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Drive

2011 · Directed by Nicolas Winding Refn

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Woke Score

79

Critic

🍿80

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 75 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #387 of 1469.

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Synopsis

Driver is a skilled Hollywood stuntman who moonlights as a getaway driver for criminals. Though he projects an icy exterior, lately he's been warming up to a pretty neighbor named Irene and her young son, Benicio. When Irene's husband gets out of jail, he enlists Driver's help in a million-dollar heist. The job goes horribly wrong, and Driver must risk his life to protect Irene and Benicio from the vengeful masterminds behind the robbery.

Consciousness Assessment

Nicolas Winding Refn's "Drive" is a meticulously composed exercise in aesthetic minimalism and moral ambiguity. The film presents a Los Angeles suffused with neon and shadow, where a taciturn protagonist navigates the criminal underworld with the precision of a samurai and the emotional capacity of a stone. Refn's directorial vision prioritizes mood and visual composition over narrative exposition or thematic elaboration. Dialogue is sparse, violence is sudden and brutal, and the emotional arc is conveyed through extended silences and lingering gazes. This is cinema as mood rather than message.

The female characters in the film, most notably Carey Mulligan's Irene, function as emotional anchors for the male protagonist's transformation. Irene is sympathetic and vulnerable, but she remains fundamentally passive within the narrative structure. She is something to be protected, a catalyst for violence, rather than an active agent in her own story. The film shows no interest in interrogating this dynamic or presenting it as problematic. It simply presents it as the natural order of its particular universe.

What one observes across the entire runtime is a deliberate indifference to contemporary social consciousness. The film is interested in style, violence, and the existential loneliness of its protagonist. It contains no lectures about systemic inequality, no celebration of diversity, no interrogation of gender dynamics, no environmental concern. It is, in this sense, a film from another era of cinema, one that preceded the constellation of progressive sensibilities that would come to dominate cultural discourse. "Drive" remains steadfastly unconcerned with the world outside its perfectly composed frame.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

79%from 43 reviews
Variety100

Starring Ryan Gosling as a Hollywood stuntman/getaway driver, Drive takes the tired heist-gone-bad genre out for a spin, delivering fresh guilty-pleasure thrills in the process.

Peter DebrugeRead Full Review →
Time Out100

Drive feels like some kind of masterpiece - it's as pure a version of the essentials as you're likely to see.

Joshua RothkopfRead Full Review →
The A.V. Club100

The film is little more than an exercise in style, but it's dazzling and mythic, a testament to the fundamental appeal of fast cars, dangerous men, and tension that squeezes like a hand to the throat.

Scott TobiasRead Full Review →
New York Magazine (Vulture)40

Every bit as dumb as August's "Conan the Barbarian" but awash in neon-lit nightscapes and existential dread, with killings so graphic that you can't entirely believe what you're gagging at.

David EdelsteinRead Full Review →