The full title of Brad Pitt’s new Formula One racing film is F1 the Movie, which is helpful, given the sheer range of F1-themed programming there is, from livestreamed races to documentary series. But it’s also a little misleading. There’s been no shortage of memorable F1 movies over the years, like the 1967 Grand Prix and the 1971 Steve McQueen drama Le Mans. Among more recent titles, I’m a big fan of Rush, about the real-life racing rivals James Hunt and Niki Lauda, and Senna, a wrenching documentary portrait of the three-time Formula One world champion Ayrton Senna.
It’s probably too early to welcome F1 into that pantheon, but this slick, precision-tooled entertainment is clearly gunning for a spot. The movie, directed by Joseph Kosinski, is hugely enjoyable and dazzlingly well-made. And it does for the 61-year-old Brad Pitt what Kosinski’s last film, Top Gun: Maverick, did for Tom Cruise: It casts him as a stubborn outsider who shows he’s still got a surprise and maybe even a triumph up his sleeve.
Pitt plays Sonny Hayes, who was a rising Formula One star in the ’90s, until a devastating crash sidelined his career. Thirty years later, Sonny is a professional gambler and occasional race-car driver for hire. He’ll drive for any team that needs him, not for the chump change he gets paid, but for his enduring love of the sport.
The plot kicks into gear when Ruben, an old friend and racing buddy, played by a boisterous Javier Bardem, shows up out of the blue and begs Sonny to drive for his struggling Formula One racing team, Apex. Sonny reluctantly agrees and heads to Apex headquarters in London, but immediately clashes with the team’s other driver, the much younger Joshua Pearce, played by Damson Idris.
Joshua is a bit of a hothead, and he resents being tied to a has-been like Sonny. But Sonny, whom Pitt plays with a signature mix of aloofness and swagger, has years more experience, and he knows how to use that experience to get under Joshua’s skin. As the film leaps from one Grand Prix race to another — the destinations include Monza, Italy; Las Vegas; and Abu Dhabi — the men’s rivalry heats up, on and off the course. At one point, Sonny pulls a move that ends up wrecking both his and Joshua’s cars, sending Ruben into an understandable fury.


