WT

Whiplash

2014 · Directed by Damien Chazelle

🧘4

Woke Score

89

Critic

🍿88

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 85 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #152 of 1469.

Consciousness MeterUltra Based
Ultra BasedPeak Consciousness
Share this score

Synopsis

Under the direction of a ruthless instructor, a talented young drummer begins to pursue perfection at any cost, even his humanity.

Consciousness Assessment

Whiplash arrives as a film from the moment before contemporary social consciousness frameworks became culturally inescapable. Damien Chazelle's portrait of psychological abuse in the pursuit of artistic perfection makes no concessions to progressive sensibilities, nor does it need to. The film is almost defiantly apolitical, concerning itself instead with the Faustian bargain between a student drummer and his sadistic instructor. We watch Miles Teller's character sacrifice everything, including his humanity, on the altar of excellence. J.K. Simmons delivers a performance of such controlled menace that we find ourselves aesthetically seduced even as the narrative repels us.

The film's refusal to interrogate power structures through a contemporary lens might be read as a limitation, though this misses the point entirely. Whiplash is not interested in systemic analysis. It presents abuse as a personal rather than political problem, which is precisely what makes it such a compelling tragedy. The gender dynamics are notably unremarkable: the female characters exist purely in supporting roles, but this reflects the film's focus rather than a deliberate statement. This is a film about two men, and it knows it.

What emerges is a work that predates the cultural moment we now inhabit, which is both its strength and its particular interest as an artifact. The film's success derives entirely from its aesthetic control and emotional intensity, not from any engagement with social consciousness. It is a film that would be nearly impossible to make in precisely this form today, which tells us something valuable about how cultural expectations have shifted.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

89%from 50 reviews
The Telegraph100

However genius may flourish, you know it when you see it, and Whiplash is it.

Robbie CollinRead Full Review →
Variety100

Chazelle proves an exceptional builder of scenes, crafting loaded, need-to-succeed moments that grab our attention and hold it tight.

Peter DebrugeRead Full Review →
CineVue100

Although a couple of narrative twists late on threaten to drum us into melodrama, Chazelle never misses a beat and the film builds to a cathartic crescendo.

John BleasdaleRead Full Review →
Christian Science Monitor50

I don’t get the enthusiasm for this movie, written and directed by Damien Chazelle, which is such a cooked-up piece of claptrap that I half expected Darth Vader to pick up the baton. We’re supposed to think that Terence’s tough love is more “honest” than the usual pussyfooting tutelage, but in any sane society this guy would have been brought up on charges long ago.

Peter RainerRead Full Review →