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The Driver
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Directed by Walter Hill.
Walter Hill's stripped down neo-noir features a protagonist who makes the laconic boxer of the director's similar Hard Times (1974) seem logorrheic by comparison. The film's tone is set in the opening scene as the Driver (Ryan O'Neal) gloms a V-8 sedan and proceeds to whip through claustrophobic parking garages, narrow alleyways, and sundry other high-risk macadam, as he demonstrates why he's known as the best getaway driver in the business to some potential clients, before giving his vehicle a proper burial. Such plot as there is in this highly abstract film concerns the Driver's cat and mouse game with the Detective (Bruce Dern), an employee of the constabulary of an unnamed city, intent on his arrest. A mysterious and beautiful woman, the Player (Isabelle Adjani), soon appears on the Driver's radar, a perfect match for his taciturnity. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide
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chrismorrellchrismorrell Ageing well
by chrismorrell in chrismorrell Blog
loved it.
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"I don't think this has been bettered for car smash /chase action...and if you read a synopsis that omitted the four-wheel stuff it would sound sooo unpromising.No character names ,minimal character development,total underplaying ,except for Bruce Dern who literally chews the scenery..It's the Sheriff versus the "gun for hire" ...the "loner" ,man with no name ,who listens to country music(?!) who wants to turn over a new leaf...an almost comotose "love interest" ...but what it comes down to is a battle between a Pontiac Firebird and a breathed-over Ford pickup... " [More]
NakedLunchRadioShowNakedLunchRadioShow Re:Re: Top 5 Heist Films
by NakedLunchRadioShow in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"One of the best heist films ever made is The Asphalt Junlge. Also there was Bob Le Flambeur which was later made into The Good Thief by Niel Jordon. Also let us not forget Bonnie & Clyde and the Red Circle by Jean Pierre Melville! The Naked Lunch Radio Show -CJLO.COM http://augustism.com/index.php ?option=com_doqment&cid=2 " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Walter Hill has always used myth and archetype as the backbone of his films but in this beautifully made existential noir he takes this approach as far as he ever has, eliminating any hint of psychology or sociology, even denying the characters any names. In a film that seems an odd marriage of Bresson and Hemingway, the blank-faced O'Neal speaks barely more than 300 words throughout, his character manifest in his grace and economy of action. Lest this sound too much like an exercise in philosophical bombast, it's worth mentioning that the film's only apparent raison d'être is three of the most spectacular car chase sequences ever committed to celluloid. Shot by the legendary Phillip Lathrop, who also gave the similarly hard-edged Point Blank (1967) and Hard Times (1974) much of their visual allure, the film's sleek, dark-toned, wide-screen compositions resonate powerfully, particularly the scenes in L.A.'s Union Station. As the cop on a futile quest to collar the superhuman wheelman, Dern does a fine job in the film's only actable part. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide
 



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chrismorrell
chrismorrell
loved it.
Diabolical_Shadow
Diabolical_Shadow
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