My opinion? Don't use this music. It's blah and no one will "get" it other than the three other people who saw the movie.
Personally, I have never heard of the movie, the artist, character or the song. The engine notes at the end are bizarre and do nothing to convey the message that "this song is about car racing." More like "this song is so boring, I got in my car and raced away." It's jarring and completely out of the blue.
I listened to it twice. The music itself is boring and repetitive; it's background music that is "more of the same" over and over, never really reaching a climax. Nothing in it "sounds like" a spin, a jump or a footwork section, so you'll be skating over the music, not skating with the music. There's really no place to "cut it" that gives you enough time for a skating program, so you'll have to splice it at least twice. Plus, it's really slow and unless you're a fast, strong skater, it will be boring for the audience as well as the judges.
This music means something to you because of the movie, which is fine, but makes you listen subjectively. You need more objectivity in listening because you have to assume that the judges have never seen the movie or heard the song. Good skating music has to have a melody that everyone can hear and follow, variations with highs and lows, and changes throughout that "call out" for different types of elements.
The teenies all want to skate to the latest pop star's song, not realizing it's the vocals (or worse, the heartfelt lyrics) that they love in the song and the music itself is just a synthesized beat track that never varies. Boring and it doesn't sound good over the loudspeakers - all the judges/audience hear is thumping and the singer's voice, not even the lyrics. That's not good skating music.
The Harry Potter soundtracks are a great example: a lot of John Williams' songs sound the same and he recycles bits throughout the various albums. Everyone has heard "Hedwig's Theme" and the always-jaded music critics at the rinks sigh and their eyes when they hear it. One of my DDs listened to an HP soundtrack and said "I want to skate to this." It was a jazzy, upbeat song - I don't remember the name - that I really liked. Her coach cut the music and choreographed the program. Here's the key: she skated to the music itself; she didn't skate to the movie or the scene. People were really surprised to find out it was from HP.
I think you should keep looking.