1 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Like A Bat Out Of Invercargill., 28 July 2006
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
To Go Faster: that was the single-minded purpose of Herbert J. "Burt"
Munro (1899 1978), whose life story was an "inspirational movie" just
waiting to happen.
The tagline boasts, "based on one hell of a true story," justifiably it
would seem, as Munro a fearless, free-spirited New Zealand rider who
broke land speed records in his 60s - was one hell of a character.
*The World's Fastest Indian* is the quixotic tale of Munro's first trek
from his provincial home town of Invercargill, New Zealand, to Utah's
Bonneville Salt Flats, to tilt at the land speed record in what he
hopes will become The World's Fastest Indian his modified 1920 Indian
Scout motorcycle. Reading like the archetypal Hollywood tearjerker, it
is fortunate that archives of Munro interviews and riding footage still
exists, to corroborate that his tale was indeed a real life template
for underdog movies.
As with any "true" story, director-writer Roger Donaldson (whose resumé
is a laundry list of recognizable films: The Bounty, No Way Out,
Cocktail, Species, Dante's Peak) composites events and characters to
squeeze Munro's storied life into 127 minutes of fish out of water hell
on wheels. Lifting many of the anecdotes and dialog from Munro himself
(from a documentary Donaldson directed in 1973, which appears on the
DVD: *Offerings to the God of Speed*), Donaldson admits to Munro's
legend blurring over the years, "There were many stories that I'd heard
that just could not have been true and then there were stories that I
knew to be true that were hard to believe."
Anthony Hopkins, as Munro, gives a startling performance (for his utter
divergence from all things Hannibal or Uptight Butler), paying supreme
tribute to Munro by burying himself in a role which is part
absent-minded professor, part master mechanic, all nutjob the type of
guy who, when told to mow his thigh-high lawn, torches it with
gasoline, not through any malice, but with an ingenuousness that would
somehow endear him to all he came in contact with.
The able supporting cast reads like a B-Actor cameo call: Chris
Williams, Bruce Greenwood, Paul Rodriguez, Christopher Lawford, and
notable appearances by Annie Whittle and Diane Ladd, to further the
fact that "dirty old men need love too."
Accompanied by the Indian he worked on for decades like a lover,
Munro's quest would see him paying his way across the Pacific as cook
onboard a tramp steamer, using a log as a wheel when the desert highway
claims his makeshift trailer, choking down a Native American's gift of
powdered dog's balls for his prostate, stealing petrol from the
official race supply, letting his tailpipe char his calf during a
record attempt rather than stopping, battling his own ailing heart,
butting heads with regulation-raunchy officials and the most horrible
trial of all spending two nights in Hollywood.
Was Munro such a yokel that, instead of finding a hotel in Long Beach
(where he would pick up his bike from Customs the next day), he would
rather trek all the way north into Hollywood for the night just to "see
film stars"? Apparently so. With scenes that read like a clunky
*Crocodile Dundee*, Munro winds up at the Flamingo Sunset hotel,
promptly getting ripped off by a fake flower-girl, propositioned by an
old hooker and meeting a transvestite within the space of two minutes.
(When I first moved to Hollywood, it took me three whole months to get
taken by a small-time hustler, propositioned by a skanky hooker and
befriend a she-male.)
Cutting down on the weight of his bike - and against all regulations -
Munro saw no need even for brakes ("I'm planning on going, not
stopping") or a parachute ("I'm not planning on bailing out"). From the
poverty-stricken, ascetic life he led, it was no wonder he was
eternally ready to die with his boots on. If Munro had nothing else, he
had balls. And plenty of 'em. Which accounts for his simple philosophy,
"You live more in five minutes on a bike like this going flat out than
some people live in a lifetime." And also accounts for the trail of
bodacious, wrinkled squeeze he left in his wake (Annie Whittle and
Diane Ladd).
For those who believe in planetary alignments and other such nonsense,
the whole solar system must have conspired to aid Burt Munro in those
days leading to the 1962 Bonneville Speed Week, as fortuitous event
after fortuitous event nudges him towards his goal, everyone's heart
melting over Burt's cause (from competitors to race officials alike),
creating a syrupy Disney contagion that seems non-believable at times,
but which must have some basis in reality, as the shattered records are
testament to this broke, obsessive, neighborhood nuisance becoming a
living legend.
Some of Munro's land speed records still stand to this day.
It's a sobering thought that there must be thousands of fanatical old
tinkerers out there who obsess over seemingly ridiculous, esoteric
pastimes, any of which, with the right set of circumstances, could land
them in history books.
