By Sarah Sluis
I'm not really into car chases. They require a suspension of disbelief that bores me and makes me tune out. Car chase sequences that really broke ground, like the one in 1968's Bullitt, have been so copied that watching the original feels like "same old." The only car sequence that truly freaked me out in the past decade or so wasn't even a car chase, but that out-of-the-blue car crash in Adaptation. That felt incredibly real and scary.
For this reason, I wasn't that excited about the indie movie Drive. Ryan Gosling plays a professional driver who moonlights as a getaway car driver. After a job goes wrong, a contract goes out for his death. He runs away with the girlfriend of one of his crime associates (Carey Mulligan), and presumably there's some smooching involved.
The FilmDistrict film is a selection at the Cannes Film Festival, and the festival website just posted a clip of Drive that's truly stunning. It's chock-full of suspense without going over 40mph. Car chases generally involve lots of crashing through intersections, high speeds, and improbable moves like going off a ramp on a pier and landing on a barge in a river (just riffing here). Drive takes the rare step of doing something simple and realistic like pulling over to evade the cops. I almost fainted from excitement.
I don't know if the rest of the movie will be able to pull of that level of suspense, but I also like that the first look of the movie wasn't a trailer, but a brief clip The director, Nicolas Winding Refn, has written and directed seven low-budget action/thrillers that get distributed by the likes of IFC, First Run, and Magnolia. He hasn't ever had the chance to prove himself with a larger budget or well-known stars. But within the low-budget realm, he created Pusher, so successful it was turned into a trilogy and inspired a remake. This man must be doing extremely well in the rental/DVD arena.
Drive will benefit from the support of newbie distributor FilmDistrict, which has been performing strongly. One of its first releases, the horror movie Insidious, has earned $50 million in the U.S. alone off a reported $1.5 million production budget, making it the most profitable movie of 2011. A while back, Drive was given a release date in the fall, where it can take advantage of the post-summer slump.
For a closer look at the Cannes Film Festival, check out Film Journal contributor Jon Frosch's Cannes blog.
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