- A documentary film on the legacy of the U.S. Express - once known as the Cannonball Run - and the controversy shrouding the incredible secret behind the record time set on the last such illegal race nearly a quarter century ago.
- My desire to document a close family friend's 23 year old speed record in the infamous cross country race, the Cannonball, ends up raising questions and suspicions I can't answer with interviews alone. In order to vindicate his effort I end up in the back seat of Alex's Roy's BMW M5, racing across the country to prove that 32 hours and 7 minutes is possible.—Cory Welles
- 32 Hours 7 Minutes is a documentary film that takes its title from the US transcontinental speed record, set during the 1983 US Express (a secretive race from New York to California). A successor to the famous Cannonball races, drivers were essentially breaking the law nonstop, driving as fast as they could to cross the United States. The total distance, start to finish: 2,874 miles (4,625 km). Over 2 decades later, when suspicions arise about the legitimacy of that record, Director Cory Welles climbs into the backseat of Alex Roy's infamous BMW M5 and races across the country, attempting to break 32 hours and 7 minutes to prove that it's real.
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