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"Racing Dreams" is rated PG (Parental guidance suggested).
For all its craft, "Racing Dreams" leaves you longing for more information about the sport.
That said, "Racing Dreams" is one of the rare documentaries you leave wishing it was a little bit longer.
"Racing Dreams," Marshall Curry's absorbing documentary examination of the world of professional auto racing, comes at its subject craftily: from below.
For his nonnarrated "Racing Dreams," which includes a 47-word introductory text card, Mr. Curry tucked his writing credit in the middle of the scroll at the end of the documentary, where, he said, "it blows by most audiences".
In 2005 Mr. Curry was working on "Racing Dreams," when his wife told him about a strange day at work: Federal agents had invaded her offices and arrested her employee Daniel McGowan, as part of a nationwide sweep.
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McCoy shakes his head at his folly in driving himself too hard, too soon, before falling again amid the destruction of his last great racing dream.
He was found to have viral myocarditis, an infection that causes inflammation of the heart, and so his Boat Race dreams were cruelly and abruptly ended.
"My Grandfather's Son" may consciously or not echo the title of Barack Obama's memoir of genealogy and race, "Dreams From My Father," but it might as well be written in another tongue.
And as Michael Eric Dyson, a sociology professor at Georgetown University, notes, Mr. Obama wrote an entire book on race: "Dreams From My Father," in which he dealt with his own complicated biracial history and struggle to fit into a country that sees things in black and white.
It surveys how Asians were described as white in most European accounts prior to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and only later determined to be yellow in the new color-differentiated theories of human "races" dreamt up from the eighteenth century onward, which established white, black, red, and yellow as key identifiers.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com