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Video: The Great Escape, re-enacted
Times Online | February 13, 2009 | Nick Rufford

Posted on 02/15/2009 8:56:12 AM PST by Daffynition

Steve McQueen’s bike jump is an iconic movie moment, but is it as authentic as it looks? To find out, we recreated it. Nick Rufford reports:

Two feet, four, six . . . 7ft off the ground. After repeated nervous, muddy attempts, Bud Ekins, a motorcycle stunt rider, coaxed the old Triumph into the air, flew over the strands of fake barbed wire and into the history books. The sequence helped make The Great Escape a cinema classic and turn Steve McQueen into an international star. It also made Ekins, who doubled as McQueen, a legend among fellow riders.

In stunt-riding circles, the jump is still regarded as one of the most technically skilled — and controversial — performed for the big screen. Controversial because Ekins later claimed it was done on a standard, factory-built Triumph. Some film historians say such a jump could not have been accomplished except by special effects or on a highly modified machine. Forty-six years after The Great Escape was made, The Sunday Times has solved the mystery by reconstructing the jump.

In the film, Virgil Hilts, the Cooler King, played by McQueen, is fleeing from the Germans and trying to escape to Switzerland. He seizes a military motorbike and a high-speed chase ensues through the rolling fields near the Swiss border. Though McQueen did much of his own stunt riding, the jump was deemed too risky by the film studio’s insurers and McQueen nominated Ekins, a friend who ran a motorcycle repair shop in California, to do it. The scene required propelling the heavy bike high enough to get it over the first of two fences that film crews had built to resemble the border.

For its day, it was a daring feat, no less so for the fact that the barbed wire was actually little strips of rubber tied around normal wire, made by the cast and crew in their free time. Even that concession to safety was not out of concern for Ekins, but because the script required McQueen to become entangled in the wire before surrendering.

After the film was released, Ekins kept quiet about the jump. His silence helped perpetuate the widely held belief at the time that it was McQueen who had cleared the fence and not a stunt double, though McQueen never made this claim. Before his death in 2007, Ekins recounted the experience in a rare interview. “When I was in the air it was dead silent,” he said. “\ was hard. It just went bang, then it bounced. I made it on the first pass. I filmed it. That was that.”

Ekins later admitted numerous practice attempts had failed. “The effects man put a piece of string across at all these different heights,” he recalled. “The first time, I’d take a run at it and jump maybe 2ft off the ground. Then we would take a shovel and dig this natural ramp, changing the angles on it.”

The first stage in our reconstruction was to find a bike that matched the original Triumph Tiger used in the film. The modern Tiger is nothing like its ancestor so we settled on a bike called the Métisse Steve McQueen Desert Racer, a replica of a bike built by McQueen and Ekins in the 1960s. Our replica was built by Gerry Lisi, a British enthusiast, using genuine Triumph parts and home-machined components. Though not identical to the Tiger used in the film, the Desert Racer is comparable in size (albeit somewhat lighter at 297lb versus 365lb) and performance (it uses the same 650cc Triumph engine, giving a top speed of about 90mph). Triumph motorbikes were considered world beaters in their day; in 1965 five of the top 20 finishers of the Daytona 200 were on Triumphs.

But good though it was, by today’s standards the 1960s Triumph was a clunky old machine and quite unsuitable for jumping — all the more reason to marvel at Ekins’s achievement, if it was genuine. We were about to find out.

Next we brought in Steve Colley, three times British trials bike champion and one of the best motorcycle jumpers in the business. Reaching a height of 7ft would normally be a breeze for Colley on a specially built stunt bike. But they typically weigh only 150lb — half that of the Desert Racer — with double the power-to-weight ratio.

Colley was sceptical about whether he could do it (“Ekins and those guys were used to riding heavy motorcycles and making them do incredible things. No one would dare today. It’s a lost art.” Pause. “But I’ll give it a go.”)

As a substitute for Bavaria, the location used for The Great Escape, we chose Carswell golf and country club near Wantage, Oxfordshire, where the rolling fairways matched the landscape of that region. A line of fencing was built with logs to represent the Swiss border.

