Baby Driver
Dir: Edgar Wright
2017
****
After Edgar Wright walked from
Ant-Man, a project he'd put a lot of heart and soul into, he needed to come
back with some special and something he could get passionate about, so he went
back to an idea he had back in 1994. The idea - of a get away driver who was
obsessed with music - was actually realised in a music video he made for the
British re-mix electronic beat masters Mint Royale back in 2003. The video for
'Blue Song' stared Noel Fielding as the music obsessed driver and his Mighty
Boosh co-star Julian Barratt and Wright regulars Nick Frost and Michael Smiley
as his bank-robbing passengers. During the heist (which we never see) Fielding
listens, dances and performs in time to the music in the corner of a
multi-story car park. It's a great little video, especially if you like
contemporary British comedy. The intro to 2017's Baby Driver is essentially
that video all over again, with Ansel Elgort replacing Noel Fielding and the Jon
Spencer Blues Explosion replacing Mint Royale. I'll be honest, I didn't like this
intro scene at all. It looked like a cheap and nasty remake of the old music
video - with better music granted - but unconvincing and utterly
charmless. Thankfully, it got much better very quickly. Wright has built on his
original idea rather well, and I thoroughly enjoyed Baby Driver from
(just after the) start until finish. However, the concept that has been much
hyped, of the film essentially being one long music video, keeping in time with
the constant soundtrack, isn't quite accurate. There are wonderful flourishes
of action following the beat of whatever song is playing at the time, but it's
hardly a constant thing, or even much of a concept. Nor is it something
particularly original. I like it, but I feel the film was sold on a quirk
that isn't the whole film, I feel it undersells what is a perfectly good
high-octane crime thriller romance. Still, that's a pre-production
marketing thing, the music-heavy themed action works very well in the film and
is, thankfully, never overdone as I'd worried might be the case. So the concept
isn't really original and the story certainly isn't either, but this isn't a
problem, as the story is told slightly differently than one might expect and it
is told very well. There is nothing new about bank robberies or the age old
tale of a nice guy involved crime, sometimes against his will, who wants out,
after one last heist (that goes terribly wrong), to be with the girl he loves.
The story has been told with unique twists since the beginning of cinema,
Baby Driver goes back to basics in many respects, but the story is a familiar
one and has all the same cliches - it's just that here they are updated. This
is not criticism though, as I feel Wright has totally understood and
immersed himself in the genre and has improved on each element. The
romantic side of the story is perfect, and also doubled. Baby meets Debora
(Lily James) working as a waitress in a classical American Diner - the spark is
there from the very beginning and it only gets brighter as the film goes
on. In contrast, you also have Buddy and Darling (John Hamm and Eiza
González), the classic True Romance couple we've all seen many times before but
with just enough of a Bonny and Clyde essence about them for them to still be
bad guys. They are a cynical version of Clarence and Alabama, had they
gone broke after walking into the sunset at the end of True Romance. Both
couples are integral to the overall feel of the film, Wright is basically
taking the classic crime couple, splitting the cliche into two and updating
both. He does exactly the same with the two main bad guys. Kevin Spacey
plays the film's crime King-Pin, the reason Baby can't get out of the crime
syndicate and Jamie Foxx plays the gangster on the rise to power who doesn't
like or understand Baby's style. Each character's conclusion comes as a
refreshing surprise, Baby Driver follows all crime thriller formulas while
re-writing them completely. I would say it works 98% of the time, with only a
couple of cartoonish scenes keeping it from being the full 100. Apart from a
couple of overlong scenes (I'm afraid Wright does have an issue with
editing) I loved everything about it but it is missing something important. It
doesn't have that one important scene that makes it iconic. Sure, it has lots
of great scenes, a couple of unexpected ones that thrilled me to the core but
nothing that will ever elevate it to cult status, which is a terrible shame and
a bit of missed opportunity. The script is ace, the cinematography brilliant
(thanks to the great Bill Pope) and the direction, concept and acting all of
the highest quality. It just doesn't have that scene people will be
talking about for years, that scene that gets spoofed by The Wayan brothers or
mocked in a Jason Friedberg/Aaron Seltzer movie. I don't think Baby Driver
will ever have a cool alternative movie poster made of it, it's not the next
Pulp Fiction or indeed, the next True Romance. I sound like I'm hating on it
but I'm really not, what I'm trying to say is that it is in fact only a couple
of tweaks away from being something of a modern masterpiece. There is certainly
a lot more to it than you might expect and a lot more going on than the
casual viewer might realize. I have to say I was very impressed with Ansel
Elgort who I have thus far overlooked and Lily James is certainly going places
fast, the role was originally meant for Emma Stone, and I'm sure she would have
been good in it, but I'm glad James got it and she certainly gives it her all.
Kevin Spacey is perfect in his role and I think more suited to it
than Michael Douglas who was approached originally. I liked this version
of Jon
Hamm very much, he and Eiza González sizzle and Jamie
Foxx makes for quite the effective and unpredictable bad guy. It was also
nice to see Flea in a small cameo appearance, his filmography is quite
varied now as it is impressive. I'm quite excited about Edgar Wright's career now
that all the Ant-Man upset is over, to be fair, there are many people who could
have made Ant-Man as it was, but not many people who could have made Baby
Driver the success it is.
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