By Mike Wilmington Wilmington@moviecitynews.com
Wilmington on DVD. Pick of the Week: New. Drive
Drive (Also Blu-ray U.V. Digital Combo) (Three and a Half Stars)
U.S.: Nicolas Winding Refn, 2011 (Sony)
Drive is an L. A. street action movie to tighten your throat, twist your guts and set your pulse racing. But there’s thought in the show too. Story-wise, it’s lean, mean and stripped to the bone, but it’s also drenched with modish, chic visual style and a few ideas about modern life and what it does to us ad others. Especially the drivers.
Directed by Nicolas Winding-Refn, the flashy Dane of The Pusher Trilogy and Bronson, it’s about a movie stunt driver played by Ryan Gosling who steers getaway cars as a “night” job. At home, in his rare down-time, he falls in love with the woman down the hall in his building: nervous Irene (Carey Mulligan), whose husband Standard (Oscar Isaac) just got out of the slammer and is now being forced into another heist himself by the shady moneymen Nino and Bernie (played by Ron Perlman, who’s good, and Albert Brooks—who is tremendous).
Drive is full of killingly well-executed action scenes and sharp acting and ironic/iconic dialogue and that ultra-snazzy visual style, all glowing colors and deep shadows—all of which helped win Refn the Best Director prize at the last Cannes Film Festival. It’s a movie built largely out of our memories of other movies, but that’s not necessarily bad. We know where this show is coming from early, as soon as we know Gosling’s character has no name but The Driver—just like Ryan O‘Neal in Walter Hill‘s 1978 The Driver, or Dwayne Johnson in the recent Faster.
Neo-noir is this picture’s middle name, and its forebears are The Driver (of course) and John Boorman’s 1968 Point Blank, with Lee Marvin, and Peter Yates’ 1968 Bullitt, with Steve McQueen, and William Friedkin’s 1971 The French Connection, and Clint Eastwood’s modern shoot-‘em ups and Michael Mann‘s outlaw movies Thief (1980) and Heat (1995)—and even perhaps Jean-Pierre Melville‘s 1967 Le Samourai, which has a hero, hit man Jef (played by Alain Delon) who’s just as cool, just as silent, murderous and secretly romantic as Gosling’s Driver is here.
As you’d expect from a movie with that kind of lineage, Drive begins with a great action-chase-street-set-piece, and it gives us a little — a very little — dip under Gosling’s opaque exterior (a mask, chewing a toothpick) by letting us know that he‘s a movie stunt driver by day, and a free-lance getaway driver by night or off-hours. (He allows his robber/clients only a five minute leeway to get to his car from the time they set after pulling their jobs).
He’s also a prospective racing car driver, for whom his damaged auto shop owner/patron Shannon (Bryan Cranston) wants to get sponsorship — with Shannon turning to the very same criminal financiers, Nino and Bernie, who want Standard to pull a job for them, a job for which Standard wants The Driver to drive.
And The Driver does, mostly because he’s in love with Standard‘s wife, Irene and his little son Benicio (Kaden Leos).
As the movie goes on, it alternates its always-thrilling action scenes, with the more emotional character stuff — including that very brilliant turn, an Oscar worthy one, by Brooks as the deceptively good-natured gangster, financier and ex-movie producer Bernie. (In the ‘80s Bernie made action movies that some critic called “Eurpopean,“ and it still boosts his ego. He likes to be considered a bright, artistic guy.) Drive also gets more violent, and the violent scenes are short, but extremely bloody. Since the movie plays some of its carnage with razor-sharp comic timing (especially Brooks‘ scenes), it becomes more and more disturbing as well.
Drive definitely doesn’t suggest that crime pays, just that it can look good while it goes over the edge. But it‘s true that there’s something sinister and icily detached about that kind of comic violence. Drive suggests a world where brutality is rampant, where greed rules, where immorality thrives. But look around you: Is that view all that wrong? The movie may be stylized, but it knows where the underworld dirt is.
As for the film’s very classy cast, they sometimes seem to be getting paid for holding it back — especially Gosling, whose minimalism here makes vintage Eastwood or McQueen look like John Barrymore. But they’re all good.
Especially Albert Brooks. Except for his heavy role in Soderbergh’s Out of Sight — we certainly haven’t seen Brooks play many roles as wrenchingly, yet amusingly evil as this one: Bernie, an amoral gangster who smiles, chatters, makes a deal, screws people and, then with an empathetic-looking expression that suggests, falsely, “This will hurt me more than it does you“ leans over smiling, and slices .them open — as if Martin Balsam, in Psycho, had suddenly turned into Tony Perkins‘ mother. Bad taste? Not really. Bad man. Brooks makes it work so well, I’d have liked to see his screen time, if not his victim list, doubled.
It’s no surprise that the Danish émigré Winding Refn would direct a movie like Drive. His most prestigious credits are also ultra-violent films: the Danish-made “Pusher” Trilogy (a violent portrayal of the Copenhagen drug trade) and the British prison crime movie Bronson (with Tom Hardy as a real-life legendary prison brawler/troublemaker who called himself “Charles Bronson“). But it is something of a surprise that the script, an adaptation from James Sallis’ novel, was written by Hossein Amini, who started his career by adapting deep-dish literary work like Thomas Hardy’s “Jude the Obscure” (in the 1996 Jude) and Henry James’ “The Wings of the Dove” (the 1997 version with Helena Bonham-Carter and Charlotte Rampling).
A Jamesian action movie? Here, the violence is glamorously shot and classy and sometimes funny — which does make it more unnerving. But though Amini and Refn may not have really made a classic neo-noir, at least they tried. They came close. A little more Albert Brooks maybe. Maybe not even as much as I wanted. Say, five minutes or less.
_______________________________________________________________________