Thursday, March 26, 2026

Final F1

Recently there has been a film that offers both sensory enjoyment and a touch to the soul: F1. This racing film, created by the same team behind Top Gun: Maverick, has already achieved a box-office miracle—$626 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of Brad Pitt’s career.

This time, Pitt isn’t (just) showing off his looks and muscles

To be honest, my reason for going into the theater at first was very straightforward. The moment I saw the poster online, I was hooked—six-pack abs, broad shoulders, perfect proportions. The most handsome man in the world paired with the fastest and most thrilling sport in the world. At that moment, I was mentally prepared to start drooling.


Do you know? Brad Pitt is already over 60 years old. But watching his performance in this film, I would believe you if you told me he was in his 30s. That sense of youthful vitality doesn’t come only from muscles built in the gym. In recent years he appeared in Wolfs, wearing a middle-aged cadre-style jacket while acting opposite George Clooney; his physique, looks, and youthful energy were all still there, while George had already chosen to directly play a white-haired elderly rogue. That shows just how incredible Pitt’s condition is.


In F1, he doesn’t continue the usual routine of showing off looks and muscles. Instead, he takes a more interesting route—while remaining sexy, he interprets the middle-aged racing driver Sonny with a refined, slightly roguish elegance. This is not a role that attracts people purely through appearance; it requires acting skill, temperament, and an understanding of the character’s inner core. Pitt delivers.


An interpretation of leadership — How do we win?

If you only look at the surface of the story, F1 is a standard inspirational sports film: a frustrated middle-aged driver returns to the racetrack and leads a team on the verge of collapse to rise again from the ashes. This kind of story framework has been told countless times. But what makes this film moving is that beneath this shell it wraps deep reflections on leadership, teamwork, ideals, turning adversity around, and philosophy of life. Spoilers Below.


At the beginning, Sonny wins the Daytona race with a team, but he doesn’t stay. After winning first place, he refuses the team leader’s invitation and instead wants to drive a beat-up car to the seaside to run the Baja race. This is not the choice of an ambitious man; it is the choice of someone who has already let something go. Until his old friend—now team owner Ruben—finds him and strongly invites him to join APXGP, a team on the verge of bankruptcy.


What is APXGP? It is the team ranked last. What does that mean? It means starting last, and cars that can never finish a full lap competitively. Anyone who has watched F1 knows that feeling of despair—after 60 laps, the leading teams can lap the trailing teams by more than one full lap. Under the giant scoreboard, everyone’s results are laid out. Every race continues burning enormous amounts of money. A rear wing alone costs hundreds of thousands of dollars; every crash is gambling with money that ordinary people cannot imagine. Half of the cars are always just running along with the pack, never earning points. I don’t know how strong those team owners’ hearts must be, or how deep their love for the sport must be, to keep going.


Facing such a desperate starting point, what does Sonny do? Sonny demonstrates the most fundamental qualities of a leader. It almost like he followed the steps in a leadership textbook.

First, he proves his ability to the team. After decades away from the F1 circuit, he returns and immediately sets the fastest lap time. In the first few races, he successfully helps the team earn its first point. With half the season already gone, one can imagine how much hope and encouragement that precious single point brings.

Second, he gives the team direction, a path to success. Sonny repeatedly studies technical data and carefully observes every race. Eventually he finds the team’s strength—cornering speed. In a team meeting, he encourages everyone to participate and fight for 0.1 seconds in every small detail. These tiny gains add up; after 60 or 70 laps, they can become a huge lead. What F1 often competes for is precisely those few seconds of difference. At that moment, everyone sees hope—not just a small hope, but a conviction of victory that could truly create history.

I cannot forget that scene at the end of the meeting. Everyone—whether engineers in technical roles or mechanics tightening bolts—shouts together: “combat,” “combat,” the sound growing louder and more unified and everyone has smile on his/her face. In that moment they are no longer separate departments working independently, but one whole. As a leader, Sonny leads everyone to win, together.

