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Sunday, August 21, 2011

MOVIE REVIEW
Senna

Purity, Innocence, Good Speed And Godspeed



Three-times Formula One Racing World Champion Ayrton Senna, in a moment from Asif Kapadia's documentary "Senna" . 
ESPN/Universal

  

by
Omar P.L. Moore/PopcornReel.com        Follow popcornreel on Twitter FOLLOW                                           
Sun
day, August 21, 2011

"Senna", which expanded its release two days ago in additional U.S. cities, isn't just about racing.

Asif Kapadia's absorbing, moving documentary is a fascinating look at a man whose purity and energy were geared (figuratively and literally) to two ultimate higher powers: the power of winning and the power of God, both of which three-time world champion Formula 1 racing driver Ayrton Senna had deep, unambiguous relationships with.  Mr. Senna, whose life was a very brief 34 years, was one of the foremost athletes (Muhammad Ali, Kareem Abdul-Jabaar among others) whose faith and belief in a higher power were sincere and redoubtable.

Composed almost entirely of archival footage from the 1980s and 90s, "Senna" has the full-bloodied structure of a feature film: its titular protagonist, a handsome, near-fearless, determined figure revered in his native Brazil; its suave politicking French antagonist rival Alain Prost; its Darth Vader (Formula 1 President Jean-Marie Balestre); its Yoda-type elder advisor (Mr. Senna's doctor Sid Watkins); its empires of race-car teams (McLaren, Williams-Renault, etc.)  The film's remaining significant players -- those that 300-mile-an-hour racecar drivers inevitably attract -- are the beautiful women drawn to Mr. Senna, a ladies' man extraordinaire aka God's vessel.

The multifaceted Ayrton Senna was a relatively naïve fish swimming in the shark-infested, corrupt waters of Formula 1 after joining the racing powerhouse of McLaren and butted heads with his nemesis Mr. Prost.  Mr. Senna had amassed miraculous racing victories, coming from nearly dead-last to win races or narrowly lose them.  Mr. Senna, a ruthless competitor with an otherwise pure heart and spirit, didn't care for the politics of the sport and sought only its passion.  He cared about his fellow man, and "Senna" shows us Mr. Senna's compassion, drive and a boyish, childlike innocence.

The film shows concrete divisions between Mr. Senna's heart and head.  He is shocked and saddened by the casualties that Formula 1 race driving brings, yet his steadfast commitment to winning at any and all costs blinds him in a way akin to hubris.  If Icarus flew too close to the sun, Ayrton Senna drove too fast that he flew to heaven.

You may feel that God was constantly with Mr. Senna on the racetrack as he describes the aftermath of winning and thriving under incredible circumstances.  The driver wills himself to be the best he can be with such a ferocious, blinding hunger.  A higher power and consciousness takes over.  Was it truly as profound and elementary as that?

Enormously moving and powerful, "Senna" masterfully fuses the engine of competition via remarkable point-of-view cameras on Mr. Senna's vehicle, with the unquenchable thirst for justice and the rock-star mega-wattage of a Michael Jackson or Elvis Presley.  "Senna" reveals a charismatic wunderkind ahead of his time, a figure saintly yet complex, a sportsman fierce but gentle, and a generous soul who pre-visualized the end but never forgot the less fortunate or where he came from. 

Mr. Kapadia keeps the focus on Mr. Senna, breaking from traditional documentary talking-head theater, investing many moments with intimate voice-overs that don't break a stride.  Formula 1 racing fans (like myself) will relish seeing the likes of racing greats Nikki Lauda, Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittipaldi, Nigel Mansell and Michael Schumacher, among others.  Non-fans will be riveted by the visceral, dangerous and excitement of thrilling, death-defying drives from which great suspense and tension arise. 

Aside from "When We Were Kings", "Senna" may be the only sports documentary that covers the bases so thoroughly but in a more balanced manner than any.  Every angle of Mr. Senna's life is captured.  There's a David-versus-Goliath battle here that has many dimensions and an explosive Greek tragedy.  The ending packs one of the most devastating punches I've ever felt from the big screen.  The sobering conclusion and graphic descriptions are especially tough to stomach.  Shattering.  I thought about those final few minutes for two weeks, and still do.

"Senna", one of the year's best films, entertains like a high-wired, extra-kinetic action movie, hitting hard with all the force and speed of the electrifying cars that shred the sound barrier, roaring relentlessly like muted, vibrating primal screams.  Mr. Kapadia does superbly well and knows the heartbeat and moods of his subject so well.  He neither deifies nor demonizes Ayrton Senna.  The amazing footage and the man speak loudly for themselves.

"Senna" is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association Of America for strong language and disturbing content.  The film's running time is one hour and 46 minutes.

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