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THE WORLD' S
FASTEST INDIAN
(PG-13, 127 minutes) |
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The life and triumph of Burt
Munro, the elderly Kiwi man who, at the far from spritely age
of 68, broke motorcycle racing records in Utah, has fueled
director Roger Donaldson's creative energy for years. In the
early 1970s, just a few years after Munro's incredible
triumph, Donaldson directed OFFERINGS TO THE GOD OF SPEED, a
documentary on the sensational senior. Here, with the help of
the fine actors Anthony Hopkins and Diane Ladd, the director
brings the story to vivid, dramatic life yet again,
constructing a gripping and inspirational narrative.
Hopkins's Munro is a rich and magnetic character, a man who
wears his notable physical ailments (which include an
embarrassing prostate condition and deficient eardrums) like
quirky idiosyncrasies rather than debilitating defects. An
active playboy, Munro is a lovable character in his small New
Zealand town, an attractively unique old man with a zest for
life and a love of his vintage motorcycle - a bright red 1920
Indian model. After racing his own times obsessively every
day, he becomes determined to live out his dream of
participating in the annual Speed Week motorcycle event at
Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats. Through local support and
innovative fundraising, Munro is finally able to afford the
long nautical journey across the world to Mormon-land and,
beating all the incredible odds, not only enter the race but
break its records with a jaw-dropping speed of 201 miles an
hour. Besides telling a classic tale of individual triumph,
THE WORLD'S FASTEST INDIAN offers a sociological look at the
American West of the late 1960s, an iconic landscape peppered
with colorful characters that include a wizened Native
American and a generous drag queen, both of whom help the
eccentric elder on his quixotic quest.
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