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Added on the 16/07/2018 18:00:20 - Copyright : Wochit
Tom Holland recently took time out of his busy schedule to swing by a children's hospital to surprise several kids in full Spider-man costume.
Maserati teases new short film directed by Ferzan Ozpetek
US mega star Tom Cruise, who received an honorary Palme d'Or on his first visit to Cannes in 30 years, leaves the screening of the sequel "Top Gun: Maverick" with the rest of the cast and crew, who are sent off with fireworks. IMAGES
The crew of the new film "Top Gun: Maverick", starring American actor Tom Cruise, presented out of competition, walk the red carpet at the Cannes Festival. IMAGES
Thirty years after his last Cannes appearance, Tom Cruise arrives at the Palais des Festivals, where he'll walk the red carpet for the premiere of "Top Gun Maverick," the sequel to his superstar-making 1986 blockbuster. IMAGES
“Who do you think you are? Stirling Moss?” This, so the story goes, is what a policeman asked the legendary British racing driver following a particularly ‘daring’ overtaking manoeuvre on the streets of London. “Yes sir, I am” was the honest reply.There’s a nod to this legendary tale – and a number of other aspects of Moss’s life and career – in “The Last Blast”, a new short film by Mercedes-Benz Classic. A police motorcycle outrider admonishes the over-enthusiastic driver of the very Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR made famous by Moss’s win in the 1955 Mille Miglia race. As the camera zooms in on the front wing of the bike, we see a sticker bearing the famous question.With this, part of a police-escorted drive across central London, ‘The Last Blast’ celebrates the life of Moss, who died on 12 April 2020 at the age of 90. Filming took place at the end of September 2021 in London – where he lived for more than 60 years – yet somewhere the famous Mercedes-Benz racing car, with its legendary Mille Miglia starting number of 722, has never been driven before.But while the Silver Arrow is the visible star of the show, there’s an invisible one, too: the late racing driver himself. In this very car, together with navigator Denis Jenkinson, he achieved a famous victory for Mercedes-Benz in the 1955 road race from Brescia to Rome and back. And it is in Moss’s honour that the company had the straight-eight engine howl for one last blast on a drive across central London before the car is retired, returning to its permanent home in the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart.