Review: ‘Baby Driver’ sets innovative heists to a winning beat

Ansel Elgort plays a talented getaway driver, Baby, who works for a crime boss (Kevin Spacey). But after meeting the woman of his dreams (Lily James) he sees a chance to ditch his shady lifestyle and make a clean break. USA TODAY

With his latest genre mashup Baby Driver, Edgar Wright ruins every exciting car trip around town you were ever going to take.

The skillfully crafted crime thriller (*** out of four; rated R; in theaters nationwide Wednesday) breaks away from the British writer/director’s usual comedic roots and unleashes exhilarating car chases and gun fights fueled by catchy songs that are just as important to the plot as the characters themselves.

Unfortunately, what’s missing is the quirky charm of his fantastic earlier works like Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz. Stylized scenes like a ballistic ballet of firearms set to the familiar saxophone strains of Tequila are far more memorable than the people doing the shooting.

The main man behind the wheel is Baby (Ansel Elgort[1]), a shy, laconic guy who’s become a legendary Atlanta getaway driver at a young age. Constantly at his side, whether waiting for his fellow criminals to rob a bank or just going for a coffee run, is an iPod with tunes that are literally the soundtrack of his life. (The throwback device reminds him of a childhood gift from his mom.)

Revolving members of his crew like Griff (Jon Bernthal) and Bats (Jamie Foxx) are irked that headphones are always stuck in his ears, a salve for the tinnitus he’s had since the accident that took his parents’ lives when he was young. But crime boss Doc (Kevin Spacey[2]) — whom Baby is still paying off following an incident earlier in his career — always has the kid’s back, since he considers Baby his “lucky charm.”

Our hero begins to rethink his way of life when he meets outgoing waitress Debora (Lily James), but the more he wants to leave town with her, the more he’s pulled back under Doc’s considerable sway.

Master thief Bats (Jamie Foxx, left) and crime boss

Master thief Bats (Jamie Foxx, left) and crime boss Doc (Kevin Spacey) have words in ‘Baby Driver.’ (Photo: Wilson Webb)

Movie heists never sounded this good. Stacks of money hit the table and car doors slam to the beat of various tunes, The Damned’s Neat Neat Neat powers a phenomenal police pursuit through the ATL that’ll get your heart racing, and Baby faces the music (metaphorically speaking) as his “killer” song, Queen’s Brighton Rock, plays on.

Once you get past the three main robberies, or when waiting for the next needle drop leading to more action, the story shifts into neutral — the finale leaves a lot to be desired with a pesky villain who just won’t die, and characterization suffers a bit with the focus on musically charged high jinks. Elgort inhabits Baby’s physicality well — he dances through town and runs from the cops with equal aplomb — though his and James’ Romeo and Juliet dynamic feels forced.

Wright does utilize interesting and subtle ways to flesh out his players: Baby’s mixtapes have titles that describe his personality — from Too Fast to Die to Mozart in a Go-Kart — and gun-toting married couple Buddy (Jon Hamm) and Darling (Eiza González) are enigmas until a diner rant by the mercurial Bats explains their backstory. Foxx’s character is an insane delight who ties into the movie’s subtext about the 1% and the downtrodden who do bad things to get what they think they deserve.

When all cylinders are pumping, Baby Driver is an enchanting experiment that puts the pedal to the metal. And even a few off notes can’t stop the beat of Wright’s fast and furious symphony.

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References

  1. ^ Ansel Elgort (rssfeeds.usatoday.com)
  2. ^ Kevin Spacey (rssfeeds.usatoday.com)

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