A fascinating and eye-opening experience unlike anything that has come before it.
Dust to Glory (2005)
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Reviews Counted:66
Fresh:40
Rotten:26
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: Amazing footage from the Baja off-road race will give viewers an adrenaline rush.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for racing action and peril, and for some language
Runtime: 1 hr 37 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Apr 1, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $600,470
Synopsis: Extreme sports receive another loving treatment from award-winning documentarian Dana Brown, whose previous film STEP INTO LIQUID helped to define a new generation of surf culture. This time he... Extreme sports receive another loving treatment from award-winning documentarian Dana Brown, whose previous film STEP INTO LIQUID helped to define a new generation of surf culture. This time he sets his sights on the notorious Tecate Score Baja 1000, the longest and most challenging off-road race in the world. It is also the only race that virtually any vehicle may enter, and the list encompasses motorcycles, trophy trucks, class-one buggies, and even ancient Volkswagon Beetles. The drivers of this diverse group of automobiles share one thing: a taste for the thrill of the race. But they also clearly enjoy the camaraderie and fellowship of the participants. Begun in 1967 by a small band of adventurers, it had grown by 2003 to encompass 1200 participants with 270 vehicles between them, and a rowdy group of over over 200,000 spectators. The atmosphere is both carnivalesque and extremely intense, with the pristine blue Pacific and the desert mountains providing a backdrop for a distilled human drama playing itself out in sun and sand. The race represents something personal and profound to all who take up its challenge, from 16-year-old Andy McMillin to old-timer JN Roberts--who won the very first Baja race 30 years before. Mike "Mouse" McCoy's decision to ride the entire race himself, without relief riders, garners both respect and doubts as to his sanity. The cast of characters is rounded out by Mario Andretti, who cheerfully hosts the festivities. While the athletes' unapologetic pursuit of pleasure and unmitigated sense of fun is the focus of this refreshing film, the superlative photography captures the stunning Mexican landscape against which the race takes place, representing both the danger and the beauty that draws untold numbers of thrill seekers every year. [More]
Starring: Mario Andretti, Mike McCoy, Rick Johnson, Chad McQueen
Starring: Mario Andretti, Mike McCoy, Rick Johnson, Chad McQueen
Director: Dana Brown
Director: Dana Brown
Producer: Mike McCoy, Scott Waugh
Composer: Nathan First
Studio: IFC Films
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Reviews for Dust to Glory
Director Dana Brown leaves his family's fascination for surfing literally in the dust to explore the gritty off road race that may be the world's toughest endurance sport
It's nice that filmmaker Dana Brown feels so revved up about his subject. But the exuberance is confined to his overheated narration and never comes through here.
For all Dust to Glory’s visceral charge, what lingers most is its hearty embrace of so many varieties of human experience.
Brown fragments Dust to Glory past all continuity, and his relentless gosh-wow! narration makes you wish he had taken the full leap from fan to filmmaker.
The contest just doesn’t register that emotionally, with the long sermonizing stretches of the picture taking away from the real life of the Baja 1000 party: the race itself.
The movie is monotonous, storyless, and at under 100 minutes, interminable.
Same theme as Million Dollar Baby which fancies itself both realistic and inspirational. Dust to Glory is not only more realistic, but also more inspirational.
Brown weaves a fast-flying tapestry but makes the mistake of having Nathan Furst score the thing to within an inch of its life.
The movie was great fun and a real rush. Just don't try any of this stuff at home.
The cinematography, the interviews, the endurance, the enthusiasm seen in this film are wonderfully entertaining.
It's an adrenaline rush of a film, the closest anyone not inside a power-engine dune buggy will get to the love-hate experience of the unpredictable course.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
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| 78% 78% | The Hangover |
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| 90% 90% | District 9 |
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