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When you think of Australian whisky, few brands command as much respect and recognition as LARK. It fuses traditional innovation with the merging of two whisky worlds to create something truly exceptional. This is where LARK Mizunara Batch 2—a luxurious and unique offering from Tasmania’s most revered distillery—was designed for those who cherish the finer nuances of life. As part of LARK’s celebrated Rare Cask Series, this limited-edition single malt pays tribute to founder Bill Lark’s travels through Japan, a nation whose whisky legacy is both poetic and precise.
Mizunara Batch 2 stands out not just due to its origin but also the narrative that accompanies each drop. It begins with LARK’s signature single malt, crafted from 100% Tasmanian barley and peat-smoked in-house. This spirit experiences a slow, flavour-rich fermentation over seven days. Unlike many commercial whiskies that prioritize speed, LARK focuses on patience to capture every subtlety. After double distillation, it ages for five to seven years in small ex-bourbon casks before being finished in one of the world’s rarest and most coveted oak types: Japanese Mizunara.
Highlights:
LARK Distillery has launched Mizunara Batch 2, a new limited-edition Tasmanian single malt.
Crafted from 100% Tasmanian barley, aged in small barrels, & finished in rare Japanese Mizunara oak.
Available from March 3, priced at AUD$1,000 ( Approximately USD$600 )
LARK Distillery Japanese Mizunara Batch 2 | Image: LARK Distillery
This wood is no ordinary barrel making. Mizunara oak trees require an astonishing 200 years to mature before they can be used for casks. Even then, their porous, knot-filled grain presents a significant challenge for coopers. However, the result is undoubtedly worth it. The wood delivers flavors that are truly unique—ethereal, complex, and irresistibly exotic.
Visually, Mizunara Batch 2 is breathtaking. In the glass, it shimmers with a pale golden hue, reflecting light like honey bathed in sunlight. Gently swirling reveals its soft viscosity, hinting at the impending richness. The whisky boasts an aromatic bouquet on the nose, starting with bold scents of freshly baked apple pie, enveloped in sweet vanilla icing with a touch of custard tart. A gentle wave of sweet incense—characteristic of Mizunara—enters the mix, accompanied by subtle notes of coconut shavings and sandalwood, crafting a nose that is both soothing and elegantly refined.
Take a sip, and the enchantment intensifies. The taste is buttery and elegant, swiftly enveloping the palate in smooth toffee, warm oak spice, and a hint of creamy white chocolate. As it develops, fruity notes emerge—mango pudding, caramelized pear, and candied citrus peel add brightness and harmony to the more decadent flavours. There’s a subtle complexity at play, with each flavour carefully presented like characters in a well-paced novel. The finish is extensive, smooth, and profoundly gratifying. Anticipate lasting hints of Danish pastry, sweet pipe tobacco, and a concluding flourish of toasted almonds and spiced vanilla. It’s the type of finish that lingers on the palate and in your memory.
LARK Distillery Japanese Mizunara Batch 2 | Image: LARK Distillery
Each bottle is handcrafted, carefully labelled, and released in limited editions. Priced at AUD$1,000 (approximately USD$600), this product offers more than just whisky—it promises an experience. It appeals to collectors, connoisseurs, and those who appreciate that true craftsmanship lies in meticulous details. LARK characterizes Mizunara Batch 2 as “a luxurious fusion of Tasmanian authenticity and Japanese tradition,” accurately depicting its essence. Far beyond a simple label, it showcases the extraordinary result when a distillery seeks to blend bold local ingredients with the time-honoured methods of another culture. It evolves past being just whisky; it is a meeting point of diverse worlds in a liquid medium.
If you’re fortunate enough to have a bottle, enjoy it leisurely. Allow the flavours to unfold their narrative. Raise your glass to the trailblazing essence of LARK—continuously testing limits and making Australia proud. Remember, this isn’t a drink to chug like a casual BBQ beer—this one’s more suited for the opera house than the outhouse, mate.
Elias Albay is the Founder and Director of Many Men Magazine, a Toronto-based digital publication dedicated to promoting modern masculinity through style, culture, and self-improvement. What started as a personal turning point became a purposeful platform. — born from Elias’ desire to create something meaningful after completing his studies and finding no career path that truly matched his ambitions. With a background in Civil Engineering from York University and experience in Commercial Flight Operations at CAE, he applied skills, and resilience from both fields to forge a new path.
Our team of editors and experts thoughtfully chooses each product. If you decide to buy through one of our links, we may earn a commission. Learn more. Want to know how we test products? Click here for more details.
There isn’t a person alive who wouldn’t dream of seeing a Formula 1 race in person. Tickets vanish in minutes, prices skyrocket, and unless you’re lucky, you’re stuck watching from the sofa. But here’s where it gets exciting — Formula 1 has become one of the most exclusive, glamorous, and addictive sports worldwide, attracting millions who crave the roar of engines and the thrill of speed.
What makes the sport so irresistible is its unique mix of theatre and risk. It’s not just cars racing down straightaways at 200 mph; it’s the rivalries, the tactics, the heartbreak, and the victories that happen lap after lap. F1 is just as much about human drama as it is about machines, and that’s why people will travel across the world, pay huge prices, and sit through endless queues just to be part of it.
So what happens when you combine a major movie star with a world-class director in this turbocharged world? You get a cinematic spectacle that promises to immerse audiences right into the cockpit. Directed by Joseph Kosinski — the same filmmaker who transformed Top Gun: Maverick into a thrilling sky-high adventure — this film does for motorsport what Maverick did for fighter jets, putting viewers directly in the driver’s seat for an experience that feels as authentic as race day itself. With breathtaking stunts, realistic touches, and a cast made to perform under pressure, this isn’t just another racing film — it’s an effort to redefine how motorsport appears and feels on the big screen. And much like the real thing, you’ll want to buckle up.
