Driven (2001 film)

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Driven
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRenny Harlin
Screenplay bySylvester Stallone[1]
Story by
  • Jan Skrentny
  • Neal Tabachnick
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMauro Fiore
Edited by
  • Steve Gilson
  • Stuart Levy
Music byBT
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • 27 April 2001 (2001-04-27) (United States)
Running time
117 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$72–$94 million[3][4]
Box office$54.7 million[4]

Driven is a 2001 American action sports film directed by Renny Harlin and starring Sylvester Stallone, who also wrote and produced. It centers on a young racing driver's effort to win the CART FedEx Championship Series auto racing championship. Prior to production, Stallone was seen at many Formula One races, but he was unable to procure enough information about the category due to the secrecy with which teams protect their cars, so he decided to base the film on Champ Car.

Driven received generally negative reviews from critics, and was a commercial failure.

Plot

Halfway through the 2000 Champ Car Season, rookie sensation Jimmy Bly has already won five races. His success has drawn the ire of the defending champion and current points leader Beau Brandenburg, who believes he is not doing as well as he should because of his fiancée Sophia becoming "a distraction". Beau breaks up their engagement and regains his winning streak at Chicago.

As Beau returns to form, Jimmy's

paraplegic
team owner Carl Henry is concerned that he is making more driving errors. He sees parallels to his former driver and Champ Car champion, Joe Tanto, whom he convinces to come out of retirement to mentor Jimmy. Joe agrees and is brought in to replace teammate Memo Moreno. Joe's ex-wife Cathy Heguy is now married to Memo. Despite all this, Joe and Memo are still friends.

In Canada, Jimmy leads and Beau is a close second. Jimmy cannot pull away from him, so Carl orders Joe to pit and holds him there until the leaders are about to come by, despite Joe's protests. Joe leaves the pit just in time to block out Beau, allowing Jimmy to win the race. Jimmy's brother/business manager Demille takes a dislike to Joe's mentoring, implying that Joe should just act as a blocker. Joe urges Beau to reconcile with Sophia, while Jimmy's growing bond with her causes him to further lose his form on the track during the next race in Japan and crash.

At a party in Chicago, prototypes of the next season's cars are being introduced. There, Beau and Sophia reconcile, much to Jimmy's disappointment. Sophia apologizes to Jimmy, who lashes out at her and Beau, then takes one of the new cars and races it out of the convention center. Joe hops into another of the new cars and chases Jimmy down the streets, eventually calming him down.

In the coming race in Germany, Carl decides to reinstate Memo while making Joe mentor Jimmy from the pit lane. The next race begins in the middle of the rain, with Jimmy and Beau once again fighting it out for first. Jimmy needs one more win to take the championship, and Memo is instructed to block for him and keep out of his way. However, Cathy convinces Memo to go for the win, and as a result, he collides with Jimmy in a crash that sends him flying into a lake on the far end of the course. Jimmy and Beau dive into the lake and rescue Memo just as a burning tree collapses and ignites the car's leaking fuel, causing an explosion. This event causes Beau to warm up to Jimmy, saying that he is a good man and that he didn't want to win the championship this way.

Angered that Jimmy has sacrificed his championship hopes to rescue another racer, Carl decides to replace him with Beau for the coming season and negotiates a deal with Demille, who will now represent Beau. Demille tries to get Beau to sign the new contract, but he rips it up and Sophia punches Demille in the face for the way he previously treated her. Initially, Jimmy is barred from competing due to a foot injury he sustained during the rescue, but Carl eventually decides to clear him for the race after he passes Carl's strength test. Jimmy thanks both Sophia and Beau for refusing his brother's deal.

At the season finale in Detroit, Jimmy and Beau contend for the championship. With Memo now hospitalized, Joe races again as Jimmy's teammate. In the final laps, Joe takes the lead but damages his front suspension by avoiding a crash, preventing him from contending for the win. In the final lap, Jimmy starts to have a mental lapse, but upon hearing Joe's words, he pulls ahead of Beau by just some inches, while Joe's spinning car crosses in third. In front of a crowd of spectators, including Sophia and Demille, who shows he is proud of his brother, Jimmy is named the new champion and he celebrates his victory with Joe and Beau.

Cast

Cameo appearances

Montoya, Gugelmin, and Blundell lent their car and helmet likeness to Brandenburg, Tanto and Bly respectively, Blundell's helmet being suitably changed from an "MB" logo to "JB". Team Penske with 2 drivers Hélio Castroneves, Gil De Ferran and team owner Roger Penske was originally to be featured on the film but they were removed when it was learned Penske was moving his team to the rival Indy Racing League series.

Production

Development and writing

Stallone became interested in the world of racing while making Judge Dredd in Europe, and decided to make a film with that backdrop.[5] He had originally intended to make a film based on Formula One, attending the 1997 Italian Grand Prix[6] and stating his goal in a press conference. However, the plan was subsequently dropped.

