Plenty of great films have been made about the No.1 Olympic sport but the gold medal has to go to Chariots of Fire
Here are some of best films about running and athletics ever made.
1 Chariots of Fire
The story of sprinters Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell in their build-up to the 1924 Paris Olympics deservedly won four Oscars.
It is 40 years since it hit the cinema but the images of the athletes running on the beach under leaden skies to the backdrop of music from Vangelis still manages to put a chill down the spine.
The May issue of AW magazine features an in-depth article by the athletics advisor for the movie, Tom McNab – to buy a copy CLICK HERE
Or to read the original review of the film in AW in April 1981 by Mel Watman in our AW Clubhouse, CLICK HERE
2 Gallipoli
Coincidentally, like Chariots of Fire, this was also released in 1981. It is more of an anti-war movie than an athletics film, but the two lead actors, Mel Gibson and Mark Lee, play talented sprinters in Australia who join the army to fight in the First World War in Turkey.
The film begins with an inspirational pre-race pep talk by Lee’s coach and a barefoot race against a man on horseback before a professional ‘gift’ race and then, finally, a tragic sprint out of the trenches into No Man’s Land.
3 The Games
A marathon movie that divides opinion, the plot centres on four runners from Britain (Michael Crawford), America (Ryan O’Neal), Czechoslovakia (Charles Aznavour) and Australia (Athol Compton) as they prepare for the Rome Olympics.
Directed by Michael Winner in 1970, it is cheesy and cliched in parts but it caught my imagination when watching it first time as a teenager. Crawford, who was a useful runner in reality, is pushed to breaking point by his maniacal coach, played by Stanley Baker, in the quest for the two-hour marathon!
Nonsense? Or ahead of its time?
For an excellent feature from Inside the Games on my controversial pick for No.3 on this list, CLICK HERE
4 Geordie
Bill Travers plays a Scottish strongman who competes in the 1956 Olympics in the hammer. It came out in 1955 but is still an enjoyable watch as Travers, who is dubbed ‘Wee Geordie’ in the film due to his scrawny physique as a child, does a bodybuilding course and eventually grows into an Olympic thrower.
5 Without Limits
This is the best movie made about the iconic American distance runner Steve Prefontaine. Billy Crudup plays the runner and Donald Sutherland his coach Bill Bowerman, while it is co-produced by Tom Cruise. The action sequences, especially of Munich Olympics, are brilliantly shot and it is a fine tribute to the short life of one of America’s best-known athletes.
6 Fast Girls
Deliberately brought out to coincide with the London 2012 Olympics, the film sees working-class athlete (Lenora Crichlow) and the posh and spoiled rival sprinter (Lily James) come together in a sprint relay team. It’s a feel-good and fun film, although it’s no Chariots of Fire.
7 Jericho Mile
A prisoner (Peter Strauss) convicted of murder trains as a runner in the prison yard and soon realises he has Olympic potential. Originally made for television, it went on to win three Emmy Awards, although it feels a little dated now as it came out in 1979.
8 Marathon Man
Dustin Hoffman plays a keen runner who gets embroiled in a plot by a Nazi war criminal (Laurence Olivier) to find stolen diamonds. It is brilliant, but more of a thriller than an actual athletics film. Similarly, movies like Forrest Gump, Run, Lola, Run and The Imitation Game about computer genius and top-class distance runner Alan Turing only merit a side mention on this list due to not being bona fide athletics movies.
9 McFarland
Based on a true story, Kevin Coster builds a team of cross-country runners from humble backgrounds who go on to win state titles. It had a low-key release in 2015 but is a genuine running movie with a great plot and a big-name actor to give it kudos.
10 Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
The oldest movie on this list, it came out in 1962 and features Tom Courtenay as a rebellious teenager who ends up in borstal but gains pleasure from distance running. Ultimately he faces a showdown with upper-class boys from a local public school when they compete against the boys from the borstal in a cross-country race.
The May issue of AW magazine features an in-depth article by the athletics advisor for the movie, Tom McNab – to buy a copy CLICK HERE
Or to read the original review of Chariots of Fire in AW in April 1981 by Mel Watman, CLICK HERE