Rush 2013 !!link!!

However, the box office was lukewarm. It grossed $98 million worldwide. For a comparison, the same year’s Fast & Furious 6 grossed $788 million. Why? Two reasons: First, F1 had a niche following in America compared to NASCAR. Second, the R-rated violence (the burns, the blood, the hospital scenes) alienated a younger demographic.

The rivalry reached its terrifying zenith at the German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring—a 14-mile, 170-turn monster nicknamed "The Green Hell." When Lauda’s Ferrari crashed and exploded, he was trapped in the burning wreckage for nearly a minute. He suffered third-degree burns to his face and lungs, and was given last rites by a priest. Incredibly, just six weeks later, with blood seeping into his bandages and his helmet crushing his raw flesh, Lauda returned to race Hunt at Monza. rush 2013

The core of the film is the stark contrast between the two protagonists, portrayed by as the charismatic British playboy James Hunt and Daniel Brühl as the disciplined, analytical Austrian Niki Lauda. However, the box office was lukewarm

Rush 2013 does not dramatize this story; it resurrects it. The rivalry reached its terrifying zenith at the

When audiences hear "Ron Howard," they think Apollo 13 , A Beautiful Mind , or The Da Vinci Code . He is not typically associated with grime, speed, and 1970s excess. Yet, Howard brought exactly what Rush needed: a humanist center.