Driven Movie Review
Driven Review

"Driven" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Renny HarlinProducer : Renny Harlin,Elie Samaha,Sylvester Stallone
Screenwiter : Sylvester Stallone
Starring : Sylvester Stallone,Kip Pardue,Til Schweiger,Burt Reynolds,Stacy Edwards,Estella Warren,Gina Gershon,Robert Sean Leonard,Brent Briscoe,Cristián de la Fuente,Michael Boisvert
What better way to start an action movie than with... statistics!
From that rousing introduction we are thrown into the world of Driven, the
highly anticipated CART-inspired movie that takes us on a whirlwind tour of
made-up races.
Stallone's first script since 1993's Cliffhanger (like Driven, also a Renny
Harlin production) trades in the boxing gloves and climbing irons for a
fireproof balaclava as he climbs behind the wheel of the fastest cars on
earth. Once again, he's an aging, faded star, this time an old racer named Joe
Tanto(!), called back into service by his former boss, the wheelchair-bound
racing team owner Carl Henry (Burt Reynolds). His mission: to block other cars
(read: subtly cheat) during the upcoming grand prix races so his young, rising
star Jimmy Blye can win, rising to fame and fortune and beaucoup endorsement
deals.
But in order to reach that glory, little Jimmy (Remember the Titans' Kip
Pardue, who might as well be music's Beck) must face down the über-German Beau
Brandenburg (Til Schweiger, who might as well be Rocky IV's Drago). He'll also
have to navigate his way through a gaggle of starlets, each with bigger lips
than the next: from Stacy Edwards as a reporter to newcomer Estella Warren as
"The Girl" to Gina Gershon as Tanto's ex, a ghoulish nightmare in high-gloss
lipstick and a denim hat.
Director Harlin has never been one for subtlety, and the telling of Driven
comes across as gently as the last lap of the Indy 500. There's hardly any
nuance in the ham-fisted exposition ("...ah, that ex-wife of yours..."). Even
the race scenes, which ought to speak for themselves, are marred by an
overbearing "TV commentator" narration ("We are racing in Germany!!!") that
turns the goings on into Racing for Dummies.
The rest of the film wallows in the obvious. When Jimmy takes off through the
streets of Chicago in a stolen prototype racecar (the best sequence in the
film, by far), of course Tanto is going to chase him in another stolen
prototype racecar. We even get an abrupt turn from the Rocky archetype to the
Top Gun school of filmmaking, as the driving foes must learn to work together
during a crisis! Meanwhile, there are plenty of race-prep montages to dull the
senses, overflowing with ogle-worthy Bud Girl cheesecake.
The racing, of course, is what makes Driven even remotely worthwhile, and it's
hard not to sit up and start shaking nervously as car after car goes flying
into walls, through the air, or safely past the finish line. Even if it does
amount to two hours of product placement -- as Motorola faces down Target with
Nextel closing in fast! -- it's undeniably one helluva ride.
Sly, you can be my blocker anytime!
Petal to the muddle.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





