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Dust To Glory
Don’t be amazed if you feel a dry, tickling sensation in the back of your throat after looking at the slam-bang racing documentary Dust to Glory. It’s in all likelihood from the lingering sand and silt spewed from the knobby wheels of an array of machines that skitter from one end of the Baja Peninsula to the other. Using 90 cameras in a potpourri of formats, conductor Dana Brown captures the giddy danger of the race with genuinely visceral force. In 1967, a few California thrill-seekers had the Eureka spirit to take their homemade race cars for some whooping-up in the wide-open land just a few hours away. Since then, the Baja 1000 has turned into a party-fueled happening that’s more akin to Burning Man than the Indy 500. It’s billed as the world’s longest nonstop race, running point-to-point for 1,000 miles through the Mexican desert from Tijuana to La Paz–pretty much the entire length of Baja. Dana Brown is the son of Bruce Brown, whose 1966 film The Endless Summer sparked a surfing craze, and still holds up as an incomparable ode to the existential surfing lifestyle. Dust to Glory is by no means so unfathomed and uses more of a Warren Miller thrill-marketing style (he of the annual throwaway extreme-skiing films). Cameras swoop down from helicopters, careen through silt, and are put into tracks over which vehicles pass at extreme speeds. In spite of the adrenaline rush, Dust to Glory is in the long run more regarding what humans think regarding the higher significations of the competition. From the creators of Step Into Liquid comes this utterly exhilarating film in regards to the most notorious and dangerous race in the world: the Tecate SCORE Baja 1000. Showcasing Mario Andretti, Robby Gordon, Johnny Campbell and J.N. Roberts, and packed with aweinspiring helicopter footage, in-your-face POV shots and stories of raw courage, Dust to Glory follows a wild assortment of motorcycles, dune buggies, ATV quads and tricked-out trucks in a 32-hour dash all over 1,000 miles of unforgiving terrain and delivers such pulse-pounding thrills that you feel like you’ve been there .
Don’t be astonished if you feel a dry, tickling sensation in the back of your throat after observing the slam-bang racing documentary Dust to Glory. It’s in all probability from the lingering sand and silt spewed from the knobby wheels of an array of machines that skitter from one end of the Baja Peninsula to the other. Using 90 cameras in a potpourri of formats, conductor Dana Brown captures the giddy danger of the race with genuinely visceral force. In 1967, a few California thrill-seekers had the Eureka spirit to take their homemade race cars for numerous whooping-up in the wide-open land just a few hours away. Since then, the Baja 1000 has turned into a party-fueled happening that’s more akin to Burning Man than the Indy 500. It’s billed as the world’s longest nonstop race, running point-to-point for 1,000 miles through the Mexican desert from Tijuana to La Paz–pretty much the entire length of Baja.
Dana Brown is the son of Bruce Brown, whose 1966 film The Endless Summer sparked a surfing craze, and still holds up as an incomparable ode to the existential surfing lifestyle. Dust to Glory is by no means so unfathomed and uses more of a Warren Miller thrill-marketing style (he of the annual throwaway extreme-skiing films). Cameras swoop down from helicopters, careen through silt, and are put into tracks over which vehicles pass at extreme speeds. In spite of the adrenaline rush, Dust to Glory is in the end more in regards to what persons think with regards to the higher significances of the competition. One veteran finisher describes it this way: “It’s like having all 10,000 close calls of your life in one day. It makes regular life feel like slow-motion.” –Ted Fry
Most helpful customer reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
One of the best movies of all time By Michael T. Saldivar When I took my wife to see this movie, I was excited to see what looked like an exciting movie about motorcycles racing through Baja. She was excited about an evening together, and thought she’d suffer through the movie for the sake of the relationship.
Turns out, she enjoyed it as much as me! This isn’t just a movie about gearheads driving through the desert, it’s the story of the hundreds of people and families involved in the race, how it affects them, the challenges they face, and overcoming obstacles. You’ll laugh with the racers as they joke around, hide sniffles as Malcom works with the orphans, share frustration with The Weatherman, and white-knuckle whatever’s handy as the trucks and bikes race through crowds of people or along the cliffs, and get entirely caught up in the intensity of the race action across the beautifully dangerous Baja landscape.
This movie documents the triumph of the human spirit in the harshest of conditions. Definitely worth seeing, many times.
23 of 28 people found the following review helpful.
Good intro to Baja By JadeRain I did enjoy this film, however it was a little too much “MTV” stylee footage for my tastes–you know, where they cut every 2-3 seconds to convey “maximum action”. The Baja 1000 needs NO enhancement!! What I wanted to see was more SUSTAINED footage of the vehicles in action. Yes, there is some of that, but not enough. Just like concert videos and other sports footage, WE WANT TO SEE THE ACTION!!! that means NOT cutting back and forth like a mainiac, hey, this is just because I care man.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Good clean fun in the dirt! By Craigums For those of us who’ve ridden Baja this is a reminder of why we do so. For those who haven’t this is just the thing to show you why you should. High speed action, adventure, guts, and glory all wrapped up in one great movie. Dana is rapidly approaching the skill level of his father and his movies are having just as much impact as On Any Sunday and Endless Summer. I highly recommend this movie to anyone who loves riding, racing and the desert! Two thumbs up!
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