Brad Pitt's effortless charm and charisma saves F1 from totally corny and ridiculous
With a high-octane sports movie, the return of a horror classic and a quality Beatles-adjacent doco, moviegoers are spoiled for choice this week.
F1 (M)
Director: Joseph Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick)
Starring: Brad Pitt, Damson Idris, Kerry Condon, Javier Bardem.
****
Plenty of vroom for a perfect Pitt stop
If F1 lands a podium finish in the 2025 box-office race, then it will be all due to Brad Pitt.
The veteran actor is the real reason this adrenalised motor sports flick continues to engage, excite and entertain the viewer from start to finish.
Pitt's effortless charm and considerable presence keeps F1's gears shifting impressively without losing any significant revs. With anyone else at the wheel, the movie would often be running on fumes.
Safe in the knowledge Pitt's sure hands won't be leaving the wheel, F1's tech-savvy filmmaking team are free to focus on capturing a tarmac-tearing trackside authenticity never before seen on the big screen.
It does not matter whether you're a Formula One newbie who might have been recently detoured into this world by the hit streaming series Drive to Survive. Or the type of Grand Prix tragic who knows the Drivers Championship standings from top to bottom.
All that truly counts is feeling those rushes, whooshes, swerves and swoops that push a Formula One car to its absolute limit. In terms of pure audiovisual authenticity, F1 (which was partially shot at several actual Grand Prix events) nails the brief with a killer combo of daring and precision.
If F1's storyline doesn't exactly keep it real, well, it is worth remembering this is a Hollywood movie, and not a warts-and-all doco.
The 'as-if' factor remains high from the start, particularly when it comes to Pitt's role as the mercurial driving ace Sonny Hayes.
This fella hasn't driven in a Grand Prix for 30 years when he gets the surprise call-up to join the severely failing APX team. Without a single Championship point to their name, APX need to string a few results together fast, or they will be kicked out of Formula One by season's end.
Despite Sonny's finesse-free driving style and a highly unconventional understanding of racing rules, he does bring an X-factor to his struggling team that just might buy them a few more laps of the Grand Prix circuit.
In doing so, Sonny will be butting heads with APX's number one driver, the young and impulsive Joshua (Damson Idris), busting the chops of embattled team leader Ruben (Javier Bardem), and breaking down the romantic resistance of the outfit's Chief Engineer Kate (Kerry Condon).
Yes, it is all a bit corny and totally ridiculous at times. However, when it comes to feeding an audience's collective need for speed, F1 zooms past the chequered flag with fast and furious panache.
F1 is in cinemas June 26.
28 YEARS LATER (MA15+)
General release.
Released in 2002, 28 Days Later was the first great horror movie of this century. From those iconic early scenes of Cillian Murphy wandering about an eerily empty London through to repeated sightings of fleet-footed zombies sprinting to their next meal, 28 Days was all chiller, no filler. 2007's 28 Months kept the infectious misery coming, albeit a little less memorably. Now, courtesy of the Later franchise's founders, director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland, the brilliantly bleak sequel 28 Years issues an icky date on what has become of the poor old United Kingdom. Spoiler alert: it remains no fit place for a human to live. While the rest of the world has purged the infamous vicious 'rage virus', the British mainland remains sectioned off from the rest of the planet. And for good reason: the mutant beings roaming the nation have not just multiplied in number. They now vary wildly in terms of species, appetite and physical prowess. All of this and more must be learned the hard way by Spike (Alfie Williams), a wide-eyed 12-year-old living in a 'safe community' off the Scottish coast with an ill mother (Jodie Comer) and demanding father (Aaron Taylor-Johnson). The time has come for young Spike to be trained in the multi-tasking ways of a hunter-gather-warrior who can journey regularly to zombie country to procure supplies for his people. Intended as a reboot of the franchise that will spawn a new instalment as soon as 2026, 28 Years packs a palpable punch that will leave a new generation of viewers truly reeling.
ONE TO ONE: JOHN & YOKO (M)
Selected cinemas.
The next Beatles-themed documentary to come along after Peter Jackson's acclaimed and exhaustive Get Back project was always going to have its work cut out getting noticed. Remarkably, One to One justifies its existence with ease, tracking the unforeseen route taken by John Lennon to establish a new life after The Beatles. With access to a deep archive of phone recordings, home movies and photos, this classy doco places the viewer right beside Lennon and his artist wife Yoko Ono as they put down roots in a not-so-welcoming New York City of the early 1970s. The couple's fusing of political activism, experimental lifestyle choices and abrasive music releases made them a lightning rod for controversy and scorn. In fact, such is the intensity of the negativity, it finally becomes clear why Lennon retreated from the public eye shortly thereafter. A major bonus for lifelong fans of the man is plenty of footage from Lennon's 1972 One to One show at Madison Square Garden, the last time in his career he would play a full concert.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Brad Pitt 'misses the window' to have a 'gay experience'
Brad Pitt has "missed the window" to have a "gay experience". The 61-year-old actor - who is currently dating 32-year-old jewellery executive Ines de Ramon - believes his chance to spend some intimate time with another man is long gone. Speaking on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast, he said: "You know, I've never had a gay experience. "I kind of missed that window." However, if Brad does ever indulge in a homosexual experience, the star joked he's unlikely to pick podcast host Dax. Brad quipped: "But if I did, it wouldn't be you." The Bullet Train actor has been married twice before, but both ended in divorce. He wed actress Angelina Jolie in 2014, but they split in 2019 and their divorce was finalised in 2024. Brad was also married to Friends star Jennifer Aniston from 2000 to 2005. In 2018, Gus Van Sant, who had been due to direct Brokeback Mountain, which starred Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger as two homosexual cowboys, revealed Brad, Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, and Ryan Phillippe all rejected the chance to appear in the motion picture. Speaking to Indiewire, he said: "Nobody wanted to do it. I was working on it, and I felt like we needed a really strong cast, like a famous cast. "That wasn't working out. I asked the usual suspects: Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Ryan Phillippe. They all said no. "What I could have done, and what I probably should have done, was cast more unknowns, not worried about who were the lead actors. "I was not ready. I'm not sure why. There was just sort of a hiccup on my part. There was something off with myself, I guess, whatever was going on." The movie - which was eventually helmed by Ang Lee - broke barriers for casting heterosexual actors Gyllenhaal and Ledger as the two main characters, Jack Twist and Ennis Del Mar.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Justin Baldoni drops plans for amended claims against Blake Lively
He will not be proceeding with refiling claims in his countersuit against Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds amid their It Ends with Us legal feud. Two weeks after Judge Lewis J Liman granted motions to dismiss the $400 million (£294 million) countersuit Baldoni originally filed against Lively and husband, the actor-director's lawyer Bryan Freedman announced they were not submitting any amendments. The judge had noted that Baldoni could still amend his claims for breach of implied covenant and tortious interference with contract.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals biggest pay packet
The Terminator star disclosed his earnings from playing one particular film character, explaining he took home tens of millions of dollars for working on the 1988 comedy, Twins. Arnold, 77, shared that he and co-star Danny DeVito opted not to receive a salary for starring in the buddy movie, instead, they chose to be paid via "a piece of the backend," or a portion of the movie's total box-office and distribution profits. "It was fantastic," the Predator star told Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen in an episode that aired on 23 June. "We went all the way to the bank with that one.".