Netflix F1: Drive to Survive S7 review – Can old faces bring new magic?

F1

Netflix's smash hit show Drive to Survive is here with its seventh season – can it get back to the glory days?

Flavio Briatore II Alpine 2024 ABu Dhabi GP

Briatore: made for the camera?

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Welcome to our review of Drive to Survive’s seventh season. If you’d rather read a review with no spoilers in, click here.

“How old are you now Jack? You have driving licence?

“Everyone thinks you have the magic car, driving along, smoking a cigarette. No more kid s***. No more ‘nyeh, nyeh, nyeh’.

“Now, Jesus Christ, you need to be in the top. The future of the Jack, I control you every millimetre.”

So goes the slightly sinister, more baffling monologue which could be straight out of a Godfather remake, but belongs to Flavio Briatore, old anti-hero of F1, new star of Drive to Survive’s Season 7 – released March 7.

The Alpine team’s returning boss is central to the latest instalment of DtS – Netflix’s wildly successful series has trodden dangerously boring waters in recent years. Can the show use grizzled warhorses like Briatore to conjure up some fresh magic?

Charles Leclerc Ferrari Netflix F1 Drive to Survive Season 7

Drive to Survive takes a new approach to bring the racing to life

Netflix

Candid access has been limited as PRs’ vice-like grip strengthens, drivers have had their personalities (if they ever had one in the first place) media-trained out of them and the championship itself is unwilling to portray itself in any negative light.

Recent seasons 4, 5 and 6 have been largely bland affairs as a result. The halcyon, Guenther-Steiner-fok-smashing days of S2 and 3 – when F1 exploded in popularity – feel like a distant memory.

At one point championship bosses spoke vaguely of a making a rejig with the Netflix format, implying DtS might even stop completely after some of the buzz had been lost.

Without perhaps needing to reinvent itself, changes to the DtS formula clearly needed to be made – and some are immediately evident in the new series from the off.

“When we’re sure that DtS 7 is actually happening now, the first episode gets off to a flying start”

It takes a little while to establish when the first episode has actually got going. The action from scene-to-scene is cut so rapidly for the short-of-attention-span, and with so many explosion-like noises, you initially wonder whether you’re still watching the trailer to begin with – and suspect the next time new Haas boss Ayao Komatsu puts down a cup of green tea in the team hospitality, it’s going to be accompanied by a massive ‘BANG!’ sound effect.

However, it all adds to an enhanced cinematic feeling, and one that is certainly more watchable (if your eyes haven’t gone square already). Mercifully, after six seasons, DtS has finally managed to sort out its engine-noise-to-car shots too.

No longer, judging by the engine notes, do we watch someone apparently taking Monaco’s Grand Hotel Hairpin (probably F1’s slowest corner) at 200mph, or barrelling through Monza’s Parabolica in, err, second gear.

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When we are sure that DtS 7 is actually happening now, the first episode gets off to a flying start by combining a couple of bombshells – Lewis Hamilton going to Ferrari, and Christian Horner’s (since dismissed) workplace misconduct allegations.

Series bosses have waxed lyrical about Daniel Ricciardo’s contribution in the past, but really it’s Horner who has made the series so far, so omnipresent has he been to any dastardly DtS storyline which doesn’t involve Haas or Alpine. It’s proven more than ever in S7.

Cameras catch the Red Bull boss perched on the pitwall during the 2024 Bahrain GP’s FP2, at the exact moment a flurry of Whatsapp messages related to his misconduct were leaked to F1 journalists. Horner sits there (and later narrates) as his phone lights up, head in hands and swearing to himself while grim-faced technical director Adrian Newey is sat next to him. Looking at his colleague from corner of his eye, grand prix racing’s greatest boffin gives off a strong ‘I’m-too-old-for-this-nonsense’ impression.

Netflix shots show McLaren boss Zak Brown and his Mercedes counterpart Toto Wolff clearly loving it – but Horner hangs on despite the best efforts of others to stir the pot.

And DtS could well have breathed a sigh of relief. Horner – almost always as the bad guy – is compelling in this series, central to also the Norris vs Verstappen storyline and downfall-of-Perez-promotion-of-Lawson episodes. DtS would be lost without him: people love having someone to hate, and he’s a good pundit.

