In part a nostalgic homage to coming-of-age films of another era, Owen Trevor’s kinetic take on the sport of competitive go-kart racing is as technically assured as it is, at times, predictable. Yet, as Travis Johnson discovers, this family-friendly dramedy has more depth than its tried-and-true narrative formula might initially suggest.
Film critic Simon Foster jokingly referred to this latest piece of youth-oriented Australian cinema as ‘The Kart-y Kid’,1 and, frankly, there is no more apt sobriquet close to hand. Go! (Owen Trevor, 2020), titled Go Karts prior to its theatrical release, is a punchy, amiable teen dramedy that draws so heavily on John G Avildsen’s 1984 crowd-pleaser The Karate Kid, for both narrative structure and emotional pathos, that original screenwriter Robert Mark Kamen is surely owed at the very…