Damon plays the legendary American driver and car designer Carroll Shelby, who won Le Mans in 1959 but gets sidelined from driving due to a bad heart.
If Damon is a bad boy, then Bale is a bad-bad boy, a role perfectly in his wheelhouse, another intense, almost-over-the-top role.
Le Mans by the mid-60s was a plaything of Ferrari, which dominated year after year. Lee Iacocca, then an executive with the Ford Motor Company, convinces his boss, Henry Ford II, to enter the racing world and win Le Mans — not necessarily for glory but to make the company appealing to young buyers.
The screenwriters Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth and Jason Keller have fleshed out the tale with glimpses into the personal costs to Miles’ family (the enchanting Caitriona Balfe as his wife and their young son.) Their quiet moments at home may be a little hokey but are a welcome relief from the roar of the track. The film at some points should be called “Ford v Ford” as Shelby and Miles butt heads against an army of Ford executives in Brooks Brothers suits.
The film then goes to the 24 Hours of Le Mans — fake grainy TV and radio broadcasts help set up the tension — and you can almost smell the burnt rubber. “She’s hot, mate. Crack on!” one driver says of the Ford’s GT40 Mark II. Enzo Ferrari glowers from his box in the stands and the filmmakers don’t bother to translate everything the Italian team says, so clear is the acting.
Many of the songs we hear are well placed — it’s got a soundtrack of The Animals, The Sparkles and The Quarrymen.
Perhaps the only thing overshadowing the two Oscar-winning lead actors in this film are the cars. They’re truly drool-worthy. But be gentle on your gas pedal on your way home.
Ford v Ferrari, a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG-13 for “some language and peril.” Running time: 152 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.