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Williams

  • 2017
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Williams (2017)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:02
1 Video
7 Photos
MotorsportSports DocumentaryBiographyDocumentarySport

Focusing on the career and family of its legendary founder Sir Frank Williams, the British sports documentary tells the extraordinary story of the Williams Formula 1 team, from its inception... Read allFocusing on the career and family of its legendary founder Sir Frank Williams, the British sports documentary tells the extraordinary story of the Williams Formula 1 team, from its inception to the present day.Focusing on the career and family of its legendary founder Sir Frank Williams, the British sports documentary tells the extraordinary story of the Williams Formula 1 team, from its inception to the present day.

  • Director
    • Morgan Matthews
  • Stars
    • Jamie Berry
    • Emily Bevan
    • Keith Botsford
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    4.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Morgan Matthews
    • Stars
      • Jamie Berry
      • Emily Bevan
      • Keith Botsford
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:02
    Trailer

    Photos6

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Jamie Berry
    • Self - Brother of Ginny Williams
    Emily Bevan
    Emily Bevan
    • Ginny Williams
    Keith Botsford
    • Self - Writer
    • (archive footage)
    Valtteri Bottas
    Valtteri Bottas
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    David Brodie
    • Self - Frank's Best Friend
    Roger Bunting
    • Self - Frank's Friend & Flatmate
    • (archive footage)
    Pamela Cockerill
    • Self - Writer & Friend of Ginny Williams
    Piers Courage
    • Self - Frank's Friend, Flatmate & F1 Driver
    • (archive footage)
    Chris Cox
    • David Brodie
    Frank Dernie
    • Self - Former Williams Engineer
    Jenny Funnell
    Jenny Funnell
    • Pamela Cockerill
    Howden Ganley
    • Self - Williams Driver 1973
    Lewis Hamilton
    Lewis Hamilton
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Patrick Head
    • Self - Former Williams Engineering Director
    • (as Sir Patrick Head)
    Alan Jones
    • Self - Williams Driver 1978-1981
    Charles Lucas
    • Self - Frank's Friend & Flatmate
    • (archive footage)
    Nigel Mansell
    Nigel Mansell
    • Self
    Felipe Massa
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    • Director
      • Morgan Matthews
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    7.64.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8TheMovieDiorama

    Williams uses Formula 1 to convey an aspiring family story.

    As an avid fan of the sport and typically enthralled by documentaries, this review might have some slight bias. I must profess that you do not have to be a petrol-head to enjoy this, it is incredibly accessible to everyone. Having said that...wow! This actually might just be the first time I teared up to a documentary. Chronicling the life of Sir Frank Williams, founder of the Williams construction team for Formula 1, journeying through both the sport and his family affairs. Initially, I underestimated what I was in store for. A typical sporting documentary this is not. Matthews carefully portrayed Williams' personal backstory and intertwined it with his addiction and aspiration to the motor world in what is a perfect equilibrium. The two sides bounce off of each other where any incidents or scenarios in either life affect the other, as if Williams' story is its own ecological structure. Mesmerisingly breathtaking and incredibly moving, honestly. One man's ambition has lead him to create one of the sport's best engineering teams, and this film illustrates just how much of an impact he has made. "The accident" that occurred is intricately embedded to showcase his unstoppable personality. It didn't deter him away, he came back more focussed than ever and I really admire the way this film captures that. It's never melodramatic, it's an honest frank (pardon the pun...) look into a broken family. It doesn't stop there, it dabbles into the lack of female empowerment within the sport and how his daughter is a leading figure, not just in the team, but the entirety of F1 racing. There is a touching moment towards the end where his daughter reads a book to him about her mother, and for a moment I was stunned. The ferocious amount of emotion that was conveyed overwhelmed me. The tangible heartache for this family is astronomical. I would've like to have seen more of the racing and it could've been cut shorter for a much tighter narrative. However, the pace speeds along to an emotionally complex finish line with grace.
    9chrissatchell

    An emotional insight into a raging workaholic

    I went into this expecting to learn more about the team 'Williams', but I found myself learning more about Frank, the man, and the family, than anything else, but don't misinterpret that as a bad thing.

    I'm an avid F1 fan, I have been since the days of Michael Schumacher in a Benetton, but being of a relatively young age I didn't know an awful lot about the Williams team other than whom ran the time, who drove for them and that they were British.

    The documentary touches on many insights into how the team came to form, struggles within the family and I think most importantly, the relationship between Frank and Ginny. It does a fantastic job of showing you enough of both sides to walk away from it with a much better knowledge of what it was like for everyone involved and it doesn't pretend to pull any punches.

    There's comedic moments where Frank will recount something in such a blunt and unforgiving manner that you can't help but laugh but then there's moments where you feel great sadness for them.

    It's beautifully shot and the score is excellent, I'd HIGHLY recommend this to motor sports fans, but I'd also recommend it to those who aren't, because it's a poignant reminder of struggle no matter who you are or where you're from.

    9/10
    7Prismark10

    Being Frank

    One thing I learnt early on in this documentary was that Sir Frank Williams is from the north east and came from a poor working class background.

    This documentary could have explored a lot of areas about the Williams racing team. How in the early 1990s they dominated Formula 1 but Frank Williams could or would not keep hold of his best drivers.

    It was as if having the best car was enough for him and the driver's role was secondary.

    Wisely it concentrated on Frank Williams the man, his early years in racing and then up to his accident with the immediate aftermath.

    Williams is a great name in Formula One but the glory days are behind it. Frank Williams started out as a racer. A poor man living with posh Eton educated racers.