Burt Munro just happened to be the wrong man in the right place at the
fastest time.
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1 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Like A Bat Out Of Invercargill., 28 July 2006
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
To Go Faster: that was the single-minded purpose of Herbert J. "Burt" Munro (1899 1978), whose life story was an "inspirational movie" just waiting to happen.
The tagline boasts, "based on one hell of a true story," justifiably it would seem, as Munro a fearless, free-spirited New Zealand rider who broke land speed records in his 60s - was one hell of a character.
*The World's Fastest Indian* is the quixotic tale of Munro's first trek from his provincial home town of Invercargill, New Zealand, to Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats, to tilt at the land speed record in what he hopes will become The World's Fastest Indian his modified 1920 Indian Scout motorcycle. Reading like the archetypal Hollywood tearjerker, it is fortunate that archives of Munro interviews and riding footage still exists, to corroborate that his tale was indeed a real life template for underdog movies.
As with any "true" story, director-writer Roger Donaldson (whose resumé is a laundry list of recognizable films: The Bounty, No Way Out, Cocktail, Species, Dante's Peak) composites events and characters to squeeze Munro's storied life into 127 minutes of fish out of water hell on wheels. Lifting many of the anecdotes and dialog from Munro himself (from a documentary Donaldson directed in 1973, which appears on the DVD: *Offerings to the God of Speed*), Donaldson admits to Munro's legend blurring over the years, "There were many stories that I'd heard that just could not have been true and then there were stories that I knew to be true that were hard to believe."
Anthony Hopkins, as Munro, gives a startling performance (for his utter divergence from all things Hannibal or Uptight Butler), paying supreme tribute to Munro by burying himself in a role which is part absent-minded professor, part master mechanic, all nutjob the type of guy who, when told to mow his thigh-high lawn, torches it with gasoline, not through any malice, but with an ingenuousness that would somehow endear him to all he came in contact with.
The able supporting cast reads like a B-Actor cameo call: Chris Williams, Bruce Greenwood, Paul Rodriguez, Christopher Lawford, and notable appearances by Annie Whittle and Diane Ladd, to further the fact that "dirty old men need love too."
Accompanied by the Indian he worked on for decades like a lover, Munro's quest would see him paying his way across the Pacific as cook onboard a tramp steamer, using a log as a wheel when the desert highway claims his makeshift trailer, choking down a Native American's gift of powdered dog's balls for his prostate, stealing petrol from the official race supply, letting his tailpipe char his calf during a record attempt rather than stopping, battling his own ailing heart, butting heads with regulation-raunchy officials and the most horrible trial of all spending two nights in Hollywood.
Was Munro such a yokel that, instead of finding a hotel in Long Beach (where he would pick up his bike from Customs the next day), he would rather trek all the way north into Hollywood for the night just to "see film stars"? Apparently so. With scenes that read like a clunky *Crocodile Dundee*, Munro winds up at the Flamingo Sunset hotel, promptly getting ripped off by a fake flower-girl, propositioned by an old hooker and meeting a transvestite within the space of two minutes. (When I first moved to Hollywood, it took me three whole months to get taken by a small-time hustler, propositioned by a skanky hooker and befriend a she-male.)
Cutting down on the weight of his bike - and against all regulations - Munro saw no need even for brakes ("I'm planning on going, not stopping") or a parachute ("I'm not planning on bailing out"). From the poverty-stricken, ascetic life he led, it was no wonder he was eternally ready to die with his boots on. If Munro had nothing else, he had balls. And plenty of 'em. Which accounts for his simple philosophy, "You live more in five minutes on a bike like this going flat out than some people live in a lifetime." And also accounts for the trail of bodacious, wrinkled squeeze he left in his wake (Annie Whittle and Diane Ladd).
For those who believe in planetary alignments and other such nonsense, the whole solar system must have conspired to aid Burt Munro in those days leading to the 1962 Bonneville Speed Week, as fortuitous event after fortuitous event nudges him towards his goal, everyone's heart melting over Burt's cause (from competitors to race officials alike), creating a syrupy Disney contagion that seems non-believable at times, but which must have some basis in reality, as the shattered records are testament to this broke, obsessive, neighborhood nuisance becoming a living legend.
Some of Munro's land speed records still stand to this day.
It's a sobering thought that there must be thousands of fanatical old tinkerers out there who obsess over seemingly ridiculous, esoteric pastimes, any of which, with the right set of circumstances, could land them in history books.
Burt Munro just happened to be the wrong man in the right place at the fastest time.
(Movie Maniacs, visit: poffysmoviemania.com)
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