With everything in place, Colley made his first run. Like Ekins, he could initially manage no more than a couple of feet off the ground. “I’m tugging on these handlebars for all I’m worth and all I’m getting is bunny hops,” he said.

Page 2


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans; Science; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: motorcycle; stevemcqueen; triumph
Video


1 posted on 02/15/2009 8:56:12 AM PST by Daffynition
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Steve McQueen's Desert Racer

Steve McQueen's Desert Racer motorcycle is to be built and sold in the UK. The Métisse Desert Racer, a replica of one of McQueen's own bikes that he adapted with Bud Ekins - the stunt rider in The Great Escape - will be made by Oxfordshire-based Métisse Motorcycles, produced with the full endorsement of the McQueen estate.

Only 300 of the motorcycles will be built, with as many details recreated as possible. The frames are chrome-moly nickel plated and the motorcycles have a fully reconditioned period Triumph TR6 engine complete with a single Amal carburettor. They also include styled footrests made to McQueen’s preferred design. Each bike features McQueen’s signature on the tank badge and comes with a certificate of authenticity.

29 years after his death, Steve McQueen remains an iconic figure, epitomising the essence of cool. His passion for motorcycles was well known and inspired the owner of Métisse Motorcycles, Gerry Lisi to recreate McQueen’s favourite bike.

“The Desert Racer is such an iconic motorcycle that when I took over Métisse via the Rickman brothers, I was determined to bring it back into production and use traditional methods to ensure that it is as close to the original bike as possible," said Lisi

After three years in development, the Métisse Desert Racer was first unveiled at Motorcycle World at Beaulieu last year. The first buyer of the £13,000 bike was Steve McQueen’s son Chad.

The Steve McQueen Métisse Desert Racer is on sale now.

2 posted on 02/15/2009 9:01:13 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition

This was the very first poster my parents let me buy in Old Town Chicago when I was 8 years old. I never thought I would see it again. Thanks for posting it!

3 posted on 02/15/2009 9:05:15 AM PST by Dixie Yooper (Ephesians 6:11)
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To: Dixie Yooper
You're welcome. Mr. Cool...........


4 posted on 02/15/2009 9:07:59 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition

Speaking of great escapes check this one out!
http://needsofthemany.wordpress.com/2008/08/23/the-dumbest-robber-ever-funny-video/


5 posted on 02/15/2009 9:14:22 AM PST by ontap (Just another backstabbing conservative)
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: Daffynition

What motorcycles did the German army actually use? I always thought they were BMWs with tractor seats, like the Soviet Urals made after the war.


7 posted on 02/15/2009 9:52:42 AM PST by PUGACHEV
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To: ontap

HAHAHA! That’s precisely why I hate ladders! I love it when the shelf products keep falling on him when he’s on the floor.


8 posted on 02/15/2009 10:04:57 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: PUGACHEV
Your answer
9 posted on 02/15/2009 10:06:56 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition
Look Ma No Hands!


10 posted on 02/15/2009 10:19:46 AM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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To: JoeProBono
Look Ma No Hands! ...PAWS!


11 posted on 02/15/2009 10:32:46 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition
OOPS


12 posted on 02/15/2009 10:36:18 AM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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To: JoeProBono

13 posted on 02/15/2009 10:39:45 AM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition

14 posted on 02/15/2009 10:41:14 AM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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To: Daffynition; All

But the most famous element of the Triumph Thunderbird image came from Marlon Brando’s performance in a 1954 movie called “The Wild One.” Riding his own 1950 Thunderbird, Brando portrayed motorcycle-gang member Johnny in the film that started the biker-flick genre. A still shot of a leather-jacketed Brando, astride the bike, with a stolen dirt-track trophy attached to the headlight, has become one of the most enduring images of motorcycling from the ’50s.


15 posted on 02/15/2009 11:36:42 AM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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To: JoeProBono
Sorry ... but after "Wild One" ...it was pretty much downhill from there for Brando, IMHO.


16 posted on 02/15/2009 12:59:09 PM PST by Daffynition ("Beauty is in the sty of the beholder." ~ Joe 6-pack)
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To: Daffynition
Borrowed your Gif
17 posted on 02/15/2009 1:31:31 PM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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