Baby Driver film review ★★★★★
The Baby Driver cast is impressive – Kevin Spacey, Jamie Foxx, Ansel Elgort, Lily James and Jon Hamm – but Edgar Wright's passion project lacks his usual humour
The protagonist of Baby
Driver is a driver called Baby, but that’s not how director Edgar Wright
named his film. Both protagonist and movie have been named after the Simon and
Garfunkel song, and you get the impression that Wright had this idea knocking
around in his head for so long – since 1994, apparently – that it became
impossible for him to pick a better name when Baby Driver finally became a reality.
All of Baby Driver from the title down reflects what it is: a passion project with a too-long gestation period, an oddly inward and selfish movie that perhaps means a little too much to the creative mind behind it. The fact that its conception predates Wright’s later work is telling – cartoonish without being funny and impressive without being affecting, Baby Driver feels like a show-offy feat of technical wizardry with an immature pastiche narrative wrapped around its central conceit.
That conceit is, admittedly, clever. ‘Baby’ (Ansel Elgort) is a baby-faced getaway driver, a hipsterish dude permanently attached to his sunglasses and headphones, the latter explained by a lifelong case of tinnitus. Rather than endure permanent whining, Baby listens to pop songs (favouring classic rock) so frequently that his incessant soundtrack has become key to the success of his job: his driving ability is now dependent on the music. With the right killer track, Baby can flick and spin a car through busy traffic with awe-inspiring skill, timing his reactions to the beat. Without a tune, though, things get messy.
They’re already pretty messy. Baby owes a debt to powerful kingpin Doc (Kevin Spacey), who organises bank heists for trigger-happy larger-than-life crooks like Buddy (Jon Hamm), Darling (Eiza González), and Bats (Jamie Foxx). There’s just one more job to do before Baby is able to leave his life of crime and safely woo adorable waitress Debora (Lily James), but things don’t quite turn out as planned. Cue record scratch.
Baby Driver should be visually spectacular at least, and it’s certainly filmed in typically Wrightian style, full of cute visual rhymes and whip-pans and edited with snare-snap timing. But because it rarely tries to be funny – the jokes are great but few – this style feels a bit pointless. It’s like watching expert slapstick with the humour removed, ‘serious’ clowning that aims for something cooler than comedy. Whatever that thing was, Baby Driver misses it, only scraping the paintwork.
Perhaps this is because Wright hasn’t made a film about the gulf between colourful Hollywood fantasy and mundane English life (Shawn of the Dead, Hot Fuzz), or about the gulf between colourful video-game fantasy and mundane romantic tribulations (Scott Pilgirm vs. the World) – but has written and directed a colourful fantasy that he is determined to take seriously.
The result isn’t disastrous by any means. It's just that Baby Driver doesn’t have the memorable characters or emotional resonance of Wright’s goofy comedies. To paraphrase Martin Amis, the opposite of funny isn’t serious or cool: it’s not funny.
All of Baby Driver from the title down reflects what it is: a passion project with a too-long gestation period, an oddly inward and selfish movie that perhaps means a little too much to the creative mind behind it. The fact that its conception predates Wright’s later work is telling – cartoonish without being funny and impressive without being affecting, Baby Driver feels like a show-offy feat of technical wizardry with an immature pastiche narrative wrapped around its central conceit.
That conceit is, admittedly, clever. ‘Baby’ (Ansel Elgort) is a baby-faced getaway driver, a hipsterish dude permanently attached to his sunglasses and headphones, the latter explained by a lifelong case of tinnitus. Rather than endure permanent whining, Baby listens to pop songs (favouring classic rock) so frequently that his incessant soundtrack has become key to the success of his job: his driving ability is now dependent on the music. With the right killer track, Baby can flick and spin a car through busy traffic with awe-inspiring skill, timing his reactions to the beat. Without a tune, though, things get messy.
They’re already pretty messy. Baby owes a debt to powerful kingpin Doc (Kevin Spacey), who organises bank heists for trigger-happy larger-than-life crooks like Buddy (Jon Hamm), Darling (Eiza González), and Bats (Jamie Foxx). There’s just one more job to do before Baby is able to leave his life of crime and safely woo adorable waitress Debora (Lily James), but things don’t quite turn out as planned. Cue record scratch.
Baby Driver should be visually spectacular at least, and it’s certainly filmed in typically Wrightian style, full of cute visual rhymes and whip-pans and edited with snare-snap timing. But because it rarely tries to be funny – the jokes are great but few – this style feels a bit pointless. It’s like watching expert slapstick with the humour removed, ‘serious’ clowning that aims for something cooler than comedy. Whatever that thing was, Baby Driver misses it, only scraping the paintwork.
Perhaps this is because Wright hasn’t made a film about the gulf between colourful Hollywood fantasy and mundane English life (Shawn of the Dead, Hot Fuzz), or about the gulf between colourful video-game fantasy and mundane romantic tribulations (Scott Pilgirm vs. the World) – but has written and directed a colourful fantasy that he is determined to take seriously.
The result isn’t disastrous by any means. It's just that Baby Driver doesn’t have the memorable characters or emotional resonance of Wright’s goofy comedies. To paraphrase Martin Amis, the opposite of funny isn’t serious or cool: it’s not funny.
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What | Baby Driver film review |
Where | Various Locations | MAP |
Nearest tube | Leicester Square (underground) |
When |
28 Jun 17 – 28 Aug 17, Times vary |
Price | £determined by cinema |
Website | Click here for more information |