To love and purity! (Almost thought it was a smack

Bernita 2022-04-20 09:01:16

Ken Miles is a pure human being, and I think that's why Shelby is willing to vouch for him or even overrun the company. The title of the film is sloppy. In fact, it is not Ford v. Ferrari at all, nor is it a young guy who won the championship. It is a person who likes racing cars and loves racing cars. He has the opportunity to engage in what he likes. The villain is not the Ferrari team or the boss, but the bureaucracy represented by Ford itself. In order to better sell cars to participate in the competition, in order to improve the brand reputation, Ken Miles, who has a super advantage, is required to slow down to ensure that three Ford cars cross the finish line at the same time. In the end, Ken Miles missed the chance to become the triple crown champion, and the accident two months later gave him no chance. Bureaucracy and intrigues are dragging their feet. Is it necessary? There are no nouns or professionalisms in the modified camera lens. It is the driver and designer Ken himself who runs lap after lap, improving little by little. Every time he turns, delivers fuel, and shifts, the lens expresses the person's love and focus. There is nothing meaningless in the lens, and the narrative before and after can find echoes and foreshadowing. I was a little surprised to see Ken slow down on the straights at Le Mans! Obviously a Ken who doesn't care about others, he actually slowed down on the track he loves. No one knew what Ken was thinking, but he compromised, maybe to make it harder for his friend Shelby, or maybe more. When he knew that he could not be regarded as a champion, he was stunned, but he seemed to let it go. Instead, he comforted his friend. *Come back next year*, damn this is really a flag! The first 1/3 of this film almost thought it was a boring film. If you want to find exciting beauties, sports cars, and bang bang, just turn it off. What you see here is a person, a pure person with extreme love. I am too old to watch this film, "Seven thousand revolutions is a node, everything in front of you is gone", at this moment you are you, what you are doing is achieved by you, not obsessed with a certain name, a certain name A champion, a business success.

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Extended Reading
  • Garett 2022-03-23 09:01:23

    As an advertisement? The story of get screwed over by stupid client's stupid politics is full of resonance.

  • Hailee 2022-03-24 09:01:22

    Interestingly, the first part of 2014 is Ron Howard's "Fast Wind"; the first part of 2020 is Mangold's "Fast Car King", both of which were unveiled as racing movies. It is completely coincidental and absolutely not intentional. It is not too long at all, the small orgasm is constant, and the palms are sweating. Regardless of how the business logic pushes the "things" behind the scenes, I am more concerned about how "people" deal with themselves and operate in a situation where there are pits everywhere and it is almost impossible to revitalize them. What is the craftsman spirit, that is, the "craftsman spirit" in Japanese? In fact, it is the pure (pure) of Ken Miles when facing "things", asking himself "Who are you" at any time; regardless of the hustle and bustle of the outside world, the judgments and cold eyes of others, "There is one thing in my heart that belongs to my own. "Perfect track"; is "At 7000 rpm, everything disappears at extreme speed, you can only stay with your own heartbeat". In the end, one sentence: is a way for you to keep your soul in this world.

Ford v Ferrari quotes

  • [while racing at Willow Springs, Gurney notices Miles' broken windshield]

    Dan Gurney: Hey, Ken. What happened to your shield?

    Ken Miles: New design.

  • [Henry Ford II enters the assembly plant]

    Henry Ford II: Shut it down, Mr. Beebe.

    [Beebe turns around and faces the head engineer]

    Leo Beebe: John.

    [head engineer nods and shuts down the assembly line]

    Henry Ford II: Hear that? That's the sound of the Ford Motor Company out of business.

    [Henry II walks around]

    Henry Ford II: IN 1899, my grandfather, Henry 'By God' Ford, was walking home from Edison Illumination after working a double shift. He was ruminating. That morning, he had himself an idea that changed the world. Sixty-five years, and 47 million automobiles later, what shall be his legacy? Getting it in the tail pipe from a Chevy Impala.

    [workers chuckle]

    Henry Ford II: Here's what I want you to do. Walk home.

    [workers go silent]

    Henry Ford II: While you're walking, I want you to ruminate. Man comes to my office with an idea, that man keeps his job. Rest of you, second-best losers... stay home. You don't belong at Ford.