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  • Tonight, we drive down a sewer.

  • We power slide across a field.

  • And some other things as well. I can't see where I'm going.

  • CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

  • Thank you, everybody. Hello!

  • Hello. Welcome.

  • Hello. Thank you, thank you.

  • Now...

  • what do you suppose is the slowest means of transport

  • in this day and age?

  • Canal boat?

  • WOMAN: James May.

  • James May.

  • Getting a piggyback from James May, possibly.

  • Turns out, though, the answer is air travel,

  • as Richard Hammond explains.

  • This is an airport.

  • It's a place where you wait around a lot.

  • But the waiting isn't just because of delayed planes.

  • No, the problem runs deeper than that.

  • Everything that moves at an airport just takes an age.

  • The tug that drags the plane to the gate crawls like a snail.

  • The bus that ferries the passengers to the place is deathly slow.

  • The catering truck is always late,

  • the fuel truck just meanders about with no sense of urgency

  • and as for that little thing

  • that drags the luggage around in a big train,

  • maybe that's the reason

  • why you have to wait for a year at the luggage carousel.

  • Net result - misery.

  • In fact, some youngsters who check in to fly somewhere on a school trip

  • often die of old age in the departure lounge.

  • And that's an actual fact.

  • Time, then, for Top Gear to step in,

  • and in the same we solved the bendy bus issue,

  • we shall tackle this problem through the crucible of motor sport.

  • Let's begin by assembling a selection of typical airport vehicles.

  • First up, the aircraft steps.

  • Never there when you need them. Hope they can buck their ideas up.

  • Then we have the thing that lugs the luggage around,

  • complete with...luggage.

  • The fuel tanker, heavy and full of...

  • stuff.

  • Fuel.

  • Next, the bendy bus that ferries the passengers around.

  • We're already pretty familiar with those.

  • Ah, the fire engine. Absolutely no excuse for tardiness for that one.

  • And the catering truck.

  • Always late, sometimes better if it didn't turn up at all.

  • And finally,

  • the heaviest beast of all - the aircraft tug.

  • So, there we are -

  • a group of machines that normally trundle around at a snail's pace.

  • But just think how much faster the whole airport experience would be

  • if we could speed things up.

  • To show the airport bosses

  • just what untapped potential these machines have,

  • welcome to the inaugural

  • Top Gear Various Airport Vehicles Motor Sport Challenge Race...

  • Challenge.

  • Our venue for this ground-breaking event

  • is London's Heathrow Airport, just outside London.

  • Normally it is a lot busier than this

  • but the people who run Heathrow closed it for the day

  • and they've moved all the jumbos and, um, terminals off to the side,

  • out of shot...

  • They have, that's what they've done.

  • So, with that taken care of, all I need now are some drivers.

  • Sadly, the airport ground staff just won't cut the mustard.

  • But guess who I ran into in Duty Free.

  • Touring car legend, Tom Chilton.

  • Touring car legend, Matt Neal.

  • Touring car legend, Mat Jackson.

  • Touring car legend, Gordon Shedden.

  • Touring car legend, Anthony Reid.

  • And truck racing legend, Stuart Oliver.

  • The drivers climbed into their chosen machines,

  • leaving me with the fire engine.

  • I can't reach the switch.

  • ENGINE STARTS

  • Yeah!

  • All of these vehicles have very different engines and what have you,

  • and so whichever one wins today

  • is the vehicle we will be recommending

  • all future aircraft vehicles are based on,

  • regardless of function or task.

  • ENGINES REV

  • This is a pretty serious scientific experiment,

  • so I have stressed to the other drivers

  • in the strongest possible terms,

  • absolutely no body contact whatsoever.

  • We're away!

  • The catering lorry - I can't believe how that took off!

  • 'Although the fire truck was incredibly noisy...'

  • ENGINE WHINES

  • '..on paper, it had got winning potential.'

  • 'On the minus side, however, it was still a fire truck.'

  • 'Very soon, I was falling back.'

  • Oh, no! I mean, what good would this be in an emergency situation

  • if the bloody catering truck gets there before the fire engine?!

  • 'And predictably, with me out of the way,

  • 'the touring car boys were ignoring my strict no-contact rule.

  • 'If I was to get back in and restore order, I needed to act fast.'

  • There, that'll do.

  • Ha-ha!

  • Oh! Yep.

  • I can't see where I'm going. I can't see.

  • I wonder what's happened to the world.

  • 'But the crash diet did the trick.'

  • I'm back in the race in my lightweight fire truck superleggera!

  • Yes!

  • 'Unfortunately,

  • 'the other drivers weren't impressed with the new track conditions.'

  • That's lapped the bendy bus!

  • Ah-ha-ha-ha!

  • 'Several laps into the race and no clear winner was emerging.'

  • The stairs in front of me now, they're an unknown quanti...TY!

  • Oh, my God!

  • 'So, with great regret, I ordered the drivers to turn up the wick.'

  • Maximum revs!

  • 'Pretty soon, the results started to come,

  • 'with the fuel tender taking a pretty serious kicking from the catering truck.'

  • The fuel lorry is out.

  • Oh!

  • 'With just two laps to go,

  • 'the 29-tonne tug and the luggage trolley

  • 'were at the back in a fight of their own.

  • 'And following an accidental manoeuvre by me...'

  • Woah! '..the bendy bus was now crippled,

  • 'meaning it was now all down to me, the catering truck and the stairs.

  • 'Correction - make that me and the catering truck.

  • 'Which, as we entered the final lap, had suddenly changed tactics.'

