| Index | 7 reviews in total |
9 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
A flick about a teen who wants to become a Go-Cart racer and builds one with his dad, 19 November 2002
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Author:
Vanessa from Canada
It was a good movie. A little heavy on the accents but it had a thrilling story. The beginning is a little boring, but it has a solid ending. IT has a fun and competitive liveliness to it. It is enjoyable. It is good for kids under the age of 15.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Pretty good little movie featuring Kart Racing., 26 June 2005
Author:
TxMike from Houston, Tx, USA, Earth
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I got this DVD from my public library for my visiting grandkids, 10 and
13. We all watched it together, and were well entertained. I especially
thought Randy Quaid was a great pick to play Vic Davies, middle aged
father, engine builder, single father, and former champion Kart racer.
His son Watts (Will Rothhaar ) is a good kid, but keeps getting into
trouble. Minor stuff, but in the opening scenes we see him street
racing his cart against a dual sport motorcycle, and ending up in
someone's swimming pool.
SPOILERS. Dad and son do not have a good relationship, turns out mom
died in an accident 4 years earlier, both of them have trouble moving
on. The break comes when dad decides to teach son how to be a good
racer, using the indoor track grandpa had made for dad in the shop many
years earlier. Dad also designed and built a Kart, there is some drama
during the qualifying race, when right before a rain postponement,
their Rotax motor breaks. So they take one that dad and mom had made 4
years earlier, install it, and Watts ends up coming from behind to win
the race.
Formula Dramatization of some parent/offspring activity., 14 February 2011
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Author:
hoplite29 from United States
Well the wife's death was from cancer, per the Dialog spoken by Quaid character to son. Best I can recall the movie was filmed in Canada, Story location Lakawana (Maybe Pennsylvania USA ?). Realistic , O gosh no, who'd watch it then? A movie a little closer to actual events is Seabiscuit with Tobie Maquire, that somewhat follows Hillenbrand's book, it's got some modifications to fit the story into the 90 minutes or so of a movie, but it's not too far off. As a Unicyclist (maybe former unicyclist, it's beeeeen a while), I recommend you take a look at the trailer for "Into the Thunder Dragon" or other Kris Holm movie, I've just admiration, no aspirations for that. And, Oddly enough, he's Canadian too.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
It's okay, 19 April 2005
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Author:
chicky952003 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This movie is cute but it is nothing like real Go Kart racing. At national events they would never let you go out on the track without a neckbrace. NEVER! Also Watts drives a Rotax well Rotax's do not shift and in the movie you can hear it shift. Lastly his enemy is out on the track with him and he is pushing karts off the track and making karts crash. In real life they do not stand for any sort of pushing or bumping you would be Disqualifed in a matter of seconds. There are plenty more things wrong with this movie but these are the three that stand out the most. The movie isn't horrible but it could have been more realistic. Anyone who knows anything about go karting or racing can tell that it is all wrong.
4 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
A bit corny, 1 January 2005
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Author:
bobjoyce from Calgary, Canada
Kart racing isn't so easy, of course. And a goof I noticed: after the
"Davies Comet" engine is installed, there is still footage of Watts
racing with the Rotax Max. Also, kids that age do not race with MaxSr
engines.
The indoor lapping in the shop was a bit nuts.
The racing sounds were overdubbed with car engines or something,
because I drive a rotax kart and I have never heard it sound like that.
These are two-cycle engines, and I rarely heard the noises I associate
with these engines during any of the racing/driving footage.
Also, these karts--RotaxMax--do not make 105mph top speed.
0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Russel Crowe ruined Randy Quaid's meal ticket, 17 April 2009
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Author:
delibrartist from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
You have to wonder just how much Randy Quaid hates Russel Crowe. Here's
Randy Quaid pasting a career together with a few vaguely memorable
moments in good movies like The Last Picture Show, Paper Moon and
Midnight Express. And then making us laugh with his wackiness in
Freaked, Caddyshack 2 and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. No
Innerspace or Right Stuff but at least he has his brother or more
importantly, his ex-wife Meg Ryan. With a little money coming in from
parts Dennis' name gets him, Innerspace royalties and Meg carrying them
both, the Quaid boys could drink away their days as Hollywood's poor
man's Sheens, Carradines, Penns or Howards.
But no.
Meg Ryan had to go and make a little movie called Proof of Life and
fall in lust with her bloated Australian co-star, Russel Crowe. She
leaves her alcoholic husband behind, and at the epicenter of that
divorce is Randy Quaid and his career. Dennis goes on to make a few
disaster movies but can't really seem to get his older brother Randy,
who had more early success as an actor, anything better than Christmas
Vacation 2: Cousin Eddie's Island Adventure which most definitely went
straight to thrift store shelves across the country.
Which is essentially where I found Kart Racer.
We never really find out what happens to his wife, why he suddenly
decides to support his son's interest in kart racing or how long he's
had a secret kart track in his garage but we watch it to the end. He
doesn't look like he's starving in the movie but he also doesn't look
like he's acting past a huge guttural laugh that doesn't seem to be a
part of the scene or sympathetic to his son's kart racing plight.
At least he's working. Kart Racer may not be the best way to get back
at at Russel Crowe but maybe two cents of that three dollars I spent on
the movie will find it's way to Randy Quaid, bringing him one step
closer to revenge on The Gladiator.
8 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
I don't know what's sadder..., 1 October 2006
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Author:
Ian from Ontario, Canada
I don't know what's sadder, the fact that this movie exists, or the
fact that people are complaining that its not realistic.
Racing movies are all the same, it doesn't matter what happens in the
first 80 minutes, because the hero will just pull ahead at the last
minute anyways. And the way they glamourized this sport was hilarious.
I mean, this is the same crap people are racing at theme parks and
carnivals, and they expect us to believe that it would draw crowds like
that? Hey I know, let's make a movie about how some underdog unicyclist
has to reconnect with his father and then perceiver to win the Unicycle
Cup. At the last second he'll put it all on the line, pull ahead, and
win it all.
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