    However although Frank loved speed he was not a skilled enough racer. He made money in spare parts, buying old racing cars, refurbishing them and selling them on, usually back to the people he bought it off from in the first place. In short he was a bit of a hustler.

    Frank got enough money to start his own racing team in the late 1960s but he did not have enough money to keep it going. His cheques usually bounced.

    His first racing driver Piers Courage died in 1970 at the Dutch Grand Prix. An incident that still haunts him even now.

    Williams getting Patrick Head in his team in 1977 saw the team moving from making up the numbers to winners. They had the fastest car and won their first world driver's championship in 1980 with Alan Jones.

    In the 1980s the Williams team cemented their status as one of top outfits in F1. They had some of the best drivers but in 1986, tragedy struck as Frank Williams ended up paralysed in a car accident in the south of France.

    A traumatic time for the Williams racing team and his family. It was his wife Virginia who first had to fight to keep him alive and then keep him going so he could return to his team wheelchair bound.

    It is clear in this documentary that like other F1 team owners. Frank Williams is a driven man with a narrow vision. He eats, breathes and lives for his team.

    Family was a distant second. I think he preferred to go on a long run than spend times with his family. He wooed his wife Virginia who left her husband for him. After their wedding he went straight to work, there was no time for a celebratory lunch.

    Virginia took her children to Spain for a holiday for 16 years, Frank did not accompany them once. You felt that this has caused issues with some of his children.

    Even Virginia was upset that once the team became successful, Frank had his head turned by the beautiful women who hung around Formula 1.

    Frank Williams shows few emotions and claims to have little regrets about the past and his accident which was his fault. I find that doubtful.

    Now widowed he has little time for his family home. He still lives and breaths F1 even though the Williams team is a shadow of what it used to be.

    This was a warts and all documentary. It was truthful up to a point. I did sense there were some family issues that were held back. Obviously I sensed Frank Williams was reluctantly to talk about the death of Ayrton Senna.
    9peterrichboy

    Powerful moving film of an F1 family dynasty

    Having watched several documentaries over the years on legends of motor sport. Graham Hill Jackie Stewart Jim Clarke and now Sir Frank Williams. They all strike me as extremely driven determined and selfish individuals who put there need to increase the speed of their cars above all else and in Frank Williams most of all his family. They always came second to his F1 team. Despite having a remarkable wife who stuck by him despite numerous affairs and a near fatal accident that left him severely paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. In this insightful documentary we learn much about this remarkable man who took a struggling team on the point of bankruptcy to a multi million pound business winning several world titles along the way. We also learn much about his daughter Claire who herself has had difficult family decisions to make in her quest to become the most powerful woman in the male dominated world of Formula one. 9/10
    9Semisonic

    Beautiful, breathtaking and emotionally shattering

    How often to you come upon a documentary - a kind of film that can't afford to use fiction to draw emotions from - that makes you cry? Especially if you're not prone to crying at movies. Well, Williams was certainly my first experience of that sort, and that alone merits a high regard for this film. But that's definitely not the film's sole quality.

    There's something magical about Williams, both the film and Frank himself. Maybe that's the secret only the Brits possess, because everybody - and I mean _everybody_ - in this documentary looks as if they are professional actors: handsome, deep and oozing that charm of something really big going around. Or maybe that's the spell of Formula 1 working on me after all - even though I'm absolutely not a fan of F1 -, who knows.

    All I know is that the story this film tells is not simply about a certain racing team's ups and downs. It's not even about a certain man's personal ups and downs, even though those are quite big and dramatic on their own. It's a story of real people, a family, going through several decades of challenges life gives them, having to both overcome the problems coming from outside and deal with the way racing business shapes their lives as a husband, a wife, a daughter and a son.

    That Williams family, it's a peculiar one. If you enjoy reading people's characters, you'll find this film especially delightful, because, on many accounts, it feels like a confession for everyone involved. For Frank, who's been so obsessed with racing that he openly put his family to the second place of his life priorities. For Virginia, his wife, whose story of meeting and living with that man deserves a melodrama of its own but is given us without sugar dusting instead, with all the harsh details mentioned. For Claire, Frank and Ginny's daughter and the current Team Principle, who's been on a lifelong mission to prove herself worthy, as a woman and as a second child, of her father's shoes, against the preconceptions of the industry and the jealousy of a family member.

    That might actually be the reason why this film is so deeply touching. Because what that family has come through is so profoundly complex and at the same time so relatable, that no fiction movie screenwriter could have done a better job than what life itself did. And no professional actor could possibly convey as much emotion, both expressed and contained within, as those people did by just being sincere to themselves and to each other for us to watch. Especially Claire, who has to be as strong-willed as her dad but at the same time feels entitled to have emotions and attachments to something besides those roaring metal beasts. Her face, her voice, showing beautiful strength and determination, but at the same deep never-going sadness, is something that one could win an Oscar for, if only they were faking it instead of just living their life.

    Some things words just can't describe. So, whether you like deep psychological drama or are just a keen fan of this sport, make sure you don't miss this film. Can't guarantee that you'll deeply regret it otherwise, but, using the film's last line, it's certainly possible.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Williams Grand Prix Engineering has won: Constructors Championships 1980, 1981, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997. Drivers Championships 1980, 1982, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997.
    • Connections
      Features Formula 1 (1950)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 4, 2017 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • BBC Two (United Kingdom)
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Williams: F1 in the Blood
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • Curzon Film Distributors
      • Minnow Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $40,061
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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