  • Woah! What's he done with that?!

  • 'What he'd done was genius.'

  • 'The lightweight catering truck shot into the lead.'

  • Woah!

  • 'But the racing driver,

  • 'being a racing driver,

  • 'had forgotten about the laws of physics.'

  • That is the catering truck out of it.

  • That is good news indeed. Yeah!

  • Ahh! There you go!

  • 'So, airports of the world, take note.'

  • From now on,

  • all airport vehicles will be based on the fire engine,

  • which will be brilliant

  • as long as there isn't a fire.

  • CHEERING

  • Excellent work.

  • Excellent science, Doctor.

  • Excellent science.

  • More of that. More research, yeah.

  • Now let's do the news.

  • Yes, let's. Right... Oh, yes.

  • Every week, the Daily Mirror runs a story

  • saying that we've done something unspeakable.

  • You know, we've stolen all the Army's helicopters

  • or we've accidentally clubbed an old lady to death with a baby seal.

  • This week, OK,

  • the story they chose to run with was this.

  • OK? Here it is.

  • Big story saying that...

  • homosexuals are banned from the Top Gear studio audience.

  • Now, seriously, honestly,

  • I've never read such rubbish in my life, ever. Now, it is true...

  • LAUGHTER ..that we like an even split of men and women in the audience,

  • otherwise it's a bit like the early days

  • when we only got the Subaru owners club, and that's a bit grizzly.

  • But we do not actually insist

  • that you sleep with the person you come to the studio with. No.

  • I mean, often, you know, mums come down with their sons

  • and we're not suggesting that...

  • You know, that's... No, we're not. But everybody's welcome. Exactly.

  • The truth is, we welcome homosexual couples here. We do.

  • We particularly like the lesbian sort. Oh, God!

  • Oh, no. No, no, no.

  • I saw a film about lesbians on the internet once. Oh, God!

  • LAUGHTER

  • It looked very interesting.

  • Now, BMW, OK, have made...they've made this. It's an M5 CSL, OK?

  • It's got a carbon fibre roof,

  • it's got a longer-stroke engine, 5.5 litres, 580 horsepower.

  • That is 20 seconds a lap faster round the Nurburgring

  • than the standard M5.

  • Wow. LAUGHTER

  • I know. The big "wow" is... Do you know what it is?

  • They're not going to make it, and that's weird to me.

  • Why go to all that trouble if you're not going to make it?

  • That's like...sleeping with a woman when you don't want to have a baby.

  • No, that doesn't work, does it? That's the worst metaphor ever.

  • You're on your own with that! The real reason I brought this up

  • are these BMW racing colours,

  • because you don't see racing colours any more in motor racing.

  • You remember the Alitalia colours and the Martini...

  • It's a good point, because these days, you get a white car

  • and then it just says something like "Panasonic". Ugh!

  • Those new teams coming into F1,

  • they should choose their sponsors

  • according to which sponsors are going to give them the best-looking car.

  • With the Sheffield team that we talked about,

  • they could get sponsored by... well, by a local band.

  • The Human League!

  • They could all have helmets that are shorter on one side!

  • Because you know Timo Glock.

  • He was working as a waiter in a cocktail bar.

  • They don't want him. They picked him up, turned him around and turned him into something new.

  • Yes, all right, enough '80s lyrics references!

  • I know what would make an excellent sponsor for a motor racing team.

  • If you say Morrisons, I'm going to stab you in the heart.

  • No, I think After Eight mints.

  • There's that dark green with a little gold stripe on.

  • Does... Aston Martin.

  • Dark green... They race at Le Mans... Yeah.

  • ..24-hour race.

  • It would be after eight in an After eight car!

  • Make that happen. Do it.

  • What about Cooper's marmalade? You could have an orange racing car but with bits in.

  • What?

  • You could have beef Hula Hoops.

  • Um...

  • Bovril... Not Bovril. Bisto!

  • Then you could have that white thing down the car that could say, "Aah"!

  • James, you're just naming things you like and they're all brown!

  • James May's Formula Brown!

  • "Look, Church's shoes is overtaking the cottage pie"!

  • What would you rather...? Yes, but what would you rather have -

  • gravy overtakes pie

  • or the gone-bust bank overtakes the Japanese producer of electronics?

  • He's got a point. No, I'd want to watch that.

  • Why have I got a vision of James May smearing himself with marmalade?! Oh, my God!

  • Now, hey.

  • You know we're living in the most stupid country in the world?

  • You have mentioned that... every week at about this time.

  • OK, get this, right.

  • It's the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution

  • is backing a recent call from the scientific journal Nature, OK,

  • suggesting that we should turn off all the streetlights

  • and drive around in darkness.

  • Isn't that a bit dangerous? Yes.

  • They say if you turn the lights off, it WILL increase accidents,

  • and presumably deaths and casualties, by ten per cent,

  • but they say it's a price worth paying

  • as it'll make life better for nocturnal creatures

  • like bats and badgers and Patrick Moore.

  • They say that too much light creates dark and shady areas

  • where criminals can hide.

  • Are they saying that light creates more dark and shady places

  • than, for example, darkness?

  • What are they talking about?! There's...

  • I thought it would be a good idea to find a picture of the scientist behind this

  • so we could put a picture of him up and we could all laugh at his beard.

  • It turns out he doesn't have a beard.

  • But I think he does have a problem with light,

  • because this is the only picture I could find.

  • Ahh, what's happened?!

  • He's a vampire - that's why he wants to make it dark!

  • He does. What do we need to get him?

