Baby Driver.

Baby Driver (available to rent now on amazon and iTunes) was among the most anticipated films of the summer, and was released to solid reviews and an enthusiastic box office, clearing $100 million domestically and over $200 million worldwide. It very much looks like a movie, with actors, dialogue, set pieces, and something like a story. But it’s really an extended series of music videos, loosely stitched together by some semblance of a plot, and if you took the music out you’d just have Bad Boys 6 featuring Jon Hamm.

The main character is a driver named Baby (Ansel Elgort), and he can really drive. When he was still little, he was in the back seat of his parents’ car when they were arguing and ended up slamming into the truck in front of them, killing his parents and somehow leading him to a life of boosting cars and driving them like a champion stunt driver – but he can only drive while listening to music, and he has an iPod and a playlist for each day of the week (or something like that). He stole the Wrong Guy’s car one day, and ended up driving for that guy, Doc (Kevin Spacey), to repay his debt. The movie lets us know after the first heist that Baby just has to do One More Job and he’s “square” with Doc, after which he intends to do something not illegal. He also meets a waitress, Debra (Lily James, looking adorable), and they improbably fall in love despite spending almost no time together, but of course Doc isn’t willing to just let his best driver go – and the next caper is the one that goes wrong.

The movie is bookended by three chase scenes – two at the start, one at the end – that, if you like a good car chase, are tremendously fun to watch. They’re well choreographed and well shot, and Elgort is more than up to the task of showing steel-faced resolve behind the wheel while everyone else in the car is generally freaking out. But everything else about this movie is some exponential power of dumb. Baby records conversations he has with others and remixes them into amateurish home electronica, a habit that is both inexplicable and incredibly stupid, since he’s recording conversations he has with known criminals. With the exception of Hamm’s Buddy, the criminals themselves are caricatures, none more so than Bats (Jamie Foxx), who seems to be going out of his way at all times to let us know how crazy and unpredictable he is (which, in its own way, makes him utterly predictable). The scene with the arms dealer called The Butcher – a welcome cameo by songwriter/actor Paul Williams, playing thoroughly against type – is a complete mess, hinging on Doc failing to tell his crew a rather pertinent detail about the transaction. And throughout the movie, people get shot without any apparent pain or difficulty getting back up and returning fire.

That’s not to say that Baby Driver isn’t fun, because at many points, it is a blast. The car chases are fantastic. The script has some great lines and sight gags, often silly but frequently funny. The visual style throughout the film is arresting, no pun intended, especially during the first heist when Buddy, his wife Darling (Eiza González, wearing skintight clothes and not doing much else), and Griff move in tandem as they exit the car and approach the bank they’re about to rob. The scene opens the film and gives that music-video vibe that director/writer Edgar Wright just can’t maintain through the rest of the movie.

And boy is the rest of the movie a mess. The story is a lot of nothing, with plot conveniences strewn everywhere to keep it moving. The characters are mostly nothing; only Buddy has a hint of an interesting back story, and Hamm manages to turn the character into a credible antagonist. Elgort is solid as Baby, but not given a ton to do; the only scenes where the character shows a little depth are with his deaf, wheelchair-bound foster father, who unfortunately is more prop than anything else in the film. Doc is a parody of a caricature of a crime boss; Spacey’s performance here is indistinguishable from his work in those e-Trade commercials. The film really sputters out at the end, as if Wright couldn’t figure out how to end the story without killing everyone off, giving us a closing sequence that feels tacked on, incongruent, and very much like the end of some epic music video. Wright can certainly put together a good driving playlist, but he might have done better to ask someone else to help him write the story.

Comments

  1. I enjoyed Baby Driver, but I didn’t find it to be too extraordinary and, like you said, not terribly original. I thought the critical reviews heaped too much praise on it.

    It also provided another example of what I like to call IMDB syndrome. That’s something that happens with many new films where, when it is first released in theaters, it gets a really high rating on IMDb and ends up in the Top 250 list. Then it comes out for rental/on demand/whatever we’re calling it now, and the rating steadily drops until it’s out of the Top 250. It’s as if the people who see it in theaters all LOVE it, and people who wait to see it don’t hold it in as high a regard. Fanboys, I guess.

    And, yes, I have spent way too much time looking at the IMDb Top 250 list to have developed this theory.

  2. Yeah, it’s definitely a movie that has shrunk on me since seeing it. I thought the music/action editing was superb — it’s going to be a travesty when it loses sound editing and sound mixing to Dunkirk — but the plot is just as thin as you say. The emptiness of Debora’s character and the whole Manic Surrogate Mother Dream Girl plot was a real shame. I do look forward to watching it again with headphones on once it’s streaming, though.

    I love Edgar Wright’s movies, and Hot Fuzz is one of my all-time favorite movies period, but it needs to be said that he can’t seem to write women or minorities. Baby’s father and Liz in Shaun of the Dead have been the only exceptions; otherwise his fleshed-out characters are all white men, all the time. It’s pretty noticeable at this point.

  3. Yeah, I thought much the same. It was fun once, but I didn’t love it the way everyone else I know did and it doesn’t have the substance to want watch again anytime soon.

  4. Edgar Wright’s movies are getting progressively less fun to me — he’s always been a master of choreography, but he draws Baby as so minutely attuned to his environment, anticipating thoroughly un-anticipatable circumstances, that you never feel he’s at serious risk of harm, so there are no stakes to what is ordinarily a high-stakes genre.

  5. Well, I at least enjoyed (and the music in it) more than Drive.

  6. A poor man’s Quinton Tarantino type movie.

  7. I think the problem these days is that there are so few original (i.e. not based on a preexisting work/story) movies that when one does actually come out, it garners critical acclaim even if it’s really not THAT great.

  8. I should also add that it would have been criminal if they hadn’t used the Simon & Garfunkel song. The end credits was definitely the best place for it.