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Drive (2011)

Dir: Nicholas Winding Refn
Driver (Ryan Gosling) is a movie stunt
driver, as well as a part time getaway driver.
He has no real personal life,
he barely speaks and rarely shows emotion.
The cars Driver uses are provided
by his mentor and boss Shannon (Bryan Cranston) a crippled, unlucky, body shop
owner.
Shannon is in debt to crime figure Bernie (Albert Brooks) who bankrolls
his dream of becoming a race car manager using Drivers skills.
The
Driver lives in a sparsely decorated apartment down the hall from a young single
mum named Irene (Carey Mulligan) and her six-year-old son, Benicio (Kaden Leos).
They are the only real, though distant, emotional tie in his life away from Shannon.
But
when Driver helps Irene when her car breaks down a bond is finally formed.
She
explains that her husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac) is in prison and so Driver slowly
becomes a surrogate father to Benicio and a chaste romantic interest in Irenes
life.
After a brief time though Standard is released from prison and comes
home. So once again Driver is on the outside looking in as he and Irene try to
come to terms with how they feel.
But when Standards past comes back
to haunt the future he is trying to make with Irene and his son, Driver steps
in to help.
One simple job.
But nothing is ever simple
..
Want
to see the film that Michael Mann should have made between "Thief"
and "Manhunter" instead of the mess that was "The Keep"?
Well
here it is.
After the triumph of "Bronson", and the at least
interesting and delightfully brutal "Valhalla Rising", Nicholas
Winding Refn delivers this astonishing modern 80's throwback that delivers absolutely
everything you could hope for.
Anyone who has seen
"Thief" will recognise the night time cityscape stylistic flourishes
and cool, smooth take on the old 'honourable man on the wrong side of the law'
plot and anyone who has seen "Manhunter" will recognise the laid
back, dream-like, constantly backed by ethereal synth, dialogue exchanges.
Exchanges
made so compelling, even when dialogue is minimal, by the acting and that perfect
synth accompaniment, that the slowish build-up becomes a dramatic triumph in of
itself.
So much is owed to, and hinges on, this score and its use.

The
modern but throwback electro songs and 'Tangerine Dream' style original score
by Cliff Martinez (and pink, neon, silk on steel, title graphic and opening credits)
all scream prime era Michael Mann too.
This is not only a stunning movie in
it's own, 21st century, right but the best Michael Mann film not made by Michael
Mann in 15 years.

That's
not to say that Refn's own mastery of the art is not in evidence, or to say that
it is anything but (well perhaps along with Gasper Noe) Refn's own lashings of
astonishingly brutal and graphic violence on display that superbly punctuate this,
what he himself has called, urban fairytale.
Nor is it without note that this
is very much another Refn study of a singular, driven, coldly brutal at times,
man living in an unforgiving world.
But, and despite traces of Melville and
70's U.S. crime films, at its heart "Drive" is without doubt the offspring
of 80's Michael Mann.
Ryan Gosling gives
a fascinating, multi-layered, performance of a fascinating, multi-layered character
(known only as Driver) who is the chivalrous knight one moment, and the gore drenched
barbarian the next.
One can not exist without the other in this man's world...not
if the pure princess and her innocent child are to be saved.

The support cast is also superb with an almost unrecognisable (who stole his eyebrows?!) Albert Brooks as a measured but ruthless crime boss, Bryan Cranston as Driver's friend, Ron Pearlman as a thick-headed, uncompromising heavy and Carey Mulligan doing a beautiful job as the barely reachable purity in Driver's life, who belongs to another.
Poignant drama, multi layered characters, simple but clever plotting, excellent (and excellently utilised) synth soundtrack, gorgeous cinematography, crisp night-time city dreamscapes, exciting and unapologetically cool car sequences, superb acting and truly brutal and gory action are the gift to the audience...and the pitch perfect 80's/Michael Mann thriller styling are the its wrappings, all brilliantly crafted by writer Hossein Amini and director Nicholas Winding Refn.
One of the best films of the decade at the very least and an essential purchase.