Down and Derby is a family comedy about a small-town Pinewood Derby tournament that turns an ordinary group of fathers into an uncomfortable set of competitors. On the surface, Phil Davis appears to be an ordinary father and neighbour. On the inside, he is conflicted and at odds with his boyhood adversary, Ace Montana. Phil, desperate for first place, sees his kid's Pinewood Derby race as a game changer in his quest to defeat Ace, who also has a Cub Scout son. Surrounded by other obsessive fathers in the same cul-de-sac, they utterly reject the event's principles and take over the design, planning, and building of the automobiles. In the frantic world of derby fever, youngsters are lucky if they get to choose the colour of the paint or apply a decal. As the fathers approach lunacy and turn to backstabbing, cover-ups, and sabotage, the comedy escalates. Wives, families, and careers are all overlooked, and the repercussions are severe. The comedy reaches humorous and absurd proportions when, in a surprising twist, the young scouts triumph, reminding us not to take ourselves too seriously or underestimate what children can achieve. This comedy satirises the frantic behaviour of parents who compete with one another through their children, a social dynamic found in a variety of everyday activities ranging from little league to scientific fairs.