Sunday, February 19, 2012

Drive (+ UltraViolet Digital Copy) [Blu-ray] (2011)


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Denmark's Nicolas Winding Refn makes an electrifying go back to Hollywood filmmaking using this 1980s-style noir, right down for the synth score and neon-pink credits (he released his American debut, Fear X, in 2003). Ryan Gosling puts his implacable quality to good use as an L.A. stunt driver whose world crumbles when he falls to the wrong woman (Carey Mulligan). Irene is hardly a femme fatale, but her incarcerated husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac), is yet another story. When her car breaks down, Driver recommends your vehicle shop where he works with Shannon (Breaking Bad's Bryan Cranston). The two start spending some time together, but Standard returns from prison. Driver keeps his distance until he discovers that Standard owes protection money. If he doesn't pay up, Irene as well as their son will suffer, so Driver offers to take care of the wheel throughout a heist, work with that they has greater than a bit experience, as the riveting opening sequence proves. While they plan their score with Blanche (Mad Men's Christina Hendricks), Shannon makes a deal which has a few gangsters (Albert Brooks and Ron Perlman), but once the plans collide: all hell breaks loose. In adapting James Sallis's novel, Refn builds to your bittersweet denouement, although the bursts of bloodshed will test perhaps the hardiest of viewers. At its best, though, Drive is every bit as gripping as Reagan-era crime dramas like To Call Home and Die in L.A. and Thief. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Ryan Gosling stars being a Hollywood stunt driver for movies by day and moonlights like a wheelman for criminals by night. Though a loner by nature, “Driver” can’t help falling for each other along with his beautiful neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan), a young mother dragged right into a dangerous underworld with the return of her ex-convict husband. After a heist goes wrong, Driver finds himself driving defense for the lady he loves, tailgated by a syndicate of deadly serious criminals (Albert Brooks and Ron Perlman). Soon he realizes the gangsters are after over the bag of cash and is also instructed to shift gears and go about the offense.






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