Let's also don't forget that Sonny goes through everything, including hardships with the team. Whether misunderstood, blamed, or running together, joking and fooling around with everyone, they become increasingly synchronized and harmonious. A team like that is bound to win. In the end, this becomes the team that works miracles- they completely rebuild a racing car within 10 mins and helped Sonny win the first ever championship.


What one seeks in life

Two conversations at the beginning and the end of the film actually say the same thing.

At the beginning, Sonny speaks with a restaurant waiter:


“If a friend invites you to do something that seems too good to be true, what do you think?”

“Well, how much are we talking about here”

“It’s not about money.”

The waiter rolls her eyes politely: “Then what is it about?”


At the end, Sonny applies to join the Baja race and speaks with a member of the Baja team:


“We can’t pay you much. Are you still willing to participate?”

“I just want to drive, and it has nothing to do with money.”

“Then what is it about?”


Both times, Sonny smiles. Yes—Then what is it about? 


This is not simply a mirrored beginning and ending, but the complete trajectory of self-redemption for a forgotten racer. He once forgot his love for racing and lost confidence in himself. Decades of wandering exile made him accustomed to a rootless life. But when he returns to the racetrack, he finally finds his original self again—the self who existed purely to enjoy the joy of driving.


On the final lap of the F1 race, when he is leading, he reaches a state of self-forgetfulness. Although other cars are still chasing closely behind, ahead of him there is no car at all—only him and the track, only the wind, only the lights, curve after curve. The world is so quiet. He is flying. And then, after crossing the finish line, an explosion of cheers. People rush onto the track hugging and celebrating.


“Today, we are the best in the world.”


These words come from someone who once doubted himself, from someone who once didn’t know what he was living for. It is as if fate had never really lost him—it only made a brief detour through other scenery.


I still remember when I worked in the automotive industry in Shanghai years ago. Every Sunday I would spend several hours to watch F1 races. At that time I didn’t really understand the technical depth of the sport. I just blindly loved speed and excitement, thinking the fastest thing in the world must also be the coolest. Especially when I saw Schumacher standing on the podium driving a Ferrari, champagne spraying everywhere—I would be excited in front of the television as well. Even though I couldn’t afford tickets to watch in person and had to take two subway transfers for more than an hour to get to work every day, it didn’t stop me from enthusiastically reciting drivers’ names, rankings, points, and fastest lap records at any moment. Back then I didn’t seem to feel that life was difficult.


Now, watching F1, I remember a little of that excitement and why it existed.

In recent years, most news about Brad Pitt has been about family gossip, which made me lose interest in watching his movies for quite a long time. But after seeing several of his recent films, I realized that he has actually been diligently making films every year, never stopping his exploration of acting. Being handsome and hardworking at the same time is already unbeatable.  

Perhaps this is what deeply moved me about this film—it not only tells the rebirth story of a fictional character, but also shows the perseverance and effort of Pitt and many others. The female mechanic carrying tires, the engineering director drawing plans late into the night, the elderly technical advisor who still refuses to give up—they all feel so real, real people persevering for what they believe in and love. When the film ends and the credits roll for more than ten minutes listing thousands of staff members, aren’t they also those who persist in creating dreams and chasing them?

F1 does not merely display the charm of speed and technology. It tells a story of continual pursuit, persistent effort, rising again after failure, and redefining—and ultimately surpassing—oneself with the support of a team.


In fact, it could be the story of any ordinary person.


Thursday, March 5, 2026

F1

Recently there has been a film that offers both sensory enjoyment and a touch to the soul: F1. This racing film, created by the same team behind Top Gun: Maverick, has already achieved a box-office miracle—$626 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of Brad Pitt’s career.

This time, Pitt isn’t (just) showing off his looks and muscles

To be honest, my reason for going into the theater at first was very straightforward. The moment I saw the poster online, I was hooked—six-pack abs, broad shoulders, perfect proportions. The most handsome man in the world paired with the fastest and most thrilling sport in the world. At that moment, I was mentally prepared to start drooling.

