The Fast and Furious movies have nothing on the true good of death stunt - Car Reviews Used

The Fast and Furious movies have nothing on the true good of death stunt

Share:
The Fast and Furious movies have nothing on the true good of death stunt ,

I love fast and the Furious movies as much as the next member Vin Diesel Fan club, but none have practical waterfall I find that gutsy or hypnotic Maut ka Kuan, or "well of death," in northern India. The concept is simple because it is dangerous: a handful of drivers speeding motorcycles and cars around the walls of a large wooden barrel at a slope that is close to 90 degrees. The show of colored lights, metal zipper, and humans without fear of spitting in the face of physics naturally attracted its fair share of documentary filmmakers. This is a boon to those of us who are not the funds to make the trip.

The latest mini-doc Riders of the Well of Death comes from director Erik Morales. It is one of the most lucid document of the waterfall, spending most of his execution to get to know the people who produce and perform the show each night.

In 2013, the director Jim Demuth created a music video in the death of wells WOR the song Django Django.

And YouTube has a surplus of raw footage and experimental docs like this video of Rudy user Singh.

I did not know until recently is that the death of wells operated in India are part of a larger global phenomenon called the Wall of death. The basic components - vehicle speeding, abrupt circular wall - first appearance at Coney Island in the early 1900s, and have since grown worldwide. Just this year, Guy Martin race car driver broke the speed record for driving on a wall of death, hit 78 mph on live television.