Your Company
 

The World's Fastest Indian

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

New Zealand, Japan, United States · 2005
Rated PG-13 · 2h 7m
Director Roger Donaldson
Starring Anthony Hopkins, Iain Rea, Tessa Mitchell, Aaron Murphy
Genre Drama

All his life, New Zealander Burt Munro worked on perfecting his classic Indian motorcycle. Bringing the motorbike all the way from his home in Invercargill to compete at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, Munro had nothing but his powerful Kiwi spirit. In 1967, an ordinary man became a legend of the motorcycle community.

Stream The World's Fastest Indian

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

75

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Does what it sets out to do: educates about a mostly unknown historical figure (without doctoring the facts too much), entertains, and uplifts.

70

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust

Based on the real-life exploits of Munro, it's a boilerplate fish-out-of-water/road trip/underdog sports movie -- but it's a heck of a ride with Hopkins leading the way.

67

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

The cockeyed devotion with which writer-director Roger Donaldson dramatizes the story of New Zealand motorcycle legend Burt Munro and his classic 1920 bike in The World's Fastest Indian is in direct proportion to the cockeyed devotion with which Munro himself pursued his lifetime goal of setting a land-speed record at Bonneville Flats, Utah.

75

New York Post by Lou Lumenick

Hopkins' larger-than-life performance as the crusty and crafty Burt rivets your attention for two solid hours in this most entertaining labor of love.

70

The A.V. Club by Nathan Rabin

Hopkins delivers such a warm, winning performance that it's hard not to be won over by his loopy charm and monomaniacal passion. The film is about a man whose need for speed takes on an existential and spiritual dimension, but it's precisely its rambling, meandering, unhurried affability that makes it such a low-key pleasure.

70

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

This is a film that wears a smile button on its sleeve along with its happy heart. It believes that most people are absolutely wonderful, and it is well enough made so that a dusting of that dogged optimism is bound to rub off on you.

70

Variety by Todd McCarthy

Sometimes shticky biopic overcomes its cornball conventionality to become a genial entertainment, thanks to Anthony Hopkins' exceptionally engaging performance.

Users who liked this film also liked