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Heart Like a Wheel Poster

Heart Like a Wheel

"She did something women were forbidden to do, and became a World Champion."

Shirley Muldowney is determined to be a top-fuel drag racer, although no woman has ever raced them before. Despite the high risks of this kind of racing and the burden it places on her family life, she perseveres in her dream.

Top Cast

  • Bonnie Bedelia

    Bonnie Bedelia

    Shirley Muldowney

  • Beau Bridges

    Beau Bridges

    Connie Kalitta

  • Leo Rossi

    Leo Rossi

    Jack Muldowney

  • Hoyt Axton

    Hoyt Axton

    Jack Roque

  • Bill McKinney

    Bill McKinney

    "Big Daddy" Don Garlits

  • Anthony Edwards

    Anthony Edwards

    John Muldowney

  • Elliott Mason

    Elliott Mason

    Young Autograph Seeker

  • Creed Bratton

    Creed Bratton

    Photographer

  • Dick Miller

    Dick Miller

    Mickey White

Overview

Shirley Muldowney is determined to be a top-fuel drag racer, although no woman has ever raced them before. Despite the high risks of this kind of racing and the burden it places on her family life, she perseveres in her dream.

Rating

5.8 / 10
30 Reviews
1 Popular

2 Reviews

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Jun 22, 2025

    Long before there was Ru Paul, there was Bonnie Bedelia delivering quite a gutsy performance here in her own drag racing biopic of pioneering driver Shirley Muldowney. Her racing involved cars but otherwise wasn’t a lot less catty as her attempt to establish herself in what was very much a man’s world proved difficult for her and those around her. Initially, her new husband (Leo Rossi) is supportive and encouraging but only insofar as it is a hobby that doesn’t get in the way of their family and their gas station business. She’s more determined than that though, and egged on by fellow driver “Connie” (Beau Bridges), soon finds herself separated and striving for success with her son John helping out. If you follow the history of this particularly American sport, you will know what happens over the next few years of high-octane action peppered with a little romance. That’s about it, really. There’s nowhere near enough race action - staged or archive - to really enliven this and so for the most part there is just loads of chat and plenty of tantrums as Bedelia does just about enough but Bridges struggles to make much impact. It quickly makes it’s point about chauvinism - in not just this sport, but also in it’s media coverage, but not really very powerfully and in the end comes across more of a fluffy celebration of her achievements rather than an assessment of just how tough it was to get to the top. We know she made sacrifices, but these are not really so prominently explored in this disappointingly light-weight drama that really just joins the dots and skims over most of her graft.

  • Wuchak
    Wuchak
    7 Mar 28, 2026

    **_Biopic of The First Lady of Drag Racing, Shirley “Cha Cha” Muldowney_** This is similar to “Coal Miner’s Daughter” from three years prior, just substituting drag racing for country musician. No, it’s not as good, but it ain’t bad. It starts with sequences reminiscent of the back road drag racing in “Rebel Without a Cause.” Didn’t we all do that as teens? Beautiful Bonnie Bedelia sold me on the movie, but the real-life Muldowney, who acted as consultant, preferred Jamie Lee Curtis for the role. She called Bedelia a “snot” who exited race cars like she was getting up from the dinner table. The masculine cast includes Beau Bridges, Mickey White and Michael Cavanaugh, amongst others. It runs 1h 53m and was shot in late spiring/early summer 1982 at Irvine, California, Olympic, Washington, and Beeline Raceway in Mesa, Arizona. GRADE: B

Trailers & Clips

Recommendations

Right on Track

Based a on a true story about two sisters who came out on top of a man's sport. The story is based on Erica and Courtney Enders, two sisters who get in to junior drag racing and make it all the way to the top. The two sisters fight a battle of fellow racers who are against having girls race with them therefore it pushes them harder to compete against their competition. Erica becomes stressed when her racing life becomes mixed with her social life and academic goals, and decided to quit racing, until she realizes racing is what she truly wants to do. Finally towards the end of their teen years the Enders sisters come out on top to win the junior drag racing national title. They continue to race throughout high school and college, and still do so today.

Right on Track

6.7 2003