Netflix’s F1 series offers a captivating, candid glimpse behind the curtain | Giles Richards

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In the absence of Ferrari and Mercedes, the new documentary allows characters like the acerbic Haas team principal, Guenther Steiner, to shine and show F1’s human face

Skill, drama, spectacle and of course entertainment are the elements that should drive Formula One with, hopefully, a fine narrative to push the show along. Netflix certainly believes the sport has a story to tell, even though the two biggest names involved – Ferrari and Mercedes – refused to play ball when their cameras roamed the paddock last season. The result, Formula 1: Drive To Survive, is released on Friday and as it turns out, Netflix perhaps achieved something even more intriguing in their absence.

The 10-part series was made by executive producer James Gay-Rees, who was behind the biopic documentaries Senna and Amy. The hyperbolic, faintly ridiculous title aside, he and Netflix have made a very decent fist of it. The fact that it exists at all is indicative of how the sport has changed. Such a project would have been unthinkable under Bernie Ecclestone, and it shows that F1’s owners, Liberty Media, understand that they need to sell that drama, spectacle and entertainment.

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Written by Giles Richards
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2019/mar/07/netflix-f1-drive-to-survive-documentary-haas-ferrari-mercedes under the title “Netflix’s F1 series offers a captivating, candid glimpse behind the curtain | Giles Richards”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.