There’s a spectacular moment in the last third of Michael Mann’s Ferrari when the dangerous, two-day, roughly 1 000-mile (about 1 600km) test of endurance called the Mille Miglia enters Bologna.
The year is 1957, and this the first time in the film that the swarm of Ferraris, Maseratis and Alfa Romeos has been bottlenecked into a city.
Now, instead of jockeying for place on country roads, where a crash will send a driver careening into a field, they’re all trying to squeeze past one another on narrow cobblestone streets, with a canyon of ancient and unforgiving brick walls towering above them.
Then, with one deft movement, the camera lands on a single red Ferrari and the face of its driver, Piero Taruffi, “The Silver Fox”, played by Patrick…