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Connecticut Public TV to Broadcast LIME ROCK PARK: THE SECRET VALLEY OF RACING

Old 05-24-2001, 04:51 PM
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Lime Rock Park: The Secret Valley of Racing
Review by Mike Covello
AutoWeek Magazine
May 28, 2001, p. 41.

"Why is it that Hollywood has never been able to capture the real essence of racing?

Other than Grand Prix and Le Mans, most every movie has disappointed. As much as we love the exciting racing shots of the Ferrari 512s and the Porsche 917s, even McQueen's masterpiece falls to sub-par when the actors open their mouths and try to explain why men race.

On May 23 (at 9 p.m.) and May 27 (6 p.m.) Connecticut Public Television will present Chris Szwedo's Lime Rock Park: The Secret Valley of Racing. The greatest achievement of this 57-minute documentary is that it demystifies racing for anyone who ever wondered what drives a person to risk life and limb competing in fast cars.

For 18 months the writer/director/producer Szwedo filmed at Lime Rock in rain, hot sun, snow and freezing temperatures. These disparate, seasonal conditions carry the weight of the soul-searching narration with an ease that belies the effort involved. The beautiful Berkshire Hills sing the message of nature as eloquently as the racing luminaries in the film describe the depths of their racing passion.

Interviews with racing personalities Sam Posey, John Fitch, Skip Barber, Butch Leitzinger and others are the heart of the film. Their decades of experience provide racing insights that ring true for both the veteran racer and the casual observer. New converts can be the most zealous. Szwedo is one, and he authentically portrays the drama, the humanity and the pure fun of racing.

One viewer felt the film was powerful enough to popularize racing in the same way that Paul Newman's The Hustler brought pool from smoky rooms in questionable neighborhoods to a fixture in many suburban basements. (Yes, even Mr. Newman weighs in on the importance of Lime Rock in the international racing scene.)

Unlike many racing movies that try to generate excitement by thrusting you into the action immediately, Szwedo's film starts with a snowstorm that is gradually revealed to be blanketing a place normally only experienced in the warmer seasons. Tom Phillips' (PBS's The American Experience) score is both evocative and hypnotic; it is about as far away as you can get from ESPN's "sport music."

Skip Barber says, "Lime Rock doesn't look like a racetrack, it looks like a park." Its setting adds immeasurably to the racing experience for drivers and fans alike. Szwedo uses the changing seasons effectively as a metaphor for the rhythms of racing. We journey from the cold, speculative time of winter into the joys of seeing the surrounding hills explode with the new life of spring. And so the fledgling drivers are the first to be portrayed. The students at Skip Barber Racing School provide us with our introduction to some of the nuts and bolts of racing. Both Fitch and Posey are locals to the track, residing within a few minutes of Lime Rock Park. When we see them talking on camera, their love for the track and passion for racing provide some of the most memorable footage. The interviews come across as one-on-one conversations with viewers, rather than canned speeches that have been recited hundreds of times.

With summer come the big events and the throngs of fans. Lime Rock's history is presented, and track founder Jim Vail is portrayed as a construction worker with dreams that reach well beyond the boundaries of a road circling a gravel pit.

We see how Lime Rock has fulfilled the spirit of that vision, overcoming considerable obstacles along the way. Moving on to explore racers and their machines, the smoothness and precision needed to compete at the higher levels is conveyed without long exposition that dwells on technical terms or repetitive shots of the same cars. Mark Donohue speaks of the dangers of racing, his voice fresh, as if still with us today. To realize that Donohue's death shook Posey enough for him to give up major league racing is to feel the pangs of Mark's death anew.

For many people Lime Rock is at its best in the fall. The blazing colors, cooler temperatures and the sense of fleeting time give the Fall Vintage Festival and the NASCAR Busch North races a sense of accomplishment of a fruitful season, and a feeling of lingering sorrow for those bygone days of summer. Seeing John Fitch motoring off in his Fitch Phoenix draws the circle to a close.

The images, narration, interviews and music all weave together as a tapestry that is both entertaining and thought provoking. It will delight those racing fans who have grown up with Lime Rock during its 44 years of operation.

If you do not receive Connecticut Public Television, you have two choices. Either contact your local public television station and ask it to pick up this film for broadcast, or order your own copy.

See if you don't agree that McQueen and Szwedo may someday be commonly mentioned as film champions of our sport."

----------------------------------------------

LIME ROCK PARK: THE SECRET VALLEY OF RACING

Lime Rock Park Documentary
497 Lime Rock Road (Rt. 112)
Lakeville, CT 06033
(800) 722-3577
http://www.limerockmovie.com
$29.95 plus $3.50 shipping
(Connecticut residents add 6 percent sales tax)
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