph Kosinski said that classic, and Steve McQueen's 1971 movie "Le Mans," were his touchstones. "Those movies are now almost 60 years old but you can still watch them and still marvel at the cinematography and the feeling of being there," he said. "The whole practical nature of this film was inspired by those classics."

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Japan Times

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  • Japan Times

Delap notches first for Chelsea as club eases into Club World Cup last 16

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