Stallone said he wrote about twenty-five drafts.

And of those, about 20 were about this one man's journey, myself, through this film, and all his trials and tribulations. He'd fallen from a great height career-wise. He was a drunkard with all these problems and accidents because he and his wife Cathy, who's played by Gina Gershon, had this very tumultuous relationship. (Laughs) I'm giving you a little biographical hint here. And he just started to come apart. So he was brought back as kind of like how people should never be. It's like taking kids who are truants and then taking them to prison to see where they'll end up and scaring them straight. So I was brought back to basically prove to young Jimmy Bly how he should never be, as a bad example. And then the more we worked on it, it became the dark side, a little seedy, and I didn't know where the upside of it was ever going to be. So we began to reduce his role and make it more of an ensemble, so he's just there as a guy who did his job, wasn't very spectacular, would race like hell, sometimes he'd win, sometimes lose, but he had a certain work ethic code, that old school that could be applied to Jimmy. So that all made it more ensemble, and then in the editing we reduced it even more. I originally had a relationship going with the reporter. But that began to de-emphasise the other people, so we put that on the back burner... So we did shoot it but it we said, "Nah, it's not really flying."[7]

Stallone said the film was autobiographical in a lot of ways.

Racing's very much like the world of acting. You have your front runners and you have guys that are there for the long race, and you have other guys that block for other people, that are called supporting and character actors. It's all the same kind of situation. And you realize that you can't always be No. 1. You just can't be the guy in front all the time. So what you can do is lend support to, and help and nourish and encourage someone else. So it's like your experiences live on in someone else. If you can find some young actor and you can say, 'Listen, don't do this and don't do that and avoid this and that,' and share your experiences, and he does succeed, you can say, 'You know what, I kind of contributed to that.' As an actor did you have to learn you can't always be No.1 the hard way? (Laughs) Unfortuantely [sic] I did[7]

Stallone says it took four years to get the finance to make the film.

Stallone and Harlin had previously worked together on Cliffhanger. Harlin had been trying to develop a film on the life of Ayrton Senna and when that fell through signed on to make Driven.[8][9]

Filming

The film was shot primarily in Toronto, Canada, from 6 July 2000 until 12 October 2000, as well as at a variety of worldwide races which were sanctioned by CART.[10] The German race was filmed at the Continental test track in Hanover rather than the Lausitzring oval that was actually used by CART.

When Sylvester Stallone's character arrives at a race early in the film, there's a long shot of him walking in, saying hello to various people. One very brief uncredited cameo contains Dustin Hoffman, in racing gear.

Post-production

Rooster Teeth Productions fame was the visual effects producer.[11]

The film premiere took place at

Hollywood Blvd
.

According to director Harlin's commentary, his first cut was four hours long. Only 51 minutes of deleted footage was included as special feature on DVD.

Reception

Box office

Driven was a commercial failure, and grossed only $32 million against a $72 million budget.[13] This poor performance ended a modestly successful recovery (with 1999 film Deep Blue Sea and 1996 film The Long Kiss Goodnight) from director Harlin's critical and financial failure Cutthroat Island. However, it was Stallone's first #1 opening film since Cop Land.[14]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 14% score based on 111 reviews, with an average rating of 3.60/10. The site's consensus states: "Underdeveloped characters, silly plot dynamics, and obvious CG effects."[15] On Metacritic it has a score of 29 out of 100 rating based on 26 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[16] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale.[17]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said Harlin "has made better pictures [...] but delivers the goods here". Ebert was critical of the editing, the lack of character conflict and the all too happy ending. He gave it 2.5 out of 4.[18] Entertainment Weekly's Owen Gleiberman called it "Mostly preposterous, and it has no dramatic center, but the racing scenes hold you in their death-trip grip" and gave it a grade C+.[19] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "Harlin's skill compensates for a lot of narrative preposterousness, even it is overmatched this time around."[20]

When

Ebert & Roeper, both Leno and Richard Roeper described Driven as the worst car film ever made, and a terrible depiction of auto racing.[citation needed
] Stallone has said he regrets making the film.[21]

Accolades

The film earned seven nominations at the

Worst Screen Couple (Reynolds and Stallone) and twice for Worst Supporting Actor (Reynolds and Stallone), with Estella Warren winning Worst Supporting Actress (also for Planet of the Apes).[citation needed
]

Other media

Video game

A video game Driven based on the film was released in 2001 for the Game Boy Advance, GameCube, and PlayStation 2.[22]

References

  1. ^ SUSAN KING (20 September 2001). "Driven Starts Up on DVD". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  2. ^ "DRIVEN (PG)". British Board of Film Classification. 1 June 2001. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Driven (2001) - Financial Information".
  4. ^ a b "Driven (2001)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  5. ^ "ESPN.com - Page2 - What drove me to