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In 1978, Ferrari and Niki Lauda had gone their separate ways despite winning the Formula One World Championship together in 1977. Lauda moved to Brabham and Ferrari took on the young Gilles Villeneuve. Frank Williams and Patrick Head formed Williams Grand Prix Engineering, mounting their first title challenge with Alan Jones in the driving seat. Tyrrell had reverted back to four wheels from their radical six-wheeled P34, and this year it was Brabham who turned heads with the introduction of their BT-46B 'fan car'. on it's first Grand Prix in Sweden it took first place only to be banned from future competition by the FIA. The Lotus Type 79 'wing car' was regarded as the best outfit, piloted by the experienced pairing of Mario Andretti and Ronnie Peterson. The Lotus team capitalized on their advantage and with two rounds left to race, it was only Peterson that had any chance of catching Andretti. Formula One still hadn't made safety a paramount concern, and at Monza it paid the price. An early crash left Peterson with fatal injuries, delivering another blow to Formula One and reaffirming the need for tighter controls. This tragedy gave Andretti the title and despite not finishing at Watkins Glen and coming 10th in Montreal, Lotus had secured enough points to take the constructors title by 28 points. Brunswick films were pioneers in the embryonic days of Formula One production, when sponsors controlled the demand for footage, and before the era of global TV coverage began. They have skillfully combined film from their famous archive to create a review that captures the essence of a very special era in Grand Prix racing.
Studio: | Duke Marketing |
Release Date: | 10/23/2012 |
Item #: | 372970X |
UPC #: | 5017559100148 |
Product Type: | DVD |
Street Date: | 10/23/2012 |
This product is a special order |