3 (2004)

3 (2004)
Member Rating:  
Barry Pepper stars as stock-car racing legend Dale Earnhardt in this made-for-cable drama. Dale was raised by Ralph Earnhardt (J.K. Simmons), a proud man who worked at a mill to feed and clothe his family but found true satisfaction rebuilding jalopies in his garage and racing them at local events on the weekends. Ralph was a minor legend in Southern stock-car racing, and when Dale dropped out of high school to follow his own passion for racing, he started out in his father's shadow -- and with no illusions about the odds stacked against him. But after more than a decade of struggle, Dale finally began to break into the big leagues in the late '70s, and in time he became the biggest money maker in NASCAR history, tying with the great Richard Petty as the winner of the Winston Cup trophies. But the lessons Dale learned from his father took on a deeper meaning when his own teenage son, Dale Jr. (Chad McCumbee), also decided to take up racing at the age of 16 -- and Dale tried to keep his hot-headed son away from the track. Named for Earnhardt's racing number, 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story debuted on the ESPN cable network on December 11, 2004, and was released on home video shortly afterward. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Barry PepperElizabeth Mitchell, (more)
Director(s):
Russell Mulcahy
Format(s):
DVD  |  Blu-ray
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Synopsis of 3

Barry Pepper stars as stock-car racing legend Dale Earnhardt in this made-for-cable drama. Dale was raised by Ralph Earnhardt (J.K. Simmons), a proud man who worked at a mill to feed and clothe his family but found true satisfaction rebuilding jalopies in his garage and racing them at local events on the weekends. Ralph was a minor legend in Southern stock-car racing, and when Dale dropped out of high school to follow his own passion for racing, he started out in his father's shadow -- and with no illusions about the odds stacked against him. But after more than a decade of struggle, Dale finally began to break into the big leagues in the late '70s, and in time he became the biggest money maker in NASCAR history, tying with the great Richard Petty as the winner of the Winston Cup trophies. But the lessons Dale learned from his father took on a deeper meaning when his own teenage son, Dale Jr. (Chad McCumbee), also decided to take up racing at the age of 16 -- and Dale tried to keep his hot-headed son away from the track. Named for Earnhardt's racing number, 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story debuted on the ESPN cable network on December 11, 2004, and was released on home video shortly afterward. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
92 mins

Complete Cast of 3


Director(s):
Russell Mulcahy
Writer(s):
Robert Eisele
Producer(s):
Lynn Raynor
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    Member Reviews
     
    Tom M.

    This is a great movie basically honoring the man, the myth, the legend, Dale Earnhardt! That's all you need to know

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    Matthew N.

    This is a very good movie

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    Clint E.

    This movie is awful. The whole thing is just a boring tedious slap in the face to one of NASCAR's first stars. ESPN rushed this movie into production to capitalize on the death of Dale Earnhardt. Unfortunately this movie is barely better than most Sci-fi channel originally produced films - and we all know how good those are, YUCK! I know there will be a bunch of blind Nascar fans who'll say they love this film, but they are just ESPN apologists. Take a close look, it's terrible.

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