  • MAN: Wooden stake. A wooden stake!

  • We need a wooden stake to drive through his Pringle jumper,

  • I think he's wearing.

  • Hey, listen.

  • Do you want an Audi A4, OK,

  • that's much more expensive and harder to park?

  • Yes, I do. Good news, because this week,

  • we've received news that there's a new Audi A8.

  • It's designed by a man called Mick Dick.

  • LAUGHTER

  • I've got... No, no, no, I've got the bumf here, OK? Um...

  • Has he anything interesting to tell us about it?

  • JEREMY MUMBLES INDISTINCTLY

  • No.

  • Well...what does it look like?

  • No idea. This is the picture they sent, OK?

  • It's under a cloth! Yes.

  • Who's he? Mick Dick. Oh, that's him! Yeah.

  • Best friend, as it turns out, of Billy Willy!

  • They work for Bob Knob, do they?!

  • With Roger Todger.

  • They were going to get it designed by the Scottish car designer...

  • Jock Cock!

  • Actually,

  • there was something interesting in here, OK?

  • There was, genuinely, right?

  • What Audi has done is they've outlined what the A8 customer is.

  • GERMAN ACCENT: And they say... he is highly affluent

  • with an average income of 500,000 a year,

  • er...

  • he is 58 years old

  • er, highly educated,

  • mostly married.

  • Mostly married? How? What does that... So he's married down to there?

  • And this bit is separated?

  • Yeah, it says he's got a few children still in the household.

  • What, in the basement? Yeah, he's a kidnapper as well.

  • Anyone here who is 58 years old, on half a million dollars a year

  • with divorced shins and some children in the basement?

  • LAUGHTER

  • Oh, dear, Mick Dick's cocked up.

  • He's built a car for someone who doesn't exist.

  • Yeah. So let's move on. You see, it doesn't matter what sort of a person you are.

  • There is always a car to suit.

  • If, for example, you're an air hostess, you can have an Audi TT.

  • If you're a Freemason, hm, you can have a Lexus.

  • If you have huge ears with hair sprouting out of them,

  • you can have a Peugeot 3008.

  • LAUGHTER

  • But...what if you're mad?

  • What if you can't walk past a window without being overcome with an uncontrollable need to lick it?

  • There's never been a car to suit you...until now.

  • This is no ordinary BMW X5.

  • This is an S&M X5.

  • What they've done is taken the standard car

  • and inserted under the bonnet a 555 horsepower, 4.4 litre twin-turbo-charged V8.

  • The results are as dramatic as putting a furious weasel

  • in your underpants.

  • Gallon of fuel gone there.

  • There's another one gone. And another.

  • This car would be less annoying to eco-mentalists

  • if its engine ran on sliced dolphin.

  • Still, it produces more power and more torque than a Ferrari 430 Scuderia.

  • So, despite the enormous weight, we're told that in a drag race,

  • it should be able to make mincemeat out of most sports cars.

  • Go!

  • Yep. This is a five-litre, super-charged sports car.

  • HE LAUGHS And it's winning.

  • Yeah, there you go - look. There's Usain Bolt.

  • Thrashing John Prescott here, contrary to the information we received.

  • We weren't expecting that. We looked up some figures in the office

  • and they suggested that this would win and now it hasn't.

  • That's a bit embarrassing.

  • The handling is equally surprising.

  • But in a good way.

  • It is remarkable that here I am four miles high in the sky

  • driving a car that weighs slightly more than the centre of the earth.

  • And it's fine. It's better than fine.

  • It's not an M5, but for something like this, it's amazing.

  • And of course, it's all great,

  • but in a big 4x4 school bus, what's the point?

  • I don't know what the world record is for the most amount of sick to come out of a child,

  • but I reckon if you put a nine-year-old in the back of one of these and drove like this...

  • ..he could beat it.

  • And look at this. This tells you how much torque is going to each wheel

  • at any given moment.

  • Can you imagine bringing that up on a first date?

  • Have you seen this, my dear? Look at that.

  • I reckon you'd be in there. Mm-mm.

  • This, then, is a silly car.

  • And also, it's not very good.

  • The seats are hard and unsupportive.

  • The ride on normal roads is very uncomfortable, if I'm honest.

  • And I don't know about you, but I find this interior rather boring, apart from that, obviously -

  • the torque thing.

  • It's like sitting in someone's ear.

  • What's more, because it's fast, it has fat tyres and firm suspension.

  • And that's created another problem.

  • What they've done is built a car that can sort of go off-road and then converted it so that now

  • it can't any more.

  • Still, if you want one, get your nurse to find you a crayon

  • and write out a cheque for £76,000.

  • Or, if you don't understand how crayons work,

  • you could spend even more on this rather ugly Audi.

  • On the face of it, this Q7 appears to be quite sensible.

  • Unlike the X5, it comes with seven seats which move about

  • to suit your every need.

  • And under the bonnet, there's a diesel engine.

  • Sadly, however, it's not a diesel engine that makes any sense at all.

  • You see, it's a six-litre twin-turbo-charged V12 diesel.

  • Now, I'm sorry, but the whole point of buying a diesel engine car is to save money,

  • so having a twin-turbo V12 diesel is like turning your central heating off at home

  • and then keeping warm by burning Rembrandts.

  • Still, at least you get a lot of torques.

  • 738 of them, in fact.

  • That's 200 more than you get from a Zonda R.

  • Nought to 60 takes five and a half seconds.

  • Top speed is limited to 155 miles an hour.

  • And it stops because it's got ceramic brakes. In a diesel!