Christian Horner Red Bull Netflix F1 Drive to Survive Season 7

Horner hangs on, somehow

Netflix

This is emphasised once more by Verstappen barely appearing as a talking head, and Perez’s absence of anything interesting to say.

The episode centred around the beleaguered Mexican’s demise is one of the best, but Perez appears to have no answer off-track just as he doesn’t on-track.

“You have to give full credit to DtS for squeezing all the editorial juice out of 2024’s most boring story line”

Amongst several revealing moments are just how ready Red Bull was ready to dump Perez mid-season for Ricciardo, but for the Australian’s own abject form making him an unacceptable choice.

You also have to give full credit to DtS for squeezing all the editorial juice out of 2024’s most boring story line: which lower midfield team will Carlos Sainz sign for?

Williams team boss James Vowles pens love letter after love letter to the Spaniard: “It would be a complete transformation of Williams to have Carlos by my side. I go to sleep and wake up thinking of nothing else.” Blimey! To quote George Russell.

Sainz hilariously stands up Vowles when he’s supposed to arrive to sign a contract, but why? Because of Flavio Briatore, that’s why.

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Alpine’s returning dark lord, along with Horner, is one of two characters who makes Season 7 and, accompanied by a ham Italian operatic soundtrack at all times, is the Godfather-send the series makers were praying for.

Alpine’s team-boss-turned-CEO comes in swinging the axe. He says the car is “s***”, tells Pierre Gasly he thought he was a “w*****” prior to some decent performances and, worst of all, declares the Enstone coffee not up to much. He then falls out with and fires Esteban Ocon, while Jack Doohan looks bemused as he’s being given the latest priceless Flav download. It’s all good stuff.

Commenting on the changing of guard at Alpine and Haas (we’re clearly meant to infer the contrast between the Briatore comeback versus the rise of the F1 technocrat), Horner doesn’t even know who the promoted mega-nerd Ayoa Komatsu is: “All these vanilla engineers, all they talk about is data and probabilities… data, data – not like it was a few years ago…” Yearning for a bit of Eddie Jordan in his life, clearly.

Horner’s right though: the above-mentioned scenes sit amongst a decent swathe of beige.

Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Netflix F1 Drive to Survive Season 7

Ricciardo gets his chance, but…

Netflix

As we negotiate the series, the race sequences simply aren’t that interesting. They’re completely necessary to the Netflix-based fan who might tune in to the occasional GP, but if you’re a diehard who watches every round live, you’re just waiting for them to end and are sorely tempted to skip forward.

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An episode where Norris, Leclerc, Albon, Russell and Gasly are given phones to record their weekend at the Singapore GP promises a lot and delivers little – Albon giving a running commentary on the window cleaners outside his 20th story hotel room proves the video diary highlight.

The most telling moment is that Russell appears to have a panic attack following heat stroke-type symptoms after the Singapore GP – nothing more shows you the physical and mental strain the drivers are under to perform at all times, and demonstrates why fans want to use DtS as a glimpse behind the scenes. This, ironically, isn’t caught on Russell’s phone but by the standard Netflix cameras.

You feel the series’ better moments emphasise some missed opportunities though. Adrian Newey’s transfer to Aston isn’t covered, which is a shame as owner Lawrence Stroll is a great villain. Logan Sargeant doesn’t get to say his bit on why he repeatedly crashed a rubbish Williams – and there’s no mention of his replacement, the charismatic Franco Colapinto, who you would think is made for DtS.

Ex-Haas boss Guenther Steiner only appears fleetingly. His sweary analysis of his former team would have been appreciated also.

Flavio Briatore Alpine Netflix F1 Drive to Survive Season 7

Conclusion: semi-incoherent older gentleman star of TV show aimed at teens and 20-somethings, apparently

Netflix

Drive to Survive S7 is an amusing representation of F1 in 2025. Despite F1’s young, vibrant, cigarette sponsorship-less modern day image, it’s the old guard of Horner and Briatore that make it compelling, because they actually say something.

As the presented day-to-day human element of F1 gets ever more dull – teams offering up quotes, interviews and video that might as well be AI-generated, does DtS give us some ‘real’ behind the scenes insight? Does it present F1 as much more than just LinkedIn-plus-a hybrid system?

Yes, at times. But you’ll have to deploy a bit of fast-forwarding to get there…

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