The Grand Tour’s Emotional Latest Ep Reminds Us What We’ll Soon Be Missing

TGT’s latest episode proves the trio and the team behind them still have the ability to put something truly special together
The Grand Tour’s Emotional Latest Ep Reminds Us What We’ll Soon Be Missing

The Grand Tour, as we know it now, will soon be at an end. But contrary to earlier tabloid rumours, Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May’s motoring show won’t be finishing altogether: series four will instead have a shorter run focusing on epic road trips.

That’s a good thing, is it not? Whether you’re looking at TGT’s run so far or back at the Clarkson/Andy Wilman Top Gear era, the trio have tended to be at their best when these big journeys are involved. The tired studio format will finally be axed, and with it, all the forced jokes and overly-scripted banter.

The thing is, it’s not quite as black and white as that. Recalling my favourite ever episodes of both shows, a good chunk haven’t involved grand touring. No, many simply involved a collection of brilliantly-executed, highly-engrossing segments. And not long after the third series’ surprisingly patchy Colombia two-part road trip special, we were treated to what might just have been the best series of the Amazon Prime Motoring show yet. And it wasn’t a road trip. Nope, it was in the soon-to-be-canned magazine format.

With a name like ‘Itchy Urus’ and a trailer prominently featuring a penis-shaped ice lake track, it didn’t seem to be promising much in the way of high-brow motoring entertainment. But then I saw James May wax lyrical about the superb Alpine A110, a car he liked so much he actually went out and bought one. Jeremy Clarkson’s well-rounded piece on the Lamborghini Urus was very watchable, particularly the ice lake showdown part featuring Abbie Eaton in a Porsche 911 Turbo. This made the track-shaping decision wholly forgivable, if only for teeing up the racing driver’s quip “I’ve raced against many dicks, but never on one.”

Even Conversation Street offered up some interesting discussions, primarily around resto-mods and the new women-only W Series single-seater championship.

The Grand Tour’s Emotional Latest Ep Reminds Us What We’ll Soon Be Missing

The best, though, was reserved until last: Richard Hammond’s ode to Jim Clark. I was expecting great things given that my Twitter feed had lit up over the weekend with praise about it, mostly from people I’ve never heard utter anything remotely positive about The Grand Tour. Even so, it smashed my lofty expectations.

Anyone with even a passing interest in motorsport knows who Jim Clark is and just how much of a legend he is, but it’s quite remarkable to see why he’s so revered concisely spelled out in 20 or so minutes. The number of different disciplines he tackled at the same time (F1, British and French F2, Indy, Tasman, touring cars) and the sheer amount of races he’d rack up in one year (63 in 1965) - is truly mind-blowing.

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We’re told about his incredibly smooth and mechanically sympathetic driving, which baffled his competitors and even his own engineers. We have raw emotional moments, like Hammond’s time behind the wheel of the Lotus Type 25 - the car Clark used to win seven of the 1961 F1 season’s 10 races, and inevitably, the subject of Clark’s untimely passing. It’s tackled with respectful sensitivity while also understanding the remarkable legacy left by the man.

The Grand Tour’s Emotional Latest Ep Reminds Us What We’ll Soon Be Missing

What The Grand Tour isn’t doing here is breaking new ground - there must be countless Jim Clark documentaries and books you could spend whole weeks binging on. This isn’t a new story to tell. But it’s told so well, coming together in a short film that both experts and those who know nothing of the Scot’s achievements stand to be captivated by.

It’s undeniable that many of ‘old-new-Top-Gear’ and TGT’s iffier episodes are these studio-anchored efforts. The show’s shake-up is, therefore, understandable, particularly when we’ve just had that less-than-brilliant pick-up truck farce-off only one episode ago. It seems like a good move overall, but after a watching episode five, part of me can’t help but feel sad about what we might be missing out on.

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Comments

Anonymous

So I guess The Grand Tour game is just gonna get thrown to the wayside lol

02/12/2019 - 15:08 |
36 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Don’t see why it would, they managed to include the Colombian special in the game quite well.

I’m still waiting for them to add the rest of the 1st and 2nd series to the game!

02/12/2019 - 15:53 |
10 | 4
Robert Gracie

Its sad to read this, I just wanna see racing like this continue….

02/12/2019 - 15:15 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

I have thoroughly enjoyed the ‘history lesson’ segments of the past series (May’s Ford vs Ferrari Le mans segment, Clarkson’s Lancia vs Audi WRC battle and now Hammond’s Ode to Clark) so much so that you can kind of forgive them for the terrible penis jokes and the occasional off episode (Pick ups, I’m looking at you).

I wouldn’t even be mad if they made a documentary spin off series!

02/12/2019 - 15:17 |
28 | 0
TheStigsAmerican Cousin

I thought it said last episode and i got really scared

02/12/2019 - 15:26 |
12 | 0
Twopoint0

I genuinely enjoyed all episodes of tgt, it’s a new format and every member of the trio had to get used to the new cicumstances, which is why, I think, they’ve done a fantastic job so far

And the pick-up test in the second to latest episode was hilarious

02/12/2019 - 15:31 |
6 | 2
Freddie Skeates

“Overly scripted banter” “patchy Columbia special”

What planet have you been living on mate??

02/12/2019 - 17:04 |
14 | 2

The Colombia Special was literally the best episode. I honestly liked it better than Top Gear.

02/12/2019 - 17:30 |
16 | 0

Planet CT is irrelevant so we make stupid statements for attention xded

02/12/2019 - 23:17 |
6 | 4

well the pickup episode is literally one of the worst episodes of the series

02/13/2019 - 01:48 |
0 | 0

The Columbia special is what made me give up watching the series. It was boring as hell.

02/13/2019 - 02:47 |
2 | 0
Joseph Hayes

I think this goes to show that while we really enjoy all the antics, we do like something serious. I mean it’s great to see them doing what most of us can only dream of: Car rebuild budgets that are bottomless, epic trips and antics without consequences. But the segments that are serious and show real heart keep us glued to the screen as well. I guess it’s like growing up. We really like dessert but after a certain age we start to eat our spinach as well. The Jim Clark tribute was one of the best things they have ever shown. Remember the segment on the old top gear when Clarkson talked about an aston martin being the end of an era? It was so beautiful I still watch it on youtube. Hopefully amazon will put some type of decent car show in its place.

02/12/2019 - 19:26 |
16 | 0

the V12 Vantage review?
where he literally didnt have words for it?

BEAUTIFUL

02/13/2019 - 01:47 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

So, the game is now recieving the same treatment as Agents of Shield after Winter Soldier huh?

02/12/2019 - 20:02 |
2 | 0
The Grand Tour’s Emotional Latest Ep Reminds Us What We’ll Soon Be Missing
Edu Doffi

This episode and the one were talk about group B i love them

02/12/2019 - 23:22 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Was I the only one crying in the Jim Clark short film?
😔😔😔

02/13/2019 - 01:16 |
0 | 0