  • But it's the go, really. That's the astonishing bit.

  • I'm not kidding. This car could bump-start a jumbo jet.

  • But only if you fit it with a towbar,

  • which is an £830 option.

  • I don't know about you, but that seems a bit steep on a car which costs £96,000.

  • Apart from the fact that these cars, with their mighty engines,

  • have brought sunshine where before there was rain,

  • they are completely bonkers and pointless.

  • However, happily, there is a third way of wasting your money.

  • This new Range Rover is heavier than the Audi and the BMW.

  • And slower. And thirstier.

  • And at £80,000, it's not exactly cheap either.

  • But unlike its German rivals,

  • it does still work when it's off-road.

  • All this computer gubbins down here means that you can keep going

  • when nature would rather you turned round and went home.

  • Bit like now, really.

  • And there's another thing.

  • The buttons and switches in the BMW and the Audi are just taken out of normal saloon cars.

  • In the Range Rover, they're big and chunky so you can use them while wearing gloves.

  • Little things.

  • What's more, the Range Rover is more majestic that the Germans. More dignified.

  • It's way more comfortable too, and some of the toys that can be specified these days

  • are just unbelievable.

  • There are five cameras all around the car

  • and you can call up the images they're taking on the screen here.

  • There they are.

  • Then you choose which ones you want to enlarge.

  • So I'll take that one looking front left and that one looking backwards.

  • Push enlarge. There we are.

  • We're coming up to the Hammerhead, going the wrong way.

  • Let's have the forward view there.

  • Now, let's see how well I clip the apex on that.

  • Oh, yes! Looking good.

  • There it is. Over the red and white lines. Now, here we go.

  • Let's switch to the rear camera as we power down the main straight.

  • You know what?

  • We don't really need a film crew or a director to make Top Gear any more.

  • In fact, I think I'm going to run them down.

  • Yes, I am. Run!

  • This has become a snuff movie.

  • Before you write in to complain, I should explain that what I'm doing now is saving your licence fee

  • on expensive crew.

  • We don't need them. I can do it all here myself.

  • Come here! You're just an expensive waste of time there.

  • We don't need you any more!

  • Mind you, some of the features on this new model are not so good.

  • These days, the grille is way to Cheshire and even the gills now have their own annoying styling details.

  • But the biggest problem, in this version at least, is the engine.

  • In essence, it's the same five-litre super-charged V8 that you get in a Jag these days,

  • and that's jolly nice if you live in Houston or Abu Dhabi or somewhere else where petrol is cheap.

  • But here,

  • hmm, I'm the world's biggest Range Rover fan,

  • but I have to admit that this engine in Britain

  • makes no sense at all.

  • I'd buy the diesel-engined Range Rover in a heartbeat,

  • but with a massive petrol engine, this is like the other cars here.

  • Really rather ridiculous.

  • APPLAUSE

  • I hate to say it, but I agree with you.

  • You do? I do. About what?

  • Because the diesel Range Rover is just fabulous

  • because, well, it's just like the petrol Ranger,

  • but the diesel makes a better noise. It does. Incredibly.

  • And you only have to stop and fill it up every 500 miles, rather than every 500 yards.

  • No question. You see, the thing is, if you get the diesel,

  • you still get that amazing screen that allows you to make movies.

  • But there's so much more to it than that.

  • For obvious reasons, you can't watch a DVD while you're driving along, for example, OK?

  • But if we look at this, OK? The passenger here is looking at a DVD.

  • Yes? You can see that.

  • But if we look at the screen from where I'm sitting,

  • it's satellite navigation. Same screen - look at this. I see sat nav.

  • Where the passenger is sitting, they can see a DVD.

  • On the same screen! Come back again, look.

  • Sat nav. This is the most amazing thing I've ever seen in my life.

  • And it doesn't end there, either, does it? Those cameras you were talking about... No, no, no.

  • I'd forgotten. Look at this. You can see OK.

  • We zoom in, zoom in like this.

  • And then you can move it up... Oh, you can actually move the camera! Look at that.

  • That's brilliant!

  • Who invented that?

  • APPLAUSE

  • Yes! That is just genius.

  • Would you like to go round the back? Sorry, mate?

  • Oh, the... Yes! The cameras at the back. Look at the back.

  • Zoom in. In, in. No, no, no, no, no! Now look what you've done.

  • I'm sorry. It's disgusting. Sorry.

  • APPLAUSE

  • Now, look... That's a disappointment.

  • If you two could just stop mucking around for a minute,

  • I've got a quite a serious point to make over here.

  • If you want to spend more money on your Range Rover, for Pete's sake,

  • don't spend it trying to make it go faster because you'll ruin it.

  • Instead, why not spend it on making it a bit more luxurious?

  • Now, a company called Overfinch has collaborated with Holland & Holland,

  • the gun-makers, to produce this. Yeah, now, it's still a Range Rover,

  • so inside you've got the clever amazing witchcraft screen and everything, but a bit more.

  • So, for instance, this wood here,

  • you've got this marquetry work in it. Lovely.

  • And these panels on the steering wheel.

  • You can have these custom-engraved to match your own shotguns.

  • Obviously! The leather is the stuff they use on the very finest business jets.

  • And in the back, you do lose a seat, but instead you get this piece of furniture

  • from the bedroom of Louis XIV. More exquisite marquetry.

  • In here there is some nice cut glass.

  • And down here, there is a refrigerator,

  • and it is a refrigerator, not merely a slightly chilly cubbyhole.

  • The cost of all this is £139,000.

