Image via bradpittofficial/Instagram
Formula 1 hasn’t just embraced Hollywood. It has practically handed over the keys.
A sequel to the Brad Pitt racing blockbuster F1 is officially in development, confirmed by producer Jerry Bruckheimer at the Academy Awards luncheon in Los Angeles. The original film, co-produced by seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, pulled in $630 million worldwide and became Apple Original Films’ biggest theatrical success. Now the industry wants more.
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The first film embedded itself inside real Formula 1 race weekends during the 2023 and 2024 seasons, shooting at events including the British Grand Prix. The sport didn’t just license its name — it opened the paddock. What looked like bold crossover promotion turned the championship into a rolling film set. And that is the reckoning.
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F1, the global racing series built on engineering excellence and competitive purity, allowed itself to become a backdrop for a fictional team and a scripted comeback story. It worked at the box office. It delivered awards nominations, including best picture. It generated headlines.
But it also blurred the line between sport and spectacle.
There is no confirmed timeline for the sequel and no official casting details, though Bruckheimer indicated he would be involved in those decisions. What is clear is that the machine is moving forward because the first film made money — not because the sport needed a sequel narrative.
This is the modern formula: leverage live competition as content, monetize the grid, turn authenticity into a cinematic asset. It looks good in marketing decks. It excites streaming executives. It fills corporate calendars already stacked with sequels, reboots and franchise extensions, from Top Gun follow-ups to another Days of Thunder.
Car enthusiasts do not need scripted drama to appreciate racing. The tension already exists at 200 mph. The danger is real. The stakes are real. When Hollywood overlays that with fictional hero arcs, the sport risks becoming secondary to the storyline.
The message behind this sequel is unmistakable: if it sells, repeat it.
Formula 1 made a calculated decision to trade access for exposure. The box office validated it. Now the sequel confirms it. The sport isn’t just hosting movies anymore — it is restructuring itself to accommodate them. And once that door is open, it does not quietly close.