Do you know? Brad Pitt is already over 60 years old. But watching his performance in this film, I would believe you if you told me he was in his 30s. That sense of youthful vitality doesn’t come only from muscles built in the gym. In recent years he appeared in Wolfs, wearing a middle-aged cadre-style jacket while acting opposite George Clooney; his physique, looks, and youthful energy were all still there, while George had already chosen to directly play a white-haired elderly rogue. That shows just how incredible Pitt’s condition is.

In F1, he doesn’t continue the usual routine of showing off looks and muscles. Instead, he takes a more interesting route—while remaining sexy, he interprets the middle-aged racing driver Sonny with a refined, slightly roguish elegance. This is not a role that attracts people purely through appearance; it requires acting skill, temperament, and an understanding of the character’s inner core. Pitt delivers.

An interpretation of leadership — How do we win?

If you only look at the surface of the story, F1 is a standard inspirational sports film: a frustrated middle-aged driver returns to the racetrack and leads a team on the verge of collapse to rise again from the ashes. This kind of story framework has been told countless times. But what makes this film moving is that beneath this shell it wraps deep reflections on leadership, teamwork, ideals, turning adversity around, and philosophy of life. Spoilers Below.

At the beginning, Sonny wins the Daytona race with a team, but he doesn’t stay. After winning first place, he refuses the team leader’s invitation and instead wants to drive a beat-up car to the seaside to run the Baja race. This is not the choice of an ambitious man; it is the choice of someone who has already let something go. Until his old friend—now team owner Ruben—finds him and strongly invites him to join APXGP, a team on the verge of bankruptcy.

What is APXGP? It is the team ranked last. What does that mean? It means starting last, and cars that can never finish a full lap competitively. Anyone who has watched F1 knows that feeling of despair—after 60 laps, the leading teams can lap the trailing teams by more than one full lap. Under the giant scoreboard, everyone’s results are laid out. Every race continues burning enormous amounts of money. A rear wing alone costs hundreds of thousands of dollars; every crash is gambling with money that ordinary people cannot imagine. Half of the cars are always just running along with the pack, never earning points. I don’t know how strong those team owners’ hearts must be, or how deep their love for the sport must be, to keep going.

Facing such a desperate starting point, what does Sonny do? Sonny demonstrates the most fundamental qualities of a leader. From a leadership perspective, step by step, he does the following:

First, he proves his ability to the team. After decades away from the F1 circuit, he returns and immediately sets the fastest lap time. In the first few races, he successfully helps the team earn its first point. With half the season already gone, one can imagine how much hope and encouragement that precious single point brings.

Second, he gives the team direction. Sonny repeatedly studies technical data and carefully observes every race. Eventually he finds the team’s strength—cornering speed. In a team meeting, he encourages everyone to participate and fight for 0.1 seconds in every small detail. These tiny gains add up; after 60 or 70 laps, they can become a huge lead. What F1 often competes for is precisely those few seconds of difference. At that moment, everyone sees hope—not just a small hope, but a conviction of victory that could truly create history.

I cannot forget that scene at the end of the meeting. Everyone—whether engineers in technical roles or mechanics tightening bolts—shouts together: “combat,” “combat,” the sound growing louder and more unified and everyone has smile on his/her face. In that moment they are no longer separate departments working independently, but one whole. As a leader, Sonny leads everyone to win together.

In addition, Sonny goes through good time and hardship alongside the team. Whether being misunderstood, blamed, or running and excercising together, joking and fooling around with everyone, he stays. With his efforts, the team becomes increasingly choesive and harmonious. A team likes that is bound to win. In the end, the team works miracles- they completely rebuild a racing car within 10 mins and helped Sonny win.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

My V2

《F1》,不只是速度与激情

最近有一部电影让人既有感官的享受又有灵魂的触动,那就是《F1》。这部由《壮志凌云:独行侠》原班人马打造的赛车电影,在票房上已经创造了奇迹——6.26亿美元的全球票房,成为了布拉德皮特职业生涯最赚钱的电影。

这一次,皮特不(仅仅)是来秀颜值秀肌肉的

说实话,我最初走进电影院的理由很直白。在网络上看到海报那一刻,我就被吸引了——6块腹肌、厚实的肩膀、完美的比例,全球最帅的男士,配上世界上最快最刺激的赛事。那一瞬间,我甚至预备好了流口水的心理准备。

你知道吗?布拉德皮特已经60多岁了。但看他在这部电影里的表现,你说他30多岁我也信。这种青春洋溢的气息,绝不仅仅来自于健身房的肌肉。最近几年他在《狼人杀》里穿着中年老干部的夹克衫和乔治·克鲁尼对戏,身材颜值青春气息都在线,而乔治早已直接选择扮演白发老年混混。可见皮特的状态有多绝。

在《F1》里,他没有继续秀颜值秀肌肉的套路,而是走了一条更有意思的路线——在兼具性感的前提下,用一种精致雅痞的气质诠释这个叫Sonny的中年赛车手。这不是一个仅靠外表就能吸引人的角色,而是需要用演技、气质和对人物内核的理解来支撑的。皮特做到了。

关于领导力的诠释- 我们怎么赢

如果只看故事表面,《F1》就是一个标准的励志运动片:失意的中年车手重返赛场,带领一支陷入绝境的车队浴火重生。这样的故事框架已经被讲过无数次。但这部电影之所以能打动人,在于它在这个外壳下包裹了关于领导力、团队合作、理想、逆境翻盘和人生哲学的深刻思考。

Sonny在开局时就带着一个团队赢了Daytona的拉力赛,但他没有停留。赢得第一名后他拒绝了领队的邀请,却想要开着一辆破车去海边跑Baja赛车——这不是一个野心勃勃的人的选择,而是一个已经放下了什么东西的人的选择。直到他的旧友、现在的车队老板Ruben找到他,力邀他加入APXGP这个濒临破产的车队。

APXGP是什么?是排在最后的车队。这意味着什么?意味着出发最后一个,车子从来跑不完一整圈。看过F1比赛的人都知道那种绝望——60圈下来,领先车队能整整超过落后队伍一圈多。大大的显示牌下面所有人的成绩都摆出来,每场比赛还在继续疯狂烧钱,一个车后翼就是几十万美金,每撞一下都是普通人无法想象的金钱在赌博。半数的车永远在陪跑,永远都拿不到积分。我不知道那些车队老板的心脏得有多坚强,对这项赛事得有多深的热爱才能支持下去。

就在这样绝望的开局下,Sonny做了什么?Sonny展示了一个领导的基本修养。从领导力角度分析, 他一步一步的做了这些事情:

首先,他向团队证明了他的能力:几十年没有回到F1赛场,他一回来就刷新了单圈最快速度。在最初的几场比赛里,他成功的帮团队拿到了第一个积分。在赛季过半的情况下,大家可想而之这宝贵的一分带来的希望和鼓舞的份量有多重。

其次,他给团队指出了方向。Sonny反反复复地研究技术资料,仔仔细细地观察所有的比赛,终于找到了团队的强项——弯道竞速。在一次团队会议中,他鼓励每一个人都参与进来,在每一个细小的环节上都争取0.1秒。这些一点一滴加起来,经过60、70圈的比赛后就会变成非常大的领先地位。F1所竞逐的往往就不过是那几秒的差距。那一刻,所有人都看到了希望——这不仅仅是小小的希望,这真的是一种能创造历史记录的必胜信念。

我难以忘记会议最后的那个场景。所有的人,不管是在技术岗的工程师,还是在拧螺丝的技术人员,所有的人都在齐声呼喊着"combat"(战斗),"combat"(战斗),声音越来越大,越来越整齐,每个人的脸上都是笑容和激动。那一刻,他们不再是各自为政的部门,而是一个整体。作为领导,Sonny带着所有人一起赢。

