Last Updated on August 3, 2021
Glad to see you again, lovers of cinema. You have come back to the Face-Off to see what lucky competitors will be thrown into the pit together, and to see who will emerge victoriously. This latest battle is surely fast and furious, as we will pit two great crime stories (with a bit of passion and charm) that put the pedal to the metal: BABY DRIVER and DRIVE. Time to get your engines started, film fans, because this shit’s about to go off.
Both movies feature quiet, reserved, mysterious but kind-hearted characters in the lead (Ryan Gosling and Ansel Elgort), and who both have their lives thrown for a loop when a charming lady enters their life. Directed with style and energy by Edgar Wright and Nicolas Winding Refn, these films are two of the best in the action-romance-crime-thriller genre, both with their own distinct spins on the format. Which has the slickest moves behind the wheel, though? Put it into high gear and find out below!
Liliy James as Deborah
Jon Hamm as Buddy
Jamie Foxx as Bats
Kevin Spacey as Doc
Eiza Gonzalez as Darling
CJ Jones as Joseph
with Jon Bernthal as Griff
Flea as Eddie
and Lanny Loon as JD
Carey Mulligan as Irene
Albert Brooks as Bernie Rose
Bryan Cranston as Shannon
Ron Perlman as Nino
Oscar Isaac as Standard
Christina Hendricks as Blanche
Baby, a young music fanatic, and a superb driver has spent the last few years working for Doc as a getaway driver and does so with the help of his trusty iPod(s). Soon he meets a young southern belle, Deborah, and hopes that he can move away from the crime life and into one of domestic bliss with this blonde beauty. However, he learns that getting out is not so easy, and if he’s to live the life he wants, he’s gonna have to crank the tunes and go into high gear.
Like all his movies, Wright finds a way to make this love/crime story all his own. The dialogue crackles and snaps and has no shortage of laughs, and sounds and moves like a Tarantino flick. But this is an Edgar Wright film, so of course, it has its fair share of quirky humor, even though this is his least funny film. Wright seemed to be aiming for a real hybrid of an action thriller with a romance story, with the humor being more of a sprinkling on top. The genre-blending works great, though, with plenty of well-written characters feeling unique enough to not be typical action-thriller cut-outs, and a romance that’s instantly absorbing.
A lone-wolf stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway man finds his lonely, solemn life changed forever when he gets to know his lovely next-door neighbor, Irene, and her son, Benicio. He begins to open himself up as he falls for her, but the fairytale is upended when her husband comes home, and finds himself embroiled with some Italian thugs. The Driver must put his skills to use in order to get him off the hook, but is soon dragged down into the criminal underworld in a bad way.
A classic crime thriller done with an art-house, avant-garde style, the DRIVE script by Hossein Amini (based on the book by James Sallis) avoids cliches by writing three-dimensional characters with distinct personalities and gliding effortlessly from a thoughtful character study into an intense crime thriller. There are so many great lines of dialogue, and Amini knows when to let one character talk and to make the other keep silent, never exhausting a scene with too much dialogue. Both Driver and Bernie get some great, long pieces that set the tone, and then the moment settles with minimal responses or just silence.
Meet Baby/Jamming in the Car
The First Getaway
Groovy Coffee Run
The Hideout/The Crew
Griff: “I mean, is he retarded?”
Doc: “‘Retarded’ means slow. Was he slow?”
Back-Up Glasses
Doc and Baby’s Arrangement
Baby: “One more job and I’m done.”
Doc: “One more job and we’re straight. Sound good?”
Meet Joseph
Baby’s Hobby
Flashbacks/Assorted Music Players
Deborah
Deborah: “I’m jealous. Sometimes all I want to do is head west on 20 in a car I can’t afford with a plan I don’t have – just me, my music, and the road.”
Meet Bats
The Second Plan
Baby Knows the Drill
Eddie: “I said Michael Myers!”
JD: “This is Mike Myers.”
Bats: “It should be the HALLOWEEN mask.”
JD: “This is a Halloween mask!”
Bats: “No, the killer dude from HALLOWEEN.”
JD: “Oh, you mean Jason.”
Eddie & Bats: “No!”
A Less Smooth Getaway
Baby’s Conscious
Switching Cars
Bats to Baby: “The moment you catch feelings is the moment you catch a bullet.”
Finally Straight
Junkyard Blues
Deborah: What is your name?
Baby: Baby.
Deborah: Your name’s Baby? B-A-B-Y Baby?
Listening Party for Two
Baby: Pizza Boy Extraordinaire
A Lovely Meal Interrupted
Doc: “Now I don’t think I need to give you the speech about what would happen if you say no, how I could break your legs and kill everyone you love because you already know that, don’t you?”
Scoping Out the Post Office ft. Doc’s Nephew
The Final Plan
The Deal Goes Up in Lights
The Wrong Diner
Doc: “Bananas”
Baby Exposed
Baby Ditches the Plan
Bats Impaled
Dashing Through Atlanta
Buddy and Darling Take on the Coppers
Darling Down, and Buddy Goes Off
Saying Goodbye to Joseph
Baby, Deborah and Buddy
Buddy: “Is she a good girl? You love her?”
Baby: “Yes, I do.”
Buddy: “That’s too bad.”
One Last Stop
Baby: “You and I are a team.”
