In the middle of the Cannes Film Festival, where some of the drivers made an appearance, the Croisette wasn't the only one to host a screening in front of a star-studded audience. A few kilometers away, the F1 organized a private screening of the film F1 of Joseph
This article is for subscribers only.
You have 95% left to discover.
Already subscribed?
Sign in
- Up to -50% savings!
- Unlimited Premium articles
- The digital magazine from 20 p.m. every Monday
- Access to all issues since 2012 on the AUTOhebdo app
DANIEL MEYERS
23/05/2025 at 09:52 a.m.
They are almost all on official duty, (Verstappen and Stroll apparently refusing to play along) "It's very Hollywood" probably being a fancy way of describing a dud! PS: I'm only too happy to be contradicted, except that I'm going to kindly wait for the TV broadcast.
Yves-Henri RANDIER
22/05/2025 at 06:29 a.m.
An opportunity to revisit "Grand Prix" - a film released in late 1966 and directed by John Frankenheimer - which was a critical and public success with three Oscars in 3 and one of the biggest box office hits of 1967 in the United States. Will "F1966" with 1st-century means have the same success?
Hilton Leon
22/05/2025 at 06:17 a.m.
No, two are absent. Stroll and Max.
SYLVAIN DUCREUX
22/05/2025 at 05:18 a.m.
Anyway, in a racing car movie, nothing could be worse than Stallone's Driven, it has that advantage. :-)