
In 1971, 'On Any Sunday' starring Steve McQueen opened in theatres and wrote its place in motorcycle history. It also transcended the sport to reach a wide audience through a cast of engaging characters and variety of heartfelt stories. 'On Any Sunday, The Next Chapter' will continue this family tradition and also pass the torch to the next generations. A lot has happened in the past 40 years, but the passion for riding is timeless and continues today.... (Full plot summary below)
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In 1971, 'On Any Sunday' starring Steve McQueen opened in theatres and wrote its place in motorcycle history. It also transcended the sport to reach a wide audience through a cast of engaging characters and variety of heartfelt stories. 'On Any Sunday, The Next Chapter' will continue this family tradition and also pass the torch to the next generations. A lot has happened in the past 40 years, but the passion for riding is timeless and continues today.
Leave your thoughts about On Any Sunday: The Next Chapter.
| The Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckIt's a visually stunning experience. Even the shots of riders crashing, and there's enough of them here to fuel a dozen PSAs, achieve a haunting visual poetry. |
| The DissolveNoel MurrayOn Any Sunday: The Next Chapter is doggedly down the middle, mixing sports action with talking-head interviews, set to an eclectic soundtrack of rock and country music. The movie feels scattered, jumping too quickly from subject to subject, with little of the original’s visual poetry. |
| RogerEbert.comGlenn KennyWhat follows is all handsomely shot and not without some general interest — but the movie’s only really going to play for you if motorcycles and those who ride them are subjects to which you’re somewhat sympathetic. |
| VarietyScott FoundasAn intoxicating blend of exotic travelogue, death-defying derring-do, and affecting profiles in courage and perseverance. |
| Los Angeles TimesRobert Abele"Next Chapter" may not exhibit the scrappy charm that characterized the first film's glimpse into a marginalized but colorful world, but for devotees, Dana Brown has assembled a love letter to a now-global culture. |
| Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreSlick as a Red Bull motorsports commercial, but it lacks the DIY grit and passion of the original, the greatest motorcycle documentary of them all |
| New York TimesNicolas RapoldMotorbikes careening round corners just millimeters off the track still quicken the pulse, but “The Next Chapter” also demonstrates the padding that documentaries in general have picked up in recent years. |
| Austin ChronicleSteve DavisWhat’s missing here is the full adrenaline rush associated with this dangerous but exhilarating sport and pastime. The documentary’s start/stop narrative structure never allows anything to accelerate full throttle. |
| New York PostFarran Smith NehmeThe single theme is “Isn’t this cool?” And if your response is, “Well, it’s certainly loud,” then On Any Sunday probably isn’t for you. |
| Cinemalogue.comTodd Jorgenson... yields some visual flair at locales around the globe, yet the emphasis is on celebrating the sport more than analyzing it, which will leave the engine in neutral for outsiders. |