Doc: “Don’t feed me any more lines from MONSTERS INC!”
Doc Unloads
Buddy Returns
Buddy: “Here it is Baby; your killer track.”
Leaping Over the Car
Buddy Takes Away Baby’s Favorite Thing
Buddy Takes a Tumble
Baby Does His Time
Deborah: “Hey Baby, you know it’s funny even though I heard it so many times in the court case I still can’t get used to the fact that your real name is Miles. It’s a cool name though. I can think of a lot of great Miles songs, but we still have to get through all those baby songs first. I can’t wait till the day it’s just us, music, and the road. See you later baby, all my love. Deborah.”
Reunited Once More
Driver: “There’s a hundred-thousand streets in this city. You don’t need to know the route. You give me a time and a place, I give you a five-minute window. Anything happens in that five minutes and I’m yours. No matter what. Anything happens a minute either side of that and you’re on your own. Do you understand?”
Timing the Boys
The First Getaway
Ball Game Cover
Returning “Home”
Back on the Road
First Encounter with Irene
The Day Job
A Good Neighbor
Driver: “My hands are a little dirty.”
Bernie: “So are mine.”
A Detour with Irene and Benicio
Alone with Irene
Nino: “Now this… that is one motherfucking, fine-ass, pussy-mobile, motha-fucka’! Damn!
Bernie to Driver: ” I used to produce movies. In the 80s. Kind of like action films. Sexy stuff. One critic called them European. I thought they were shit. Anyway, he arranged all the cars for me. Did all the stunts. I liked him. I liked having him around. Even though he overcharged the shit out of me. His next business venture, he got involved with some of Nino’s friends. They didn’t go for the overcharging bit. They broke his pelvis. He’s never had a lot of luck. The reason I’m telling you this is that he has a lot invested in you. And so do I. So anything you need, you call me. We’re a team now.”
Meet Standard
Driver to Redneck: “How ’bout this. You shut your mouth. Or I’ll kick your teeth down your throat and I’ll shut it for you.”
Standard’s Dilemna
Driver: “One of those men gave that to you?”
Benicio: “He told me not to lose it.”
Dinner with the Family
Standard: “All right. So I illegally walked over to a seventeen-year-old girl. And I walk up and I say, “Hello, Miss. What is your name?” And she didn’t say anything. And then I said, “Well my name is Standard Gabriel.” Then what did you say?”
Irene: “I said, “Where’s the deluxe version?”
The Plan
Driver: “If I drive for you, you get your money. You tell me where we start, where we’re going, where we’re going afterward. I give you five minutes when we get there. Anything happens in that five minutes and I’m yours. No matter what. Anything a minute on either side of that and you’re on your own. I don’t sit in while you’re running it down. I don’t carry a gun. I drive.”
Standard Gunned Down
An Unclean Getaway
Driver to Blanche: “Now, you just got a little boy’s father killed. And you almost got us killed. And now you’re lying to me. So how about this? From now on, every word out of your mouth is the truth. Or I’m going to hurt you.”
Bye, Bye, Blanche
The Driver Unleashed
A Man and His Hammer
Driver to Cook: “Whose money do I have?”
A Well-Placed Bullet
Nino: “What do you get out of it?”
Driver: “Just that. Out of it.”
The Elevator Scene
Bernie to Cook: “Shut the fuck up, you fucking monkey!”
Donning the Mask
Taking Down Nino
Driver to Irene: “Can I talk to you? I won’t keep you long. I have to go somewhere and I don’t think I can come back. But I just wanted you to know. Getting to be around you and Benicio was the best thing that ever happened to me.”
A Chat with Bernie
Bernie to Driver: “Here’s what I’m prepared to offer. You give me the money, the girl is safe. Forever. Nobody knows about her. She’s off the map. I can’t offer you the same. So, this is what I would suggest. We conclude our deal. We’ll shake hands. You start the rest of your life. Any dreams you have, or plans, or hopes for your future… I think you’re going to have to put that on hold. For the rest of your life you’re going to be looking over your shoulder. I’m just telling you this because I want you to know the truth. But the girl is safe.”
Parking Lot Stab Fest
A Gift for Irene
A Real Human Being
- $107 million ($225 million global)
Reviews:
- Rotten Tomatoes 93% (88% audience)
- IMDB: 7.9
- Metacritic:86 (8.0 audience)
- $35 million ($76 million global)
Reviews:
- Rotten Tomatoes 93% (79% audience)
- IMDB: 7.8
- Metacritic:76 (8.1 audience)
BABY DRIVER is ceaselessly entertaining, incredibly endearing, toe-tapping, and heart-racing joy to watch that manages to be all that thanks to a perfect combination of killer tunes, a great script, and amazing editing. But, sadly for DRIVER, DRIVE has much of what makes BABY DRIVER great and then more. Terrific music, gripping tension, an iconic leading character, shocking brutality and some career-best work from Brooks and Gosling all make for a tremendous piece of modern cinema. Upon rewatching it for this piece I was amazed how well it still holds up and how much is was absorbed by everything about it – especially the music. Virtually everything about it is pitch-perfect, and I believe it’s earned its place as one of the best films of its decade. Is it weird that it still makes me want to buy driving gloves? Ah, who am I kidding, I can’t pull those off.
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