  • AUDIENCE MURMUR

  • Now, that is a lot of money,

  • but then this car does come with the best optional extra ever fitted to any car

  • in the whole of human history, I think I'm right in saying. Yeah, yeah. You're right.

  • OK, it's this chest here in the back.

  • In this drawer here we find, OK, there is space for your gun.

  • This particular gun in this one, they actually cost more than the car does.

  • RIPPLE OF LAUGHTER No, seriously.

  • OK, so that's the guns, right, on this side.

  • And what goes with guns? You're right - drink.

  • And so... LAUGHTER

  • ..in here we find the glasses, the vodka, the whisky, obviously,

  • the champagne - Pol Roger - is in the fridge in the car itself. And here is the really amazing bit.

  • This is what's called a self-replenishing drinks cabinet.

  • For the first year you own the car, when your drink supplies are getting low,

  • they come round and top them up free of charge.

  • Wow! Wow.

  • Do I have to buy the car, or can I just have the self-replenishing drinks cabinet?

  • I'll tell you what, if I bought this car,

  • the diesel in the tank after one year would be exactly the same as it was when it came.

  • It would still be in the same field. I tried drinking the diesel, but then the man arrived with more champagne.

  • I just want one of those. No, it is. I mean, really and truthfully,

  • this is the car to buy if you are sensible.

  • Or if you're a drunk!

  • But if you are insane, you will doubtless now want to know how fast the BMW S&M X whatever it is

  • and the Audi V12 diesel go round our track,

  • and that, of course, means handing them over to our tame racing driver.

  • Some say that the drinks cabinet in his car

  • contains 14 different types of custard.

  • LAUGHTER

  • And while he has been known to leave his house in a bit of a hurry,

  • he's never once hit a fire hydrant.

  • LAUGHTER

  • All we know, he's called the Stig!

  • And they're off, lumbering down to the first corner

  • like two fat rhinos in trainers.

  • Beginning to forget what our tracks looks like in the dry.

  • Still, at least these silly cars

  • have four-wheel drive to help them along.

  • Oh, dear, that's not very interesting

  • as they go round the first corner.

  • MUSIC: "Any Old Iron" by Peter Sellers

  • Oh, dear. Still enjoying the sound

  • of Barbara Windsor's wedding.

  • Audi, there - look at it getting all out of shape in Chicago.

  • And now he's heading down to the Hammerhead.

  • Triggered the hazards under heavy breaking.

  • That Q7 is really not happy.

  • X5, a little more composed.

  • Although if you really wanted composed,

  • obviously you'd be better off

  • in the M5 Saloon.

  • Into Follow Through, a chance for them to use their big power

  • to give the laws of physics a bloody nose.

  • Thundering past the tyres.

  • Obviously, now, two corners left. Audi still flashing away.

  • BMW getting sideways, there.

  • Just Gambon left.

  • Here it comes. BMW veering sideways. Steady on, Stig!

  • And across the line! Well, here we are. Here we are.

  • APPLAUSE

  • Stand by to receive the two most not interesting facts

  • in the history of British television.

  • The Audi Q7 V12 Diesel did it in 1.33.3. So that's down there.

  • And the BMW X5 M did it in 1.28.2.

  • So, there we are. Not interesting.

  • Uh, and now, it is time to put a star in our reasonably priced car.

  • My guest tonight is best known for his Cockney gangster movies,

  • such as Snatch and RocknRolla

  • and Lock and Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

  • So, everybody, open your mince pies, put your Bobby Sands together,

  • and let's have a rousing round of sores...paws...

  • sores...running, pustulating sores for Guy Ritchie!

  • APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

  • Guy, how are you?

  • Hello, Mr Clarkson, how are you set? Very well. How are you? Have a seat.

  • Look at that moment!

  • Thank you very much! That is a big welcome.

  • Now, I was fascinated when you arrived here this morning.

  • A lot of guests say the same thing. Is it possible to turn the car over?

  • Because they need reassuring that, no, it isn't.

  • And then Guy said, "No, because I really want to."

  • Well, I had a go.

  • Would anybody like to see some of Guy's practices? OK?

  • AUDIENCE: Yes!

  • Just early on, this is Guy practising for his lap.

  • Here we go. You've still got the Stig in the car here.

  • So let's... Look how wet that is!

  • Wow! That's unbelievable.

  • HE SHOUTS AND WOOPS

  • Look at that! We can now plant crops there after that.

  • LAUGHTER

  • Now, obviously - I'm sorry about this - I'm sure a lot of people

  • are going to expect a lot of tittle-tattle about Madonna.

  • Can I just say, this isn't Loose Women.

  • So there'll be none of that. This is Top Gear.

  • And I'm more interested in your love of winching. LAUGHTER

  • No, I'm not kidding, OK? You like... What's it called, Off-Green Laning?

  • Off-roading? Green Laning and a bit of winching. There's nothing like a good winch.

  • As you know, it's a thing. It's quite a nerdy undertaking.

  • No, there is. There are people who deliberately get stuck.

  • LAUGHTER

  • Don't tell me you're one of those. You winch yourself...?

  • If you're into winching, you get stuck. And you get out and winch yourself out?

  • If you don't get stuck, you can't winch. So you deliberately look to get stuck.

  • I find that fascinating! What's the big appeal of winching a car?

  • It doesn't make any sense. Why should you want to get a car stuck and then get it out?

  • But it's a lot of fun!

  • LAUGHTER

  • I can't believe I'm talking so much about winching!

  • Now, what do you drive? Actually, I know what you drive. You drive a van!

