The long-awaited Gran Turismo movie is finally hitting theaters in the US.
It stars Stranger Things icon David Harbour, Archie Madekwe as the main character and Orlando Bloom as Darren Cox.
Weāve had a chat with Darren Cox, and heās given us an exclusive behind-the-scenes glimpse into what actually happened.
READ MORE: Hollywood is making a āGran Turismoā movie ā and itās got a legit plotline
The movie is based on the true story of Jann Mardenborough, the youngest winner of the GT Academy.
Launched in 2008, the GT Academy gave skilled Gran Turismo gamers the chance to earn a real-life career as a racing driver.
Speaking to Supercarblondie.com, Cox recalls the exact moment a life-changing lightbulb switched on in his brain.
ā[We were] at Bedford Autodrome. I compared lap times and realized the fastest players in the game also happened to be the fastest drivers on the track,ā he said.
It was at that moment that Cox realized he was on to something, and began pitching the GT Academy idea to Nissan.
Mind you, getting the Japanese automakerās top brass to sign off on the project wasnāt as easy as it looked in the movie.
āIt took three minutes in the movie, but in reality it took me three years to convince them,ā Cox told Supercarblondie.com
Cox also joked about some of the aspects of the story that were glamorized in the movie.
āThe way Orlando Bloom plays my character is a lot more corporate,ā Cox said.
ā[But] I donāt remember having a corporate jet. We were more EasyJet than corporate jet.ā
The movie combines characters based on real people and totally fictional characters.
One of the characters that is definitely real is Kazunori āKazā Yamauchi, the creator of the Gran Turismo video game, whoās played by Japanese actor Takehiro Hira.
Hardcore fans will be happy to learn the movie includes a juicy cameo of the real āKazā as a sushi chef.
Left, Bloom and Madekwe ā Right, Kazunoriās cameo
Despite the movie being co-produced by Sony, Cox said Kazunori wasnāt really hands on.
āOnce the Hollywood train leaves the Hollywood station, itās down to the executive producer and the director,ā he said.
Still, aside from the glamorization of his character and the āHollywoodizationā of certain elements of the story, Cox said the movie is pretty accurate.
Heās especially thrilled with the casting of Orlando Bloom as Danny Moore, a fictional character based on Cox himself.
āI told my wife and she said thereās no way an actor like that is going to play you,ā he said.
āBut it happened. Itās surreal.ā
Filmed on a budget of $60 million, the movie is now finally available globally after the Hollywood strike delayed its release in the US.