Toronto Star

In praise of an old school thrill ride

Ford v Ferrari aims to deliver both spectacle and a sense of humanity

- JOSH ROTTENBERG

As a filmmaker, James Mangold has been behind the wheel of almost every kind of movie you can name, from the crime drama Cop Land to the western 3:10 to Yuma to the Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line to the comic-book blockbuste­r Logan.

Although the pictures have been wildly different, in each one, the basic challenge, as he sees it, has been the same.

“The real problem I try to solve across all these genre lines is: How do I hold you as an audience?” Mangold, 55, said a week ago at the Telluride Film Festival, where his latest movie, Ford v Ferrari, made its world premiere. “And how can I take the genre and continue to expand it?”

Set in the high-octane world of car racing, Ford v Ferrari — which premiered Monday at TIFF, ahead of its wide release on Nov. 15 — chronicles the real-life story of pioneering automotive designer Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon) and maverick British driver Ken Miles (Christian Bale), who were recruited by the staid Ford Motor Co. to try to unseat the perenniall­y dominant Ferrari at the 1966 Le Mans auto race.

Anchored by its two leads, the film — the type of old-fashioned, crowd-pleasing adult studio drama that is fast becoming an endangered species — will be closely watched as the very different kind of race that is Oscar season unfolds.

The day after the picture’s well-received premiere, Mangold spoke with The Los Angeles Times about how film directors are like race-car drivers, the state of movies for grown-ups and his genrehoppi­ng journey through Hollywood.

How nervous were you before that first screening?

We had test-screened the movie, and it had done well, but I didn’t know how it was going to play for the film-festival scene. It’s not an essentiall­y dark film, and there is in the postmodern age a kind of jaundice that people have where if you don’t have something (awful) to say about the world, then why are you saying it? But I think it’s gone well.

Some early reviews have used the phrase “old school” to describe this movie. Do you see it that way?

I love that. If I were a carpenter, I’d love it if you said the quality of my tables is old school. It would mean that there are beautiful joints and that things aren’t just tacked together. I live for that. It’s why I still make movies and have a harder time in television, because what I’m doing requires more time. I love the craft, and I love trying to put things together in a way that feels resonant.

What appealed to you about this story from the start?

I’m not essentiall­y a car obsessive, so my response to the story was really connecting to these characters. I had heard of Carroll Shelby, but I didn’t know anything of Ken Miles until I read the script for the first time. But I innately identified with him, and I instantly thought of Christian.

In a weird way, the racing scenes attract all the attention, but the real tough things are the in-between parts. In the race scenes, you’ve got the sound and the engines and the speed and the movement and the obvious stakes. That stuff I can do, and I love doing it in an inventive way. But it’s trying to hold the audience when the stakes are less driving, when you’re in a moment of intimacy and you aren’t being bounced along with music — that’s when I get really excited.

Though this movie is set in the world of auto racing, there’s also a way it could be seen as an allegory for the movie business, with the executives who want to play it safe trying to control the artists who are trying to push the boundaries. How much were you thinking about that while you were making it?

All the time. I saw a lot of parallels. I’ve had the come-toJesus meetings with the studio where they’re like, “This element of your movie must change or we’re not making it.” This was also a time in the ’60s when things were less tested. There was no computer modelling. You had to just on a hunch build a car and put a man in it and drive it and see if it works or explodes. Similarly, with movies, I miss a little bit those days when people went on their gut.

That said, this movie really brings home the insanity of driving at such high speeds over hours and hours on a hunch, particular­ly with the technology they had back then.

It’s crazy. They didn’t even have a roll bar. There was no thought applied to making the (driver’s) cabin safe. That all came later with computers and an understand­ing of crash patterns and stuff that just didn’t exist at that point.

But is it any more crazy than making movies? Like, what are we all doing? All these endeavours are kind of crazy, but they’re things we’re compelled to do.

Well, when you’re making a movie, you’re less likely to die in a giant fireball.

No, but you die other deaths making movies. (Laughs) There is a kind of body count in movies that is different. It’s competitiv­e and frightenin­g, and the pressure is intense. Whether it’s our own anxieties and neuroses, you do perceive it as a life-or-death struggle. This is what I love about Ken: To do your job well, you have to push all that awareness of the stakes out of your mind. Otherwise you get paralyzed.

This is the kind of big, entertaini­ng drama for grown-ups that used to be a mainstay of the studios and is now becoming more and more rare. I read that an agent told you, “You’d better enjoy this one because it’s the last one you’re going to get to make.” Do you feel that way?

That was said in jest, but they were serious in the sense that the whole business is in a moment of contractio­n, and it’s very hard to get movies made that don’t have some kind of built-in audience. Movies have kind of gotten segregated into “stupid and fun” or “intense and I’ll wait until home video.” That means that all of the dramas have almost no life theatrical­ly because the audience is waiting to watch them at home. And the only things that are thriving are tent poles with built-in sell-through or very bouncy, light, frothy things — and even those sometimes have a hard time if they’re too adult-themed.

Modern genre movies have become like a ride at a theme park. You never get close to anything. It’s just intoxicati­ng spectacle. I’m always thinking, “What if we can deliver the spectacle and deliver the quality human moments in the same experience?” Because if you don’t hold a movie with your characters, you have to keep getting louder and noisier and flying the camera around more just to hold the audience from detaching. When I see those kind of sensory-overload movies, I have a kind of narcolepti­c response where I start to spontaneou­sly fall asleep. It’s too much.

I am aware that there’s more at stake now, that if these don’t work, they’re not going to make them again. And I think it’s really important that we keep alive the ability to tell original stories.

You’ve had such an eclectic career, bouncing constantly among genres. Do you see a consistent through-line?

I try not to see a through-line because I think it wouldn’t be healthy for me. I think I’m attracted to character. We now get boxed in so quickly, whether it’s by the press or the business itself. We get put in the disco or rock ’n’ roll or rap or country slots in the record store. But so many of the filmmakers I admire moved from genre to genre.

My example always is that Billy Wilder didn’t make a funny film until his 16th film. So how can we even know what we’re good at? Or maybe what we’re good at is different things and carrying these energies back and forth.

We’re at a point now where speculatio­n about a movie’s awards potential starts the second its first festival screening ends. Is it hard to tune that out?

You have to tune it out. That horse race stuff — obviously, you guys have to report on it, but essentiall­y, every moment you’re talking about who’s ahead and who’s behind, you’re not talking about the movies. You have to get in a bubble and push it all away.

I think I’ve gotten better at that over the years. I’ve had movies that play well, and I’ve had movies that play less well. I’ve had movies that they think are not going to play well and they surprise you, and I’ve had movies that they think it’s going to be a home run and then it isn’t. And once you’ve lived through every one of these scenarios and you’re still here making movies, it makes you a little less frightened. You think, “I’ll probably be here tomorrow.”

This interview has been condensed and edited.

 ?? MERRICK MORTON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? James Mangold’s Ford v. Ferrari chronicles the real-life story of pioneering automotive designer Carroll Shelby and British driver Ken Miles, played by Christian Bale.
MERRICK MORTON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS James Mangold’s Ford v. Ferrari chronicles the real-life story of pioneering automotive designer Carroll Shelby and British driver Ken Miles, played by Christian Bale.
 ?? AARON HARRIS THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mangold, who’s made everything from crime dramas to westerns, says he appreciate­s reviews that call his latest work “old school.”
AARON HARRIS THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Mangold, who’s made everything from crime dramas to westerns, says he appreciate­s reviews that call his latest work “old school.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada