The Speed Merchants is the story of the 1972 manufacturer's Championship Series as told by drivers Mario Andretti (Ferrari 312P) and Vic Elford (Alfa Romeo T33TT/3). The film takes you behind the scenes at Daytona, Sebring, the Targa Florio, the Nurburgring, Le Mans and Watkins Glen, focusing on Mario and Vic, as well as Jacky Ickx, Helmut Marko, and Brian Redman. You visit with the drivers at their homes in France, Belgium, Austria and England where they relax with their families between races. Woven into the film is rare footage of both the Ferrari and Alfa Romeo factories where the cars are prepared before each race.
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Quite probably the best documentary on sports car racing or motor racing in general ever made. As a still photographer in that era I can attest to the accuracy of this film. Well photographed with great attention to detail the film takes viewers into the hearts and minds of the drivers depicted. A couple will be winners, one will retire and a close friend will lose his life. A better script could not have been written by Hollywood. The film also gives you views into places you might not get to see such as the Ferrari factory of 1972, Autodelta garage, the Matra-Simca garage at Le Mans and great film of the Targa Florio. I saw this film at its premier in 1973 at Watkins Glen while shooting the 6 hour endurance race with these same cars and watched it again just recently. It still holds up as a great motor racing film.
As a race car driver and having lived thru this era, I love the movie. Very nice how they showed personal sides and insight into the featured racers lives. Racing was far more dangerous in those days and these men were the persona of the breed.Documentary format and moves well. Music/score was well written and very effective. Highly urged for those who want to see the lives and gain insight into this discipline.As an aside, what is the name of the song that the folk band was playing at LeMans in the scene where the spectators are eating and drinking?
Hollywood hasn't got a real good track record when it comes to racing. Stinkers include Days of Thunder, Bobby Deerfield, and the dreadful Driven.Grand Prix and Le Mans are probably Hollywood's best; both have excellent racing footage but weak plots. Winning at least had a reasonable plot and decent acting, but it's far from being a world class movie.The best racing movie ever made, IMHO, didn't come out of Hollywood. This movie, The Speed Merchants, blows the doors off Hollywood's best efforts. It's a documentary of the 1972 season of the world endurance racing championship, and it was made by a race driver/filmmaker named Michael Keyser, who drove in that championship himself while making the film. Don't let the corny-sounding title fool you. This movie is stunning. It includes some incredibly raw, compelling in-car footage of the Targa Florio - so raw, in fact, that when I saw it in the theater in Watkins Glen after its initial release, I could hear people throwing up! Apparently the big-screen experience of whipping past stone walls and donkeys and little villages right next to the roads in Sicily was a little too real for some people! Along with lots of footage of the Ferrari 312P (one of the most beautiful - and beautiful-sounding - race cars ever built) The Speed Merchants also has interviews with a number of great drivers throughout the 1972 season, including Mario Andretti, Vic Elford, Jacky Ickx, Helmut Marko, and Brian Redman.A lot of very interesting things happened during the '72 season - along with a few tragic things. Hearing about them from the drivers' own perspective, in their own words, creates more drama than any fictional racing movie I've ever seen.The movie ends with one of the most exciting races I ever saw, the 6-hour at Watkins Glen in 1972. The final hour of this race comprised a flat-out duel for the overall win between two of the Ferraris, both of them wounded - and both of them being driven absolutely on the limit, turning laps faster than their qualifying laps, repeatedly breaking the lap record.I watched this race live, in person, and it was stunning. Keyser captures every bit of the excitement and tension of that race in this film.Unfortunately The Speed Merchants never got wide distribution in theaters. Apparently someone bought it and used it as a tax shelter, so it was buried, and only hardcore racing fans ever even heard of it.These days you can get this movie on DVD or VHS, although AFAIK it's still not available from major retailers like Amazon. You have to buy it from Michael Keyser himself. Just Google the name "michael keyser" and look for his autosports marketing company. Believe me, it's worth it! BTW, Keyser also wrote several books, including a book by the same name.
The dangers of motor sports are high, but were especially high back then with the vehicle technology far exceeding driver safety. These gentlemen knew the stakes were high. They drove for the love of driving. However because of the sacrifices made by these men, the level of safety we now have today is at it's best. The film really piqued my interest of that era, and not only documenting Racing history of the late '60s early '70s. This is my target of interest largely because of being raised up in the "Racing Capitol Of The World" during that same time. The director knew exactly what he wanted to record.The personal life of the drivers as well shows how serious each one was about their job, and also added the opportunity of getting to know each one personally.The filmmakers caught all these elements in a most spectacular way.