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The Flying Scotsman (2007)
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Reviews Counted:51
Fresh:26
Rotten:25
Average Rating:5.6/10
Consensus: The Flying Scotsman's too-brisk pacing reduces the scale of cyclist Graham Obree's accomplishments while not uncovering what makes him tick.
Synopsis: THE FLYING SCOTSMAN follows the standard blueprint for a sports film: underdog overcomes obstacles to become a champion--but adds the element of the hero's real-life mental illness to make an... THE FLYING SCOTSMAN follows the standard blueprint for a sports film: underdog overcomes obstacles to become a champion--but adds the element of the hero's real-life mental illness to make an engaging drama. Jonny Lee Miller (TRAINSPOTTING) plays Graeme Obree, a Scottish cyclist who is seemingly past his prime. He has gone from winning races to running a losing bike shop, but he can't be called a quitter. When he learns his old rival will race for a record, Graeme decides to get back in the game. His wife (Laura Fraser, A KNIGHT'S TALE), a fellow avid cyclist (Billy Boyd, THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RETURN OF THE KING), and a friend (Brian Cox, RUNNING WITH SCISSORS) all join him in his quest. Though his opponent's bike boasts $500,000 in engineering, Graeme builds his from scratch, even dismantling a washing machine to make the perfect bike. In addition to his lack of a designer cycle, Graeme also struggles with a mental illness that makes it difficult for him to get out of bed, much less try for a world record. But despite his troubles, Graeme is stubborn and driven, and Miller ably captures the zeal of the real-life athlete. Cox may be best known as a villain in films such as X2, but it's fascinating to see him play such a sympathetic character here. For those who love sports movies (or even just dramas in general), THE FLYING SCOTSMAN begs comparison to CHARIOTS OF FIRE. For most people, cycling doesn't hold the thrill of the typical spectator sports such as basketball or baseball, and one might assume that extends to the movie as well. But thanks to its strong characters and the novelty of a film about cycling, THE FLYING SCOTSMAN deserves a look. It could have benefited from developing the mental illness aspect of the plot, but it still adds an interesting element to what would've been a standard film. [More]
Starring: Jonny Lee Miller, Laura Fraser, Billy Boyd, Brian Cox
Starring: Jonny Lee Miller, Laura Fraser, Billy Boyd, Brian Cox, Morven Christie, Steven Berkoff, Andy Griffith
Director: Douglas Mackinnon
Director: Douglas Mackinnon
Screenwriter: Simon Rose, Declan Hughes, John Brown
Producer: Peter Gallagher, Peter Broughan, Sara Giles
Composer: Martin Phipps
Studio: MGM
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Reviews for The Flying Scotsman
A true-life inspirational tale of about a young man who defies all odds, "The Flying Scotsman" is disappointingly devoid of emotion with a script that never manages to fully convey the personal demons floating about.
Graeme Obree was a champion bicycler who, by all accounts, rarely took the easy way out. Too bad this movie version of his life doesn't follow suit.
It is a straightforward biography but it treads so gingerly around his mental troubles that you feel something is missing.
Obree is clearly a great man, but you wouldn't know it from this uncomplicated evocation of his life and successes.
For bike racing enthusiasts there is much meat here, but the film may ultimately fail to fully engage and inspire a more general audience.
Never quite manages to whip its disparate story elements into an emotionally moving whole.
Compressing Obree's story into an hour and a half makes it seem less astonishing than it actually is -- the triumphs seem too easily won, and the problems too quickly resolved.
Manages to be both an unsatisfying human drama and a confusing sports movie at the same time. Fans of both genres will be disappointed.
It's a story that practically begs to be made into a film, albeit preferably one less pat than The Flying Scotsman.
...the film is too specialized in subject and too ordinary in execution to attract much attention outside the cycling circuit.
Fairly dull. Better to spend your money on that other Flying Scotsman -- Obree's autobiography.
While he tries not to lapse into the formula that has reduced sports films to white-hat/black-hat certitudes, the evenhandedness doesn't offset the film's fundamental dullness.
How a movie based on a figure so fascinating and inspiring fails to achieve either of those qualities is perplexing.
Scotsman not only lacks vision, a true sense of how to mesh Obree's sporting triumphs and personal setbacks, but it also lacks passion. What it needs, as strange and tacky as it may sound, is a bit more madness.
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