  • I got a van. Why have you got a van? I love vans. I used to be a van driver.

  • Ritchie's Removals, it was. LAUGHTER

  • I wasn't good at Ritchie's Removals. It didn't work. Particularly as a business.

  • We'd been under a few low bridges and taken a few £1,000 tables out as we went under the low bridges.

  • How do you explain that to the poor unfortunate souls waiting at home for their...?

  • You have to be very creative. Hence, I became a film-maker.

  • But you maintained the love of vans.

  • I love a van, yeah. And you now have a Mercedes Sprinter.

  • Yes, I do. Is it just a normal van?

  • No, it's been kitted out a bit in the back. We've got two 42-inch screens in the back of it.

  • And it's, uh...cushdy.

  • LAUGHTER

  • It's pretty comfy. I mean, you just get so much bang for you buck with a van.

  • How much is a Rolls-Royce Phantom? £250,000.

  • OK. This was 20 grand. We got it second-hand. We spent 40 grand in the back. 60 grand.

  • I can tell you, it's a lot more comfortable than a Phantom. Really? Yeah.

  • Have you done the outside? The A-Team thing with the big wheels...? No, it looks like a builder's van.

  • "No tools are left in this overnight", written on the back.

  • There's lots of tools left in it overnight.

  • Ha ha! Oh! Um...

  • So what do you drive when you're not driving your van? I've got the Range Rover outside.

  • Yeah. Q7. Got an Audi Q7.

  • Don't like that? I've got to tell you, everyone loves that.

  • Well, except me. OK. What do you know about cars, anyway?

  • Not much, actually.

  • I live on a bicycle. That's the irony. I live in central London

  • and probably 90% of my travelling is done on a bicycle.

  • I love bicycles. I shouldn't imagine you like bicycles very much.

  • I'm not... You'd look good on a bicycle! No, I wouldn't. A Penny Farthing, maybe.

  • I was being sarcastic, actually. I nearly tried to kill a Frenchman on a bicycle the other day.

  • He'd got so much rain on his spectacles, he couldn't see where he was going.

  • Then he banged on my car. Well, that was it.

  • How did you know he was French? FRENCH ACCENT: Because he was speaking like an idiot,

  • that is how I knew he was French!

  • LAUGHTER

  • Now, you've got no cars, obviously, in your new movie, Sherlock Holmes.

  • Tell us a bit about it. I wanted to do a bigger movie than any movie I've done before.

  • Um, and it seemed like a natural segue from going from, sort of,

  • smaller British gangster kind of things to doing something kind of big-ish.

  • But I wanted to keep the identity English and there is no greater icon,

  • I suppose, than Sherlock Holmes.

  • But you've got Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock.

  • He's got a very good British accent. Has he?

  • We've got a clip. Let's have a look. Very good.

  • I have a request. There's someone I want to see.

  • Sherlock Holmes.

  • You and I are bound together on a journey that will twist the very fabric of nature.

  • Allow me to enlighten you.

  • Tomorrow, the world as you know it will end.

  • Well, there isn't any time to waste, then, is there?

  • It does make a considerable difference to me having someone with me on whom I can thoroughly rely on.

  • It's nice to see you, Watson.

  • Oh, yes! That is big budget! APPLAUSE

  • Is that CGI? Some of it. That's a big budget thing going on right there.

  • I see what you mean about his accent.

  • You can see we had deeper pockets on this one. When's that coming out?

  • Boxing Day in the UK, Christmas Day everywhere else.

  • Why isn't it out on Christmas Day here? Everyone's stuffing their face with turkey in the UK.

  • Um, so these days, you're a publican.

  • I have a pub. You have a pub in...?

  • Mayfair. Actually, I have to tell everyone a story. Do you mind? Please!

  • This is back in the Fulham days. I used to go to this place.

  • On the Wandsworth Bridge Road, OK? Get there before ten, guaranteed lock-in.

  • Then one day, a new manager started at this place.

  • A new manager, no more lock-ins. "Out. Get lost."

  • 20 years later, I was walking down the Fulham Road and I ran into

  • the original barman, now a security guard outside a hospital.

  • So I said, "What happened to that bolshie bastard that came and took over you?"

  • He said, "I tell you what happened to him. He married Madonna."

  • You stopped us having... You stopped us having... APPLAUSE AND LAUGHTER

  • I been dying to get that off... Joe's Brasserie.

  • Did you come and work as manager there?

  • It was either me or Sean Penn, and I don't think Sean Penn worked in Joe's Brasserie.

  • LAUGHTER

  • Now, obviously you came down here to do your lap.

  • We've already established - quite wet.

  • I mean, the wettest we've ever had. but nevertheless, who would like to see Guy's lap?

  • AUDIENCE: Yes! Right, Guy, let's have a look.

  • Soaking wet.

  • And you can't cut the corners - this is the important thing.

  • Oh, come on, son! Wow!

  • OK, there's the first corner.

  • No suicidal tendencies into it.

  • But plenty coming out.

  • That's quite poo, actually.

  • LAUGHTER

  • Off the road a bit, there.

  • That's looking very neat and tidy. That's good. That's good.

  • This is raining, lads, by the way. I don't know if anyone noticed.

  • It's quite an unforeseeable thing.

  • The water's streaming down the windows! Hammerhead...

  • Did they put cones out for you today? No, they didn't bother.

  • Only last week we had that for Chris Evans. Just Radio 2 DJs get that.

  • Again, that looks neat and tidy and good.

  • I got to tell you, this is not easy, chaps.

