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On the actor's quest to make his 1971 auto-racing film Le Mans. Cars 3: 2017 Animated Sports car Sequel to Cars and Cars 2: Logan Lucky: 2017 Comedy Stock car A group of people attempt a heist of the Charlotte Motor Speedway on a racing day. Pegasus: 2019 Comedy Rallying Chinese comedy about a former rally driver on his comeback trail Blink of ...
A. American auto racing films (5 C, 264 P) Animated films about auto racing (1 C, 20 P) Argentine auto racing films (3 P)
Catch Me If You Can (1989 film) The Checkered Flag (1926 film) Checkered Flag (film) Checkered Flag or Crash. The Checkered Flag (1963 film) The Choppers. Circle Track Summer. The Circuit (2008 film) Climb Dance.
List of films. The First Auto (1927), about the transition from horses to cars for transportation, and the rift it causes in a family. The Crowd Roars (1932), James Cagney stars as a race care driver in this 1st sound car racing film. Death Drives Through (1935), the protagonist is a race-car driver.
English. Box office. $152,200 [1] Snake & Mongoose is a 2013 American sports drama film directed by Wayne Holloway, starring Jesse Williams and Richard Blake as drag racers Don "The Snake" Prudhomme and Tom "The Mongoose" McEwen, respectively. [2][3] The film received a limited theatrical release in 20 cities between August 9 and November 4, 2013.
Death Race 2000 is a 1975 cult action film. It stars David Carradine, Simone Griffeth, Sylvester Stallone, Louisa Moritz, and Don Steele, and was directed by Paul Bartel. In the near future, the ultimate sporting event is the Death Race. Contestants score points for running people down as they speed across the country.
Lightning McQueen, formerly known as Montgomery "Monty" McQueen, (voiced by Owen Wilson in the films, Cars on the Road, video game adaption, Kinect Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure, and Lego The Incredibles, Ben Rausch in Cars 3: Driven to Win, Keith Ferguson in most video games), [1] is a custom-built racecar who competes in the Piston Cup Racing Series.
English. Box office. $14.6 million (US/Canada) [1] Winning is a 1969 American Panavision action drama sports film directed by James Goldstone and starring Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward and Robert Wagner. The film is about a race car driver who aspires to win the Indianapolis 500. A number of race car drivers and people associated with racing ...