The Flying Scotsman (2006)
Director: Douglas Mackinnon
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
Working-class background? Check. Aging mentor with shattered dreams? Check. Biased sports federation with plans to thwart your protagonist? It’s all there: You’ve got yourself an inspirational sports movie—based on a true story, of course. The most original thing about The Flying Scotsman is that its protagonist was successful from his first, unlikely foray into professional competition, which means the movie peaks in its first hour and has nowhere to go but down.The athlete in question is Graeme Obree (Miller), a self-taught Scottish cyclist who developed a custom aerodynamic bike, pioneered an efficient hands-to-chest riding position and in 1993 broke the world one-hour distance record, only to be railroaded by a cycling federation—here embodied by a lone, sneering Bavarian bureaucrat—that didn’t like the way he rode. (Indeed, at some point after the movie ends, the “Superman” position Obree later adopted was banned.)
He also suffered from depression, an issue the movie raises and then
summarily drops, the better to add more cycling scenes. (Did he get
over it? Does he still have it?) Emphasizing teamwork, Scotsman
shows how Obree’s wife (Fraser), manager (Boyd) and preacher friend
(Cox) were crucial to his success. The most evocative scenes involve
their skepticism at his bicycle designs, which include bearings built
out of dryer parts. But the significance of his achievement is never
clarified; to us, Obree’s just another rider, trapped in the
movie-uplift gearwork.
Author: Ben Kenigsberg
Time Out Chicago Issue 114: May 3–9, 2007
Cast & crew
Director: Douglas Mackinnon
Cast: Jonny Lee Miller, Laura Fraser, Billy Boyd, Brian Cox, Morven Christie, Niall Fulton, Steven Berkoff full cast
Genre(s): Drama
Rated: PG-13
Duration: 102 mins
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