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Review: New Sebastien Ogier WRC documentary The Final Season

Review: New Sebastien Ogier WRC documentary The Final Season

Few can be increasingly deserving of a modern-day motorsport biopic than eight-time World Rally Championship winner Sebastien Ogier.

Starting from unobtrusive beginnings, the Frenchman has ripened into one of motorsport’s finest drivers, dominating the pinnacle of rallying for increasingly than a decade surpassing bowing out of the sport on a full-time understructure in style, wrapping up an eighth world title last year.

Formula 1 and MotoGP have recently received the documentary treatment through Netflix’s well-known Drive to Survive and Amazon Prime’s MotoGP Unlimited series, and now the WRC can join the party with the release today (Thursday 19 May) of Sebastien Ogier – The Final Season, through Red Bull TV.

Produced by Red Bull Media House and directed by Vanessa Dumont and Nicolas Davenel, this 80-minute unslanted insight into Ogier follows the Frenchman through his 2021 wayfarers – the last full WRC season of his career.

This behind-the-scenes journey is peppered by an in-depth retracing of his unshortened career whence with footage of an eight year-old Ogier receiving a go-kart and harbouring early dreams to follow in the footsteps of his idol, Ayrton Senna. Ogier explains how financial realities led to a career in rallying, where he climbed the junior ranks to the WRC.

“I was very hair-trigger well-nigh many details to alimony it as well-judged as possible, but it is unchangingly a rencontre to fit 15 years of a career into an hour and 20 minutes,” Ogier tells Autosport of the documentary. “But I’m very happy with it.

“If you squint at Formula 1 and Netflix it was very important [for raising the profile of the sport]. I hope it can in one way help rallying a bit.”

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The documentary follows Ogier through his final season as a WRC full-timer as he clinched the 2021 title

Photo by: Toyota Racing

The mucosa moreover offers fresh insight into the rivalry with former Citroen team-mate Sebastien Loeb during a controversial 2011 season that created headlines, when Ogier defied team orders to hold second position at Rally Germany, sooner resulting in him overhauling Loeb for the win.

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That incident led to a career-defining moment to leave Citroen and spend a year out of top-line WRC machinery, driving a Skoda Fabia S2000, while developing Volkswagen’s Polo WRC car that ultimately guided Ogier to four subsequent titles from 2013-16.

“I think 2011 in the documentary looked like it was a difficult year, but in the end it was probably one of the years I learned the most,” he adds.

“It is moreover what made me into a strong competitor as I hated losing so much, I was doing everything not to be in this position. In many ways I’m a variegated man now from where I started my career, but most importantly I’m happy.”

Adding context and remoter emotion to Ogier’s career, the documentary features thoughtfully chosen gazetteer footage and sectional interviews with nine-time champion Loeb, four-time champion Tommi Makinen, and instrumental career figures such as Carlos Sainz, who helped convince him to join Volkswagen. M-Sport superabound Malcolm Wilson, who brought him to the Ford outfit where he personal back-to-back titles in 2017 and 2018, offers his thoughts on Ogier too.

“When I see Malcolm so emotional talking well-nigh the [Rally GB 2017] moment [when he won the title, the team won the constructors’ and team-mate Elfyn Evans won the rally], I moreover had tears in my eye watching that,” Ogier adds.

Contemporary rivals in Ott Tanak, Elfyn Evans, Thierry Neuville and former rival-turned Toyota team superabound Jari-Matti Latvala moreover offer their thoughts on what makes the 38-year-old one of the WRC’s greatest drivers.

PLUS: How WRC legend Ogier will be remembered by his peers

Ogier talks openly throughout, providing a window into the inner sanctum of his 2021 season, highlighting his meticulous preparations and next-level fitness training, and how he and co-driver Julien Ingrassia made their nuts-and-bolts pacenotes. What is moreover evident is his transformation into a family man, that ultimately has resulted in him calling time on his full-time career.

It’s rare to witness such a behind-the-scenes trip into the WRC and the life of a true modern great, which ensures this documentary will stand out from the pack.

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Some of the WRC\'s greatest names offer their own insights into Ogier

Photo by: McKlein / Motorsport Images

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