Madison (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Madison

Theatrical release poster
Directed by William Bindley
Produced by William Bindley
Written by William Bindley
Scott Bindley
Starring James Caviezel
Jake Lloyd
Mary McCormack
Bruce Dern
Brent Briscoe
Music by Kevin Kiner
Cinematography James Glennon
Editing by William Hoy
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) April 22, 2005
Running time 99 min
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Madison is a 2001 film about APBA hydroplane racing in the 1970s. It stars James Caviezel as a driver who comes out of retirement to lead the Madison, Indiana community-owned racing team.

Contents

[edit] Background

Madison, Indiana, on the Ohio River, has sponsored powerboat racing since 1911 and began holding an annual race called the Madison Regatta in 1929. Beginning in 1954, the race became affiliated with the American Power Boat Association, held annually in July. Though Madison has a population of only 12,000, the Regatta maintains its place in the Unlimited hydroplane American Boat Racing Association series, whose other races are in Seattle, Detroit, and San Diego, among others.

The Regatta regularly draws about 70,000-100,000 people and is a tremendous source of pride for residents of the town. Also significant is that Madison has the world's only community owned unlimited hydroplane, Miss Madison. The boat was traditionally near the bottom of the circuit. In 40+ years of racing, U-6 (its number regardless of its name) had won just six races before 2005.

One of those was an upset in the 1971 Regatta, which is the basis for the movie. Making that victory even sweeter was that it also for the APBA Gold Cup.

Caviezel's character, Jim McCormick, was a real-life veteran racer and boat owner who drove the Miss Madison in 1966 and 1969-71, then raced his own boat until seriously injured some years later.

[edit] Cast and Characters

[edit] Delayed Release

Filmed in 2000 and completing post production in 2001, this film sat unreleased for nearly five years and was finally given a limited release on April 22nd, 2005. It ended up being the last film ever released by MGM as an independent company.

[edit] External links

This 2000s drama film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages