1
( Spectators cheering )
( Engine roaring )
( Heartbeat )
( Heartbeat slows )
( Engines roaring )
( Low, steady heartbeat )
( Sirens approaching )
Martin brundle:
Everybodythought I was dead.
I didn't have a bruise
on my body.
I didn't have anything at all.
I looked up,
and I saw a red flag.
That's lucky--
they've stopped the race.
Back then, we had
the restarts, and...
Also we had spare cars,
so your mind goes,
"get in the spare car."
And new ear plugs!
Man:
Yes, okay.And new gl--
and new gloves!
Martin brundle:
And so, you can't startuntil you've seen Professor Watkins.
"Where's sid?
Anybody know where sid is?"
I ran towards him like crazy.
I got there, and he said,
"I can see you're okay.
I've just watched you run
300 meters. What's the date?"
I said, "it's the 10th
of march."
He said, "yeah, then
you're fine. Get in the car."
Martin brundle:
There is no doubt about it--
a few years before,
I would have been a dead man.
Martin brundle:
We wantto see something exceptional,
breathtaking, that we
think we can't do.
We want to see gladiators,
warriors.
And let's face it, we do like
to see a bit of a shunt.
But we don't
want to see deaths.
Man:
Miracle of miracles!This is well nigh unbelievable!
Martin brundle
gets out of the car,
and he's seemingly
all right.
Martin brundle:
It isincredible how this changed,
and how suddenly it became unacceptable
to die in the name of sport.
Man:
Grand prix is likewith the cars in
all national colors:
Blue for the French,
green for the British,
red for Italy,
and white for the Germans,
until Mercedes stopped using
paint on those silver arrows...
Man:
Michael schumacher wins,and becomes the most successful
grand prix driver of all time!
Man:
...The silver cars thatare the pride of Hitler Germany.
Man:
Alfa Romeo wins,driven by the fabulous nouvalri.
Man:
What a feelingfor Fernando Alonzo.
He wins the Italian
grand prix at monza.
Man:
As the French announcetheir search for the fastest man
in a new world championship
series to be entitled formula 1,
with the inaugural race
to be held at silverstone.
Man:
Enzo Ferrari for oneis not impressed
with the new wave
of British motor racers.
Il commendatore has labeled
the new independent designers
garagistes, the men
who cannot build engines.
Man:
Fangio is beatenin buenos aires
by former teammate
and fastest rival stirling moss,
in a Cooper funny car,
no less.
Man:
What courageby these men,
to push these cars
and themselves
to their very limits.
But that is formula 1.
Narrator:
Formula 1was born in a bygone time...
When boys' heroes
reigned in the sky.
Nigel mansell:
When you're young,you wanted to be a formula 1 driver.
You wanted to be an astronaut,
you wanted to be
a fighter pilot.
Damon hill:
After the second world war,
the mindset of going off
and doing something
courageous in a vehicle,
this just naturally flowed
into what became formula 1.
Martin brundle:
When you see photographsand film of that era,
the seriousness of them
is awe inspiring.
I grew up in that world.
My dad was world champion '62,
and I was 2.
They all had this
genuineness about them.
They all
were the real article.
John Watson:
I certainly had respectto those that went before me.
Some of them
were my contemporaries.
I met one time probably
in my view
the greatest
grand prix driver ever,
and that includes people
like Michael schumacher and ayrton senna.
Fangio.
Fangio.
Fangio.
Fangio.
Fangio.
Juan Manuel fangio.
Narrator:
The first big namein formula one
may have been
the best driver ever.
Fangio would win
five world titles,
a record that stood
for 40 years,
surpassed only
by Michael schumacher.
Whenever you drive those cars
that fangio had to race in,
it's very scary.
You have to hold yourself
on the steering wheel.
No safety belts.
The helmet was
just like a hat.
Goggles. And you
had to be brave.
Narrator:
The most celebrateddriver in a dangerous time
survived.
The year fangio retired,
1958, the formula changed.
The sport's governing body
announced from Paris
two world champions each season--
one title for
the fastest driver,
and another for the manufacturer
of the fastest machine.
Mario andretti:
This wasthe evolution, you know?
Each team
has to take engines,
take chassis and technology
to the absolute limit.
Narrator:
In thisnew competition,
the British began to challenge
the old world continental powers.
John barnard:
All the Englishteams were considered to be
the garagistby... by Ferrari
and the other racing teams.
One englishman would set
the pace of progress,
in racing and the entire
automotive world.
Colin Chapman:
We basicallygo racing 'cause I like it.
I like the competitiveness
of it,
I like the comradeship of it.
And I also like the technical
fallout that comes from it.
John surtees:
Colin Chapmanwas a great character,
if at times a bit cavalier.
(Laughing softly)
Oh, I don't know about that.
Colin Chapman was
an engineer who learned to fly,
an entrepreneur who made
lightweight sports cars for the public,
as well as for grand prix,
under the name lotus.
In those days, lotus was
an out-and-out racing car.
My father, he was
always pushing the envelope.
Good engineering means you've
designed something to its limit.
Colin was the Maverick
of all time.
He was a genius.
He was the team owner
that you want to drive for.
By 1963,
Chapman had designed
the fastest machine
in formula one...
And he had the fastest man
behind the wheel of a lotus.
Sir Jackie Stewart: Jim Clark
was the best racing driver
I ever raced against.
The whole exercise was to be
as good as you can get--
on the limit.
And Jimmy
drove in such a way
that he was never
over the limit.
He was never erratic.
He was never spectacular.
He was spectacularly fast,
but in an unspectacular fashion.
It was smooth and clean
and beautifully handled.
championship races
than any driver before him,
finishing in second place
only once in his career.
Sir Jackie Stewart:
He was a country boy.
He was a farmer from
the borders of Scotland,
quiet and almost innocent.
Jim Clark:
I'd like to getback here much more often.
It's, uh, great relaxation
to get back here,
and very much
the opposite from racing.
Clark became the face
of formula one,
with another champion,
Graham hill,
playing his affable foil.
Damon hill:
Everyonewas quite close.
Jim Clark
had been to our house,
and I knew Colin Chapman
sort of the same way as I knew my dad.
They sounded the same,
and they had the same mustache.
Sally swart:
Colinwas an extreme extrovert,
great fun to be with,
but very different
in character to Jimmy, really.
Jimmy was quieter.
But they were like brothers.
Together, they were
racing on the limit
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