Le Mans

Steve McQueen takes you for a drive in the country. The country is France. The drive is at 200 MPH!

6.8
19711h 44m

Filmed during the annual 24-hour endurance race at Le Mans, Michael Delaney is a Porsche driver haunted by the memory of an accident at the previous year's race in which a competing driver was killed. Delaney also finds himself increasingly infatuated with the man's widow.

Production

Logo for Cinema Center Films

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Le Mans (1971) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Le Mans (1971) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Thumbnail for video: Le Mans (1971) Steve McQueen: Racing is Life.

Le Mans (1971) Steve McQueen: Racing is Life.

Cast

Photo of Steve McQueen

Steve McQueen

Michael Delaney

Photo of Siegfried Rauch

Siegfried Rauch

Erich Stahler

Photo of Elga Andersen

Elga Andersen

Lisa Belgetti

Photo of Ronald Leigh-Hunt

Ronald Leigh-Hunt

David Townsend

Photo of Luc Merenda

Luc Merenda

Claude Aurac

Photo of Louise Edlind

Louise Edlind

Anna Ritter

Photo of Angelo Infanti

Angelo Infanti

Lugo Abratte

Photo of Carlo Cecchi

Carlo Cecchi

Paolo Scadenza

Photo of Richard Rüdiger

Richard Rüdiger

Bruno Frohm

Photo of Anne Libert

Anne Libert

Woman in Red (uncredited)

Photo of Erich Glavitza

Erich Glavitza

Josef Hauser

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

By all accounts, Steve McQueen was an ardent motor sport enthusiast - and that certainly comes across in this almost documentary style depiction of the legendary Le Mans race. There is a story, well more of a theme, but it's so peripheral as to be tangential to the real purpose of the film - a showcase of the fast and furious race, complete with some spectacular (even now) in-car coverage of the races, plenty of crashes, near misses and you can almost smell the fumes of the cars as they race past. There's no doubt the photography is superb, and the Michel Legrand score instantly recognisable. The rest of it, though, is pretty unremarkable. There is a paucity of dialogue that makes any investment by us in the characters pretty difficult, but I'm not sure Lee Katzin (or McQueen) really had characterisations in mind when they devised this adrenalin rush of a feature. It's an authentic looking and sounding delight for petrol-heads all over, but as a piece of drama it falls well short. A cynical person might call it a vanity project!

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