  • Now, this is... That's the Follow Through. Nicely done.

  • Now, I'm into fourth about now.

  • Second to last corner, can't cut that.

  • Not going to be good. No, you kissed the apex, which is exactly right.

  • Can't touch the grass here...

  • Oh! You have touched it there and across the line!

  • APPLAUSE

  • Now, that looked good.

  • That looked good, because it didn't look as mad as the practice stuff.

  • You're leaning forwards.

  • What does that mean? It's a sign. Every week, everybody comes on

  • and and they've been really relaxed and it gets to the time. "I'm not bothered."

  • MIMICS SQUEAKING CHAIR

  • Well, I shouldn't be bothered, because I know I did a pretty appalling performance.

  • No...

  • Yes. But...

  • But the thing is, the conditions were dreadful.

  • No question about that. No idea how fast you'd have gone on the dry, but I can tell you,

  • Guy Ritchie, in the wet, you did it in

  • 1.52.5.

  • Which means... I'll give you a very wet. APPLAUSE

  • ..you go... Oh, that's bad.

  • Oh!

  • ..between Tom Jones and Helen Mirren.

  • Not bad(!) LAUGHTER

  • So, how many cars did you go through doing that?

  • I went through four cars today. Four? Yep. Four tyres.

  • Punctures? And a gearbox.

  • And a gearbox? Yeah.

  • That is a new record!

  • A record! Ladies and gentlemen, Guy Ritchie! Thank you very much.

  • CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

  • Bad news! Bad news!

  • We've had another letter from Mr Needham. I shall read it out.

  • "Dear so-called Top Gear. Last year, I asked if you had forgotten how to do normal road tests

  • "on your so-called television show and you responded with an idiotic feature in which a Ford Fiesta

  • "was driven at high speed through a shopping centre and then off a Royal Marines landing craft, into the sea."

  • It was, actually. Well done, Jeremy(!)

  • "So I ask again. Will you please do a normal test in which the concerns

  • "of the average viewer are addressed? Yours sincerely, Mr Needham, Belfast."

  • We all thought, "Yeah, fair enough. We must respond."

  • And then Jeremy stepped into the breach. Again.

  • To get Mr Needham off my back, I've actually come to the city where he lives.

  • Belfast.

  • And this is the car I'll be testing.

  • Renault's sporty little Twingo 133.

  • HE COUGHS

  • Unfortunately, on the way over here yesterday,

  • I caught a cold.

  • Well, when I say cold, it's actually gangrene.

  • Of my lungs.

  • But, I'm a man, so I shall simply...

  • HE COUGHS

  • Excuse me. ..soldier on.

  • Oh, has anyone got any Night Nurse?

  • Oh, yes! I should say so.

  • I've always loved small, hot hatchbacks

  • and this is one of the best.

  • It's so nimble and agile. It's like driving a mosquito.

  • Not literally, of course, Mr Needham.

  • It's impossible to drive an insect and cruel to even try.

  • It's pretty quick, too.

  • Thanks to a revvy 1.6 litre engine, it can get from 0-60 in 8.7 seconds

  • and on to a top speed of 125.

  • But is it faster than its big rival?

  • The Fiat 500 Abarth.

  • Tell you what, let's find out.

  • ENGINES REV

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • Pleased with my start.

  • No.

  • Very, is the simple answer.

  • Even if you drive with verve and gusto, you should still average 40 miles to the gallon.

  • However, that said, the Fiat 500 Abarth will average 43 miles to the gallon.

  • Simple.

  • The Renault is £1,000 cheaper and you can have one now.

  • The waiting list for an Abarth stretches into 2010.

  • And I shall be dead by then.

  • In fact, the way I'm feeling, I'll probably be dead by 5.30.

  • But I'm not making a fuss, I'm just making a point.

  • Soldiering on on your behalf, Mr Needham.

  • No.

  • It's red.

  • HE COUGHS

  • Sorry, what was the question?

  • In a nutshell, yes.

  • If you buy the standard £12,200 car,

  • it's not bad at all.

  • But the car I have here has what Renault call, the Cup Chassis.

  • It's a £650 option which gives you firmer suspension,

  • ultra low-profile tyres and 17-inch wheels.

  • On a track, that's marvellous.

  • But on a normal road, it is extremely firm.

  • The result is that on some bumps,

  • the jolt is so bad,

  • that your lungs can come off.

  • Like that one.

  • Is this thorough enough for you, Mr Needham? I hope so.

  • Its got a radio, air conditioning, electric windows

  • and electric door mirrors.

  • But I'm afraid to say

  • no parachute system.

  • So, if you wake up one morning to find that someone has put your car

  • on top of a Harland and Wolff crane,

  • you're never going to get it down again.

  • Bad mark for Renault there.

  • You would be amazed how often I get asked that question.

  • To get an answer, I've come to the network of sewage tunnels

  • underneath Belfast and for the next few minutes,

  • we've asked the people in the city to, erm, cross their legs.

  • Oh, God!

  • Oh dear! Splashing!

  • Oh dear!

  • I've considered the tunnel's diameter,

  • the car's centre of gravity, everything and I've worked out

  • the precise speed I need to be going is 17.5 metres per second.

  • I wish I knew what that was in miles an hour

  • because that's what I'm getting on the speedo.

  • I think it's about 37.

  • 37mph. It's roughly there.

  • And here we go.

  • Building it up.

  • If this goes wrong, I really am in a world of sh...

  • Here we go! Aargghh!

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • Yes!

  • Aarghh!

  • There you are, Mr Needham.

