Fast, stylish, and taut, The Driver is an audacious
experiment in cinematic minimalism. Eschewing conventional elements like
backstory, character names, and emotional life, writer-director Walter Hill
presents an action movie comprised merely of situations and forward momentum;
the fact that a certain kind of ambiguous character study emerges from this
Spartan storytelling speaks not only to Hill’s craftsmanship but also to the
depth of his commitment to themes of individuality and male identity.
The
Driver (Ryan O’Neal) is a Los Angeles wheelman who freelances for crooks,
providing his expensive services during high-speed getaways. The Driver’s
reputation has spread beyond the criminal community to the world of law
enforcement, so the Detective (Bruce Dern) devotes himself to catching the
Driver. Caught between them is the Player (Isabelle Adjani), a casino gambler
who witnessed the Driver performing a crime but refuses to ID him for the
Detective’s benefit. When these characters converge, the Detective forces a
situation that puts the Driver in league with reckless thieves willing to
betray anyone and everyone for the right price.
Taking place mostly at night,
and set in evocative locations like a cavernous warehouse and L.A.’s iconic
Union Station, The Driver is a sleek
underworld poem. Nobody trusts anybody, and yet people must rely on each other
to get their jobs done, so disconnected souls rise and fall based on their luck
in picking the right partners. For viewers who buy into Hill’s singular approach,
The Driver is a metaphorically rich
meditation on the bleak moral relativism shared by killers. Yet others might
find The Driver pretentious and
vacuous, merely a symphony of attractive actors, cool shots, and exciting
sequences.
For me, the beauty of the picture is that it justifies both
reactions—it’s a deep statement if you’re inclined to explore its enigmatic
textures, and it’s empty fun if all you want to do is enjoy its visceral
pleasures.
Cast for their surface qualities rather than their acting chops,
O’Neal manifests a cynical swagger that works well in this context, while
Adjani’s dark beauty suits Hill’s nocturnal aesthetic. Dern manages to slip in
a bit of characterization despite the script’s restraint, so he
steals the movie by dint of presenting a recognizable personality. However, the
acting in The Driver is really just
part of Hill’s overall palette, because this is the action movie as art
piece—whenever Hill commences a chase scene or a tense standoff, he reveals his
innate mastery of primal signifiers and visual economy. In his hands, a car
zooming across a nighttime highway is a brushstroke across a canvas, and a
fragment of dialogue is a world of implied psychology.
The Driver:
GROOVY
4 comments:
gonna have to check this one out, big Ryan O Neal fan.
You did it again Peter. Great movie and awesome stunts. Was telling my friend on the phone the other day that Ryan o'Neal for the most part couldn't act his way out of a paper sack but as far as on-screen charisma, there was no touching Ryan O'Neal in the 70's!
One of the best movies of 70s. Influenced many later movies.
Just watched this...very good movie! Great stunts and O'Neal's minimalist acting suited the tone of the film very well. Interesting that even when Dern played an Establishment-type he still had to make it a little weird :)
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