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Madness on Wheels: Rallying's Craziest Years (2012)

GENRESDocumentary
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Denise CookeJohn DavenportTony PondPeter Foubister
DIRECTOR
Richard Heap,John L. Matthews

SYNOPSICS

Madness on Wheels: Rallying's Craziest Years (2012) is a English movie. Richard Heap,John L. Matthews has directed this movie. Denise Cooke,John Davenport,Tony Pond,Peter Foubister are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2012. Madness on Wheels: Rallying's Craziest Years (2012) is considered one of the best Documentary movie in India and around the world.

In the 1980s rallying was more popular than Formula 1. 'Group B' machines had taken the world by storm. De-regulation opened the way for the most exciting cars ever to hit the motor sport scene. Nothing like it has ever happened since. 'This is the fastest rallying there has ever been' - Peter Foubister. For four wild and crazy years manufacturers scrambled to build ever more powerful cars to be driven by fearless mavericks who could handle the extreme power. The sport was heading out of control and the unregulated mayhem ended abruptly in 1986 after a series of horrific tragedies. This is the story of when fans, ambition, politics and cars collided.

Madness on Wheels: Rallying's Craziest Years (2012) Reviews

  • A Familiar Tale of Hubris and Self-Interest

    l_rawjalaurence2014-08-02

    In the mid-Eighties rallying was an incredibly popular sport, attracting attendances larger than those of Formula One. Spectators loved to see the sight of cars speeding round a variety of tracks, while enjoying the daredevil thrill of getting close up to the cars and running out of the way just as they were about to get knocked down. The manufacturers responded to this popularity by creating more and more powerful cars, secure in the knowledge that if they achieved success, the sales of said cars would shoot up. First Lancia, then Audi and finally Peugeot enjoyed successes: it was mostly due to their achievements in rallying that the Peugeot company was saved from financial ruin. Richard Heap and John L. Matthews' documentary captures something of the daredevil spirit of those days, where the manufacturers surpassed themselves in creating new models, and the drivers enjoyed the thrill of driving them. Once-famous figures such as Ari Vatanen, Walter Röhrl and Michele Mouton recall how much they enjoyed their work, even though they were continually faced with the risk of serious injury. As the cars grew more powerful, so the concern for safety - of drivers and spectators alike - decreased. The number of accidents increased, reaching a peak in 1986 in Portugal, when a car plowed into the spectators, causing multiple deaths. From then on, rallying's days of mass popularity were numbered. The sport continues to this day, but it lacks the risk-element that made it so popular three decades ago. What MADNESS ON WHEELS reveals is how hubris and self-interest on the part of those involved in overseeing the sport, as well as the manufacturers themselves, led to the profusion of accidents. No one really cared about safety, so long as the cars went faster and faster and the crowds kept coming. When the inevitable happened, the organizers and the manufacturers were quick to blame one another without really considering how they had been solely responsible for the tragedies. If nothing else, the documentary warns us about the risks of unrestrained capitalism and its relentless pursuit of success at any price.

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