«I know a lot about sitting in a video gaming chair playing video games,» Harbour joked.
By Phil Owen on
The Gran Turismo movie is both a video game adaptation and a sports movie--a combination that would work regardless of the real-life angle since Gran Turismo is a sports game as it is. Having a true story at the heart of this thing only makes it more fun--Gran Turismo is the low-key, late-summer banger you didn't see coming.
The focus of the film is on Jann Mardenborough, an obsessive Gran Turismo player who earned a spot in the third GT Academy class--a competition that intended to turn gamers into real race-car drivers. It worked. Mardenborough has been a name in professional racing around the world for over a decade.
In the film, Jann is played by Archie Madekwe. David Harbour also stars as Jack Salter, the guy who has to teach these gamers how to drive an actual car even though he doesn't think any of them have any shot at succeeding in the racing world.
Jack's extreme skepticism about the whole concept is the source of a lot of laughs in the early parts of the movie--he's the old, mean coach from a sports movie who has to whip these arrogant kids into shape--but all of his insults are tailored specifically for gamers. He yells things like «If you get in a wreck out here, you can't hit reset,» which sounds great coming out of Harbour's mouth. He even manages an utterly convincing «u mad bro» at one point.
Way back before SAG-AFTRA began its strike that precludes its members from promoting films, I sat down with Harbour and Madekwe to talk about Gran Turismo and their personal mentor-mentee dynamic both on screen and to some degree in real life as well. But first, I had to start by asking about Harbour's many awesome
Read more on gamespot.com