An overworked dad, missing out on his kids growing, takes an opportunity to start a "family business" thinking it will draw his family closer together - That is just mistake number one.An overworked dad, missing out on his kids growing, takes an opportunity to start a "family business" thinking it will draw his family closer together - That is just mistake number one.An overworked dad, missing out on his kids growing, takes an opportunity to start a "family business" thinking it will draw his family closer together - That is just mistake number one.
Kim Avery
- Restaurant Patron
- (as Kimberly Avery)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaChris Kelly plays the voice of the race announcer. He is part of the morning show duo known as the Two Guys Named Chris or 2GNC on the radio station Rock 92 out of Greensboro North Carolina.
- GoofsAfter connecting the "broken line of communication" on the engine of the Charger, Jeremy is able to successfully start the car. The sound of the engine turning over was that of a small block Chevy, not a Mopar starter of that vintage.
- Crazy credits"No Animals, People, or race cars were hurt in the making of this movie... Well, a few race cars got dinged... but they were fine and racing the following week... except for the one we flipped - but we planned that. Oh yeah - and there was a splinter, and 2 cases of indigestion. But really, that's it."
- ConnectionsReferenced in Talking Dead: Dead or Alive Or (2018)
Featured review
This is not a R rated film but one you can actually take kids to. The actors were great with a very PG script (any one of the veteran actors can be seen in big budget films) with just enough hints along the way to kind help set up the ending without being heavy-handed and making it with a nice twist that one might not see coming.
The best part is the use of a real track and it looks like they hired the local drivers and their cars for the race scenes with maybe 10 seconds in total of stock footage from the same track of actual racing to get some large crowd shots. Almost every shot looked like actual full speed racing especially on the corners. They actually looked like they were racing, trading paint and sliding in those corners.
The fans were likely local race fans and there were quite a few of them so it appears the movie shoot was a big deal for the track, the drivers and their fans and they certainly came out when asked to be part of this movie.
It appears that between the drivers and the movie director, they put on a show that enabled them to get some great crowd shots because the fans looked like any race night at the local dirt track. The director also did not have to use obvious movie tricks to make the crowd look larger (that always fail); that was a huge plus for this type of film.
I can not emphasize how much better the race scenes are compared to the usual low-speed Hollywood fake stuff one normally sees in films like this. The only way it would have been more convincing would have been a lot more trading paint and intentional spin-outs, but it would have been a little more hard to make Ratzenberger into a bad guy if they really portrayed the kind of racing that would really occur when $50,000 purses are on the line. But I doubt the movie budget would have withstood the price the car owners would have wanted and the cost of the repairs to the cars after the movie was shot for that kind of racing to be shot.
- scocope-654-771165
- Jan 1, 2020
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Filming locations
- Elkin, North Carolina, USA(Friendship Motor Speedway)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
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