Mike McCahill 

Lauda: The Untold Story review – studious profile of the F1 driver

The pragmatic Austrian who went to hell and back offers some candid testimony but the post-crash story is played too straight
  
  

Niki Lauda in action during the British Grand Prix at the Silverstone in 1973.
Niki Lauda in action during the British Grand Prix at the Silverstone in 1973. Photograph: Allsport

That “untold” snipes at Ron Howard’s Rush, where Niki Lauda was deployed as an uptight yardstick against which James Hunt’s roistering could be more efficiently dramatised.

This studious documentary profile – Austrian-assembled, despite its overblown American voiceover – benefits from the candid testimony of a driver who went to hell and back while displaying a supremely Teutonic matter-of-factness: on being offered the last rites in the wake of that 1976 inferno, Lauda recalls “my pragmatic thinking was that it couldn’t do any harm”.

Textured archive punches up Lauda’s transformation from humble burger to post-crash power player, yet after the initial trial-by-fire, the narrative tailgates 2013’s comprehensive F1: Life on the Limit in impressing on us the sport’s latter-day devotion to risk management. While this has saved a lot of skin, it’s the material of an instructional video; a decidedly MOR closing-credits cover of Born to Be Wild damns the untold story as very much the straight story.

 

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