Cycle News

Cycle News 2019 Issue 08 February 26

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOL. 56 ISSUE 8 FEBRUARY 26, 2019 P105 up the bike, they tried to sell him a standard racer, not the factory special he's been promised. Angered by the way he felt he'd been treated in Milwaukee, Free said he made it his life's mission to beat Harley-Davidson when- ever and wherever he could. By sheer chance Edgar met Free at a gas station/repair shop Free owned in Los Angeles. The two struck up a conversation about their mutual love of fast motors and when Edgar found out Free had been a record-setting motorcycle racer, he knew he'd found just the guy who could help him make his goal of owning the fastest motorcycle in the country possible. The movie goes into the details of the successful attempt to become the first AMA Class A motorcycle to break the 150-mile- per-hour barrier. It is told by way of commentary from motorcycle racing experts like well-known motorcycle author Jerry Hatfield, who wrote the book Flat Out! The Rollie Free Story, motorsports historian and television personality Alain de Cadenet, fellow motorcycle land speed racer Marty Dicker- son, William Edgar, son of the bike's original owner, vintage bike expert Glenn Bator and Chip Conner, who is both the owner of the famous "Bathing Suit Bike" and was Executive Producer of the documentary. The film makes wonderful use of archival footage and photos, including old Super 8 film taken at Bonneville during Free's record-breaking runs. It even includes segments of audio inter- views done with Free himself just a few years before his passing in 1984. You can tell from some of the terminology used by Free, that he was a man of a different time in American history. While Edgar was eager to own the fastest motorcycle in America, the film reveals that in Free's mind if they could earn the record, it would be poetic pay- back to Harley-Davidson all those years after they snubbed him. In 1948, Harley factory racer Joe Petrali held the American record of 136.183 mph set on a modified Harley-Davidson Model E on the beach at Daytona in 1937. Unfolding in the film is the rea- son Free ultimately stripped down to his swim trunks to make the record run. That too is wonder- fully illustrated. A photo of Free's record-setting run was featured in the October 4, 1948, issue of Life Magazine, but not the swimsuit clad photo that became so famous. Exactly who took that famous photo has been lost to time. James Gabler, who works for Preservation Productions, the company that produced the docu- mentary, jokes that Free was such a fan of less friction, "That if Nair had been around then he would have dipped his body in it." Gabler said, in all, the docu- mentary was over six years in the making. The interviews, photos and archival film footage, put the meat on the bones of Free's personali- ty. He was a man of great determi- nation and that especially comes out in the film when it reveals that the speed record had already been broken by the time Free stripped down to his swim shorts. "But he was the kind of guy that figured that the record of 148 just wasn't good enough," Gabler said. "He knew breaking 150 was a magical mark that people would remember." If you're looking for a great documentary to watch, you won't go wrong with Black Lightning - The Rollie Free Story. You can rent the movie on Vimeo. For additional information click here. CN Subscribe to nearly 50 years of Cycle News Archive issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives The documentary on Rollie Free is a joy to watch.

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