此外,Sonny一直都和团队在一起经历风雨。不管是被误解,被责备,还是带着大家一起跑步,开玩笑,打打闹闹,他们越来越合拍,越来越默契。这样的长期磨合下来非常有默契的一个团队,不赢才怪--在最后十分钟以内,他们完成了几乎不可能的任务,完全重造一辆新车,助力Sonny的夺冠。


关于一生所求


电影开头和结尾的两段不同的对话其实说的是同一个意思——

片头Sonny跟饭店服务员的对话:“如果你朋友找你去做一个看上去太美的事儿,你怎么想” “好吧,告诉我大概多少钱” “跟钱没关系” 服务员甩了他一个礼貌的白眼“那跟啥有关系”

片尾Sonny去申请参加Baja沙漠越野赛,跟Baja车队人员的对话:“我们付不起很多钱,你还愿意参加么”"我想参加这个跟钱没关系。""那是跟啥有关系?"两次,Sonny都笑了。是啊,跟什么有关系呢? 如果跟钱,这个普适的原因都没关系的话,那是不是你就有追求自己所爱的自由了呢?

这不是简单的首尾呼应,而是一个被遗忘的赛车手关于自我救赎的完整轨迹。他曾经遗忘了自己对赛车的热爱,失去了对自己的信心。几十年的放逐流浪生涯,让他习惯了无根的生活。但当他重新踏上赛道时,他终于找回了那个最初的自己——那个纯粹地为了享受驾驶的快乐而存在的自己。在F1赛场最后那一圈,当他自己领跑的时刻,他达到了一种忘我的境界。虽然后面还有其他赛车紧紧追着他,但在他的前方,空无一车,只有他和赛道,只有风,只有灯光,有一个接一个的转弯,世界那么的安静,他在飞,直到冲过终点以后那爆发的欢呼声,人们激动的拥抱冲上赛道欢呼。"今天,我们是世界上最棒的"——这句话,出自一个曾经怀疑过自己的人的口中,出自那个不知道自己是为了什么的人,好像命运从来没有迷失过他,只是短暂的为其他的风景绕了一点弯。

我还记得当年在上海汽车行业工作时,每周日都等着花好几个小时看F1比赛。那时候我其实并不懂这项赛事真正的技术含量,甚至连规则也不是完全清楚。我只是盲目地喜欢速度和激情,觉得世界上最快的就是最酷的。特别是看舒马赫驾驶着法拉利站上领奖台,香槟酒往外喷洒的时刻,我也在电视前激动不已。虽然买不起去观赛的票,每天也要换乘两趟坐一个多小时地铁去上班,但这都不影响我随时可以如数家珍地讲出车手名字、排位、积分、最快单圈记录。那些年的我似乎也不觉得辛苦。

现在看《F1》,我有些回忆起那份激动的心情和原因。

布拉德皮特这些年的新闻大多与家庭八卦有关,一度让我很久都不想看他的电影。但看到他最近的几部片子,我意识到他其实一直在勤勤恳恳地每年拍戏,从未停止过对表演的探索。长得好又努力,已经是无敌了。

也许这才是这部电影深深打动我的地方——它不仅讲述了一个虚构人物的重生故事,也展示了皮特和许多人的坚持和努力。不管是搬轮胎的女技师,深夜绘图的工程总监,已经高龄仍不放弃的技术指导,他们一个一个也都是那么的真实,真实的在为自己心意,所喜欢的在坚持着。 当电影结束的时,长达十几分钟几千人的工作人员表开始滚动的时候, 他们不也是那些在坚持造梦和逐梦的人么?《F1》不仅仅展示了速度与技术的魅力,更讲述了一个一直追寻,不断坚持、在失败中重起、在团队的陪伴下重新定义自己更超越自己的故事。

这其实也可以是属于每一个普通人的故事。


Idea- book opening When a lady earns more than her partner, there will have to be some extra explanations or easy set up for her

 for example, the son or husband will blame her subtly or directly for not spending a lot of time with family.

Lady needs to explain 

but when you think about, how much time the teenage boy wants to spend time with his/her poor mother? who already work hard like a donkey and not getting time to rest anyways.