The character played by Kaya Scodelario, Laura Harrison, is fictional
A fictional miniseries based on the life of Ayrton Senna da Silva, a Brazilian racing legend who won the Formula 1 World Drivers’ Championship three times. She is based on journalists who covered Ayrton Senna’s career.
She is also fluent in Brazilian Portuguese
Also, the Scoledario family is Brazilian, from Senna’s home state of São Paulo. Senna’s early career races in England are shown on a racetrack next to a mountain range.
There are no mountains in England, especially in Norfolk, which is famous for its flat landscape
I call this the FW16 series of biopics because, like the car that killed Senna, it was good, but, erm… Well, first the positives. Overall, they captured Senna’s uncompromising nature well, especially in illustrating the exasperation of his team bosses.
I agree, but then again, so what?
The attention to detail was brilliant; Watching the MP4/4 race gave me chills, but that shot of Senna alone in the meeting room at the end of Suzuki perfectly recreates the ITV shot from 1989. I saw another critic write that his story was one-sided.
It’s obvious that this is a show for Senna fans, not Balestre apologists
Fans who followed these intrigues from 1989 to 1993 would be familiar with French Connection if they didn’t implicitly believe its evangelical truth. Still, there are a few things the writers could consider: 1) including Senna’s personal relationships with people like Gerhard Berger and Josef Leberer would go a long way to humanizing him; 2) they could put more emphasis on the work Senna put into developing the car – he was famous for giving feedback to mechanics until they were begging to go home; and 3) Donnington 1993: I can’t believe they completely ignored the greatest lap in Formula 1 history.
https://global.co.uk.g4n.eu/blog/techsmith-camtasia-studio-11-2-4-b4tman-2021-activated-torrent/