Movie Review: ‘Baby Driver’: Electrifying Non-Digital Stunt-Driving and a Sweet Summer Romance

Movie Review: ‘Baby Driver’: Electrifying Non-Digital Stunt-Driving and a Sweet Summer Romance
(L–R) Darling (Eiza González) and Buddy (Jon Hamm) find out why Baby always listens to music in TriStar Pictures’s “Baby Driver.” (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
Mark Jackson
7/3/2017
Updated:
6/16/2022
Heist/romance movie “Baby Driver” is a mashup of “The Fast and the Furious,” “Rain Man,” and “Cinderella” containing arguably the most electrifying non-digital, straight-up stunt driving (compliments of pro stunt driver Jeremy Fry) of any car-based movie to date—and certainly the most fun!
(L–R) Debora (Lily James) and Baby (Ansel Elgort) have a first date doing Debora's laundry in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
(L–R) Debora (Lily James) and Baby (Ansel Elgort) have a first date doing Debora's laundry in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

The titular Baby (Ansel Elgort) is a baby-faced boy, who drives. But he’s all man when he slides behind the wheel of a getaway car—Rain Man, that is. The boy’s got savant-level, smokin' donut-spinning and Secret-Service-limo-floored-in-reverse drifting skills.

One example: In a bank-robbery getaway, Baby spots two other red Subaru WRX sports cars, exactly like the one he’s driving, and choreographs a three-card monte-like, lane-shifting shuffle, befuddling the chopper cops. Should I say it? A “three-car monte.” Ba-dum-bum.

Car chase from TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
Car chase from TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

He’s a super talented kid who’s got so much Ferris Bueller-type, hyper-sanguine, air guitar-playing, lip-syncing, can’t-sit-still energy, that if Bueller and Baby sat next to each other in high school, their shared ADHD natures would annoy each other so much they'd both immediately settle down, focus, and pay attention to the teacher.

“Baby Driver” is likely to be the height of 2017’s summer blockbuster fun. It’s pop fluff, for sure, but such tasty fun, it’s almost nutritious.

‘One Last Job and I’m Done!’

Usually that’s the line spoken by the salty dog who comes out of retirement for one last whatever: mission, bank heist, and so on. In this version, it’s Baby who wants out of the wheelman business.

See, Baby got caught in his misspent youth (he was 8) trying to rip off Doc (Kevin Spacey, doing his power-alley role of witheringly abusive boss man), and now Baby has to drive off his debt.

Doc, like “The A-Team’s” Hannibal, also loves it when a plan comes together, and he’s well aware that Baby’s phenom driving skills are the common denominator to all of Doc’s bank heist successes. Can Doc entice Baby to stay on and make some real money?

(L–R) Doc (Kevin Spacey) and Baby (Ansel Elgort). Doc tells Baby he has another job for him in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
(L–R) Doc (Kevin Spacey) and Baby (Ansel Elgort). Doc tells Baby he has another job for him in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

What Goes On?

Well, Simon and Garfunkel wrote a strange song called “Baby Driver,” about a kid whose bass-playing dad was a former Navy SEAL. That song is in the movie. But this is not a movie about that.

It’s about, as mentioned, bank robberies, stunt driving, and the fascinating ability of this young man to hold, more or less, to an inner moral compass while tangled up with some seriously bad actors. Ahem, by “bad actors” I don’t mean the actors in the film—they’re all A-listers. A-listers in a summertime drive-in B-movie.

(L–R) Baby (Ansel Elgort), Bats (Jamie Foxx), Darling (Eiza González), and Buddy (Jon Hamm) decide on doing the heist in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
(L–R) Baby (Ansel Elgort), Bats (Jamie Foxx), Darling (Eiza González), and Buddy (Jon Hamm) decide on doing the heist in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

And then there’s the sweetest romance you’ve seen in a while—the diner waitress Baby gets involved with provides the Cinderella angle. She’s got a snarky chef/boss in lieu of ugly sisters, and she’s waiting for her prince. Why not a nice, quiet boy who’s a stunt-driving wizard?

It helps that Debora, the waitress, is played by Lily James, the British actress who recently played that lovely, blonde-in-a-blue-dress Disney Cinderella.

Meanwhile, CJ Jones plays Baby’s deaf, mute, wheelchair-dependent, African-American foster dad, Joseph. He exists to demonstrate what a good boy Baby is for taking care of him. Think Ferris Bueller doing sign language.

(L–R) Joseph (CJ Jones) and Baby (Ansel Elgort). Baby leaves his foster dad, Joseph, at the retirement home as the cops close in on him in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
(L–R) Joseph (CJ Jones) and Baby (Ansel Elgort). Baby leaves his foster dad, Joseph, at the retirement home as the cops close in on him in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

The Bad Guys

Jamie Foxx steals most of the movie as super street-savvy Bats, an intelligent version of the character he played in “Horrible Bosses,” who waxes jaw-droppingly articulate with his X-ray-like ability to get a read on people.

Rounding out the bad-guy cast are the tattoed Griff (Jon Bernthal), who might be ex-military gone wrong; Buddy (Jon Hamm), a former Wall Streeter gone wrong; and Buddy’s wife (Bonnie to his Clyde), Darling (Eiza González).

(L–R) Darling (Eiza González) and Buddy (Jon Hamm) find out why Baby always listens to music in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)
(L–R) Darling (Eiza González) and Buddy (Jon Hamm) find out why Baby always listens to music in TriStar Pictures's "Baby Driver." (Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.)

Style Over Substance, but ...

The movie’s a good example of a mess of clichés kaleidoscoped into fresh storytelling. The dialogue’s seriously sharp and syncopated, almost rap-like at times, and Spacey subtly isolates the poetry, giving it a rhythmic pop and sounding a little like Shakespeare set to hip hop.
Similarly, concussive gunfire sometimes syncs with concussive soundtrack rhythms—that’s a director (Edgar Wright) wielding style for you.
And speaking of the soundtrack, this is, after all, a jukebox-comedy-heist-romance caper, so the soundtrack is king. This is majorly facilitated by the fact that Baby’s got a serious case of tinnitus from the car accident that killed his chanteuse mom, so he needs to block the ringing in his ears with a steady stream of beats, played on many iPods (including a pink, sparkly one), each programmed to suit his driving moods.

Dark but Funny

While it features lots of noir photography and dark humor, it’s a dark (but light-hearted), funny film that’s pure fun, foolishness, and absurdity.

It’s only Baby’s attempt to protect Cinderella from the not-really-a-chauffeur nature of his Baby-Driver-ness that has anything like a real emotion attached to it. Which is why it’s a sweet little romance.

The only thing missing for me was Prince’s song “Baby Knows,” with Sheryl Crow on back-up vocals and a sample of Patrick Swayze saying, “Nobody puts baby in a corner!”

Baby Driver’ Director: Edgar Wright Cast: Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, Jamie Foxx, Jon Hamm, Lily James, Eiza González Running Time: 1 hour, 52 minutes Rating: R (for violence and language throughout) Release Date: June 28 Rated 3.5 stars out of 5
Mark Jackson is the chief film critic for The Epoch Times. In addition to the world’s number-one storytelling vehicle—film, he enjoys martial arts, weightlifting, Harley-Davidsons, vision questing, rock-climbing, qigong, oil painting, and human rights activism. Mark earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by a classical theater training, and has 20 years’ experience as a New York professional actor, working in theater, commercials, and television daytime dramas. He recently narrated the Epoch Times audiobook “How the Specter of Communism is Ruling Our World,” which is available on iTunes and Audible. Mr. Jackson is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic.
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