Director and producer Joseph Kosinski on the set of Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
A scene from Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Need For Speed
Brad Pitt’s Sonny Hayes isn’t your typical comeback story. Once the sport’s brightest star, he’s pulled out of retirement to help drag APXGP — a team on the brink of collapse — back into contention. His old friend and rival, Ruben Cervantes (played with flair by Javier Bardem), is betting on Sonny’s experience to steady the ship. But there’s a catch: Sonny has to share the spotlight with rookie sensation Joshua Pearce, played by Damson Idris. Pearce is hungry, quick, and convinced he doesn’t need lessons from a so-called has-been, setting the stage for a fiery clash between two drivers who both want the same finish line.
What makes this performance dynamic is how convincingly Pitt inhabits the role. Sonny isn’t polished or perfect; he’s weathered, stubborn, and driven by pride. Pitt captures this with a mix of grit and charm, but what truly elevates it is the authenticity. Just like Tom Cruise insists on doing his own stunts, Pitt trained behind the wheel, logging thousands of miles in real race cars. When the camera locks in on him mid-corner, you’re not watching an actor pretend — you’re watching a man genuinely control a Formula 1 machine. It gives the film a raw energy that no CGI could ever replicate.
Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025, on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Holding all this chaos together is Kerry Condon as Kate McKenna, the sharp-minded technical director who feels like the team’s anchor. She adds an emotional pulse to the story, reminding us that Formula 1 isn’t just about engines and egos — it’s about people fighting for survival under intense pressure. Add in cameos from real F1 drivers and familiar circuits, and suddenly the line between movie magic and motorsport reality almost vanishes.
Lap After Lap
This is where the real action of F1: The Movie genuinely begins once the lights go out and the cars hit the track. Instead of relying on digital effects, Kosinski and his team kept it traditional — filming during live Formula 1 weekends with real cars on real circuits. The result is a film that pulses with the raw energy of the sport. Sir Lewis Hamilton, who helped produce the project, summed it up best when he said it’s “as authentic as a racing movie has ever been” — and when a seven-time world champion says that, you know it’s no marketing fluff.
What makes these sequences stand out isn’t just the speed, but the intimacy. We’re not just watching cars fly past; we’re dropped into the middle of Silverstone straights, Monza chicanes, Las Vegas strip lights, and Suzuka curves. You feel the pressure of a 200 mph corner and the thrill of a razor-thin overtake, as if you’re strapped into the cockpit yourself. The catch? The crew didn’t have endless time to choreograph these moments — sometimes only a few minutes to nail the shot before the race weekend marched on. That urgency adds a nervous electricity to the racing, making each lap feel like it could be the last chance to get it right.
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes in Apple Original Films’ F1 The Movie, premiering December 12, 2025, on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
The Final Lap
When the chequered flag finally waves, F1 The Movie proves it’s more than just a glossy Hollywood spin on motorsport. Brad Pitt nails the role of Sonny Hayes with a mix of grit and charm, while Damson Idris’s fiery rookie energy keeps the tension crackling. Kerry Condon holds the emotional core steady, and Javier Bardem adds just the right splash of swagger. Together, they make the garage as compelling as the grid, ensuring the drama doesn’t disappear once the helmets come off.
Where the film really shifts gears is in Joseph Kosinski’s direction. Building on the groundbreaking camerawork that made Top Gun: Maverick such a thrill, he pushes things even further here. Immersive cockpit shots, wild 180-degree flips, and blisteringly close trackside views put you right in the driver’s seat, letting you feel every jolt, swerve, and G-force. The first half of the film flows smoothly like a perfect formation lap — tight, muscular, and finely tuned — before erupting into high-octane showdowns that make you grip your seat. That said, the natural ebb and flow of Formula 1 creeps in later on; with so much downtime between races, the story occasionally struggles to maintain its momentum off the track.
Is it the greatest sports movie ever made? Maybe. But it’s easily one of the most authentic and exhilarating in recent memory. With Pitt behind the wheel and Kosinski directing the spectacle, it’s a must-watch — especially if you can catch it in IMAX or D-BOX, where you’ll almost feel the engines rattling your chest. For hardcore fans, it’s a love letter to Formula 1. For everyone else, it’s still a thrilling ride worth taking — a cinematic ‘Pitt’ stop that leaves you smiling as the credits roll.
And perhaps the film’s greatest achievement is how it makes you feel like you’re experiencing Formula 1. Not just the speed or the glamour, but the sweat, the pressure, and the fine line between victory and disaster. By the end, you don’t just leave the cinema entertained — you leave with a new appreciation for the sport and those who risk everything lap after lap.
Rating: ★★★★☆
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes and Javier Bardem as Ruben Cervantes in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes and Kerry Condon as Kate in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
A scene from Apple Original Films’ ‘F1 The Movie’ premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
A scene from Apple Original Films’ ‘F1 The Movie’ premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025, on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025 on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes in Apple Original Films’ F1 The Movie, premiering December 12, 2025, on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes & Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce in Apple Original Films’ “F1 The Movie,” premiering December 12, 2025, on Apple TV. | Image: Apple TV
Elias Albay is the Founder and Director of Many Men Magazine, a Toronto-based digital publication dedicated to promoting modern masculinity through style, culture, and self-improvement. What started as a personal turning point became a purposeful platform. — born from Elias’ desire to create something meaningful after completing his studies and finding no career path that truly matched his ambitions. With a background in Civil Engineering from York University and experience in Commercial Flight Operations at CAE, he applied skills, and resilience from both fields to forge a new path.