  • If you're looking to drive upside down through

  • the tunnels of Belfast, Twingo 133 - absolutely ideal.

  • Obviously, it's not a very large car.

  • But if you push those rear seats all the way back,

  • there is enough room back there for children.

  • Then, if you pull them all the way forwards,

  • there is enough space in the boot

  • for Ross Kemp.

  • So, Ross, are you OK in there? A bit of a squeeze but quite comfy.

  • Quite comfy? Good. Good mark for Renault.

  • Obviously, we keep being told that global warming is coming

  • and that soon, we won't have a winter to worry about.

  • But we do now.

  • That's why I've come to a little slice of ice

  • at the Odyssey Arena.

  • ENGINE REVS

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • In theory, this should be quite good because

  • in a front-wheel drive car, the heavy engine is pressing down on the driven wheels,

  • giving you better grip, better traction.

  • Here we go!

  • A lot of revs, first gear, 5,000, 4,000...

  • 20, 30...

  • 46.

  • 107 registered there!

  • 133mph there!

  • That is on ice.

  • On a lot of cars, the anti-lock braking system doesn't work

  • on snow or ice, so let's see how it is in the Twingo.

  • And...

  • Brake.

  • I don't know why I'm looking at my watch - there's no second hand.

  • That was a long time.

  • Now, the ice hockey players are here and they want to come on.

  • I know. Sorry. I'll get off.

  • Come on!

  • I'm sorry. I'm trying to leave.

  • Just bear with me.

  • This was harder than you might imagine.

  • There's the exit.

  • No, I'm not going to make that. I'm not going to make it.

  • It's going to hit the wall. Mustn't hit the wall.

  • THEY SHOUT

  • Wait!

  • Keep your hair on.

  • Sadly, the ice hockey players wouldn't wait any more.

  • They're playing a game!

  • BLEEP. What was that?

  • You've just pushed me!

  • Arghhh!

  • Eventually, this ended badly.

  • Oh, my God! I hit him.

  • That's astonishing.

  • There isn't a mark on it.

  • Since the skater seems to be OK, we have to say

  • the Twingo scores well for pedestrian safety.

  • Especially, if the pedestrian you hit is dressed up like that.

  • We've all been there. Lost. In a shipyard.

  • Your biorhythms are wrong. You're feeling under the weather.

  • You're just not concentrating quite as hard as you should be.

  • The next thing you know is...

  • WOODEN CRATES THUD

  • It's just one of those days where you're judgment's out

  • and you think, "I can go through that." Then it turns out...

  • METAL SCRAPES

  • ..you just can't.

  • Of course, you may say that you would never drive a car

  • when you're feeling under the weather

  • but even if you are that responsible,

  • the day will still come when you pull up at at junction,

  • and while you're checking to make sure nothing is coming,

  • you will be hit up the backside by blind Jack the milkman.

  • ROSS KEMP LAUGHS

  • That really hurt!

  • Then, of course, the day will come when you lend your car

  • to your 17-year-old son.

  • He'll be driving along in it and he will think,

  • "If I pull this handbrake lever, my girlfriend's clothes will fall of."

  • Of course, we know that doesn't happen.

  • We know that what actually happens when you pull the handbrake lever

  • is this...

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • Ah!

  • Jeremy, that BLEEP hurt. Thank you very much.

  • This is one of the joys of the hot hatch.

  • They're as much fun to drive as supercars but you can get

  • Ross Kemp in the boot

  • and they don't cost a fortune to repair.

  • The front wing, for example, for a Renault Twingo, £66.

  • The front wing for a Lamborghini, £2,430.

  • We've all been in this situation.

  • The boat is still here and I can make it.

  • Come on!

  • Being late for a ferry can drive a man mad.

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • You forget there's going to be another ferry later on.

  • No, there isn't!

  • This is the last ferry ever! I must catch it!

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • The thing is, this Twingo could just be the ideal car for the job.

  • BELL RINGS

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • That's not gone well.

  • A Fiat Abarth may be more fun to own,

  • more fun to look at, but this, with the Cup Chassis,

  • is sharper.

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • It's a very good little car, this!

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • Handbrake. I've overdone it!

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • BLEEP

  • Just because it's left, does not mean I'm going to give in.

  • How hard can it be?

  • When I get out of here, I'm going to hurt you. Here we go!

  • TYRES SCREECH

  • ENGINE REVS

  • Aarghhhhh!

  • CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

  • What was that?

  • An acid trip!

  • What? What was going on?

  • Seriously. How much Night Nurse did you take before you did that film?

  • A lot. But not so much that I wasn't able to work out that that car...

  • It's just brilliant.

  • It WAS a brilliant car.

  • Where is it now? It's at the bottom of the sea.

  • As a test, that was rubbish. I had a cold.

  • I did. I didn't make a fuss, I just got on with it.

  • But the important thing is, I survived. What about Ross Kemp?

  • No.

  • LAUGHTER

  • Sadly, he didn't make it.

  • And that really is a bombshell that we can end on this week. Oh!

  • Before we go,

  • one more thing. The first three programmes of this series

  • went out at nine o'clock rather than eight.

  • Tonight, we started at 8.30.

  • Does anyone want to guess what time we're on next week?

  • THEY SHOUT OUT DIFFERENT TIMES

  • No. We're actually not on at all.

  • For reasons we don't understand.

  • But we are back the week after that at whatever time the Beeb

  • can squeeze us in.

  • No mater. Thank you very much for watching tonight.

  • Take care. Good night!

  • Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

  • E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk

Tonight, we drive down a sewer.

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