Champagne Carbon – From Soil to Speed

The Carbon Champagne documentary development began not as a pitch, but as a conversation — with the owner and managing partner of Champagne Carbon. What emerged was a shared instinct: this was not simply a product story, but a philosophy worth bringing to the screen and beyond.

Merlins’ roots trace back to an energy drink and an early racing partnership with a former Formula 1 driver. That lineage — speed, risk, reinvention — made Carbon a natural subject. From the outset, the question wasn’t whether to tell the story, but how to tell it cinematically.

Those early discussions unfolded during Toronto International Film Festival, where ideas evolved organically: structure, tone, access, and the kind of intimacy that could ground a luxury brand in human truth. The concept sharpened when Netflix brought Champagne Problems to its platform, reigniting global curiosity around Champagne as culture — not commodity.

From there, the vision became experiential. Imagine an acclaimed chef hosting a private dinner in Champagne, welcoming guests arriving from Cannes Film Festival or the French Grand Prix. Conversations flow over courses and glasses; ideas collide. The camera listens as much as it looks.

At its core, this is a story about those who carry the Merlin within — the unconventional, the builders who venture into uncharted territory. Carbon is the smallest Champagne house in Champagne, yet it dared to create a carbon-fiber bottle and take it all the way to the podium of Formula 1, and far beyond.

True to Merlins’ ethos — screen to streets — the film stays grounded in the soil that gives the grapes their magic. We return, again and again, to the land, the roots, the patience. In spirit, it echoes The Grapes of Wrath: resilience, belief, and the quiet power of origins.

This is not a luxury documentary.

It is a human one — poured slowly, and meant to be shared.