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Motorsport prime

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Stars take to the red carpet for Heroes film premiere

Stars including Jean Todt and Bernie Ecclestone took to the red carpet to celebrate the launch of the new Heroes feature-length film in London, and raise money for the ICM Brain and Spine Institute.

Motorsport Heroes

Motorsport 'Heroes' tells the story of five legends of motorsport, whose lives are intimately intertwined and interconnected as they all scale the heights of their sport, while contending with profound personal challenges along the way. Featuring Mika Hakkinen, Tom Kristensen, Michele Mouton and Felipe Massa, the 111-minute feature film written by Manish Pandey allows four of the greatest warriors of the sport to reflect on their lives, bringing out of each other the story of those transformations and their tales of the best and worst of times.  It is also the story of the man who connects them, Michael Schumacher, viewed as the greatest winner of them all but whose story, like the others, is filled with the same fallibility and emotion that makes him human. Available in English with subtitles in: Japanese, French, Spanish, Arabic, Portuguese, Mandarin, German, Italian and Russian.

The Heroes film explores the lives of double Formula 1 champion Mika Hakkinen, nine-time Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen, ex-Ferrari Formula 1 driver Felipe Massa, and World Rally Championship event winner Michele Mouton, and has been directed by Manish Pandey, the writer and executive producer of the award-winning film "Senna".

The quartet join to share their story, and are catapulted back on a fascinating trip through their motorsport history thanks to extensive raw archive footage going back to karting and the grassroots.

They also re-live their relationships with Michael Schumacher, who is also featured in the film, which has been produced with the help of Schumacher's long-term manager Sabine Kehm.

The glitzy premiere, held at Curzon Mayfair, helped to raise money for ICM, a charity that was set-up by Todt, Schumacher and a Professor of orthopaedic surgery and traumatology, Gerard Saillant.

Todt and Saillant were among the VIP guests at the event, as were Hakkinen, Kristensen, Massa and Mouton.

Mika Hakkinen, Tom Kristensen and Manish Pandey
Felipe Massa
Michèle Mouton
Bernie Ecclestone and his wife Fabiana
Jean Todt, President, FIA, Bernie Ecclestone
Jean Todt, FIA President and Bernie Ecclestone
Felipe Massa with his wife and his son
Mika Hakkinen
Michèle Mouton with her daughter Jessica
Tom Kristensen with his family
Manish Pandey, James Allen, Motorsport Network President
James Allen, Motorsport Network President, Michèle Mouton, Mika Hakkinen, Felipe Massa, Tom Kristensen
James Allen, Motorsport Network President, Michèle Mouton, Mika Hakkinen, Felipe Massa, Tom Kristensen
Michèle Mouton, Mika Hakkinen, Felipe Massa, Tom Kristensen
Tom Kristensen
15

"It's brilliant, how it's been done," said ex-McLaren driver Hakkinen. "I understand nothing about movies, but what I found is it takes an enormous amount of work. We are a tiny part of it. It's great to be in a movie."

Massa – now the FIA Karting president, who was in attendance with Rob Smedley, his long-time F1 race engineer – added: "Unbelievable. The whole team is very special. It was difficult not to cry, here watching for the first time."

Kristensen said that it was an honour to represent sportscar racing and that it was "about time" it got recognition at this level.

"I'm obviously very touched. Congratulations to you all who made this fantastic movie," he said. "I'm very happy to represent sportscar racing and Le Mans, I think it's about time so thank you Manish."

All four drivers showed an outpouring of emotion on the evening. Mouton drew applause for discussing her role as FIA Women in Motorsport president, and her voice wavered as she spoke of the sadness that Schumacher was not able to attend.

"Manish was very good because we met up in easy conditions and it was quite relaxed, we even forgot we were recording," she said. "I just would prefer to be five people here tonight rather than four."

The film was well received with applause at the end credits, after which the four stars gave a Q&A to the watching audience.

One guest, Mark Deschamps, summed up the movie as "poignant" and said that he had been "moved" after watching the new film.

"Very human, very poignant," he said. "It moves you. It's about cars, championships, machines, but behind it all it's about people. It's about their ups, their downs, the phone calls that started it all, the pain of the lost ones.

"It's not a story of motorsport, but of human life. In many ways it could be the story of many people. It shows you motorsport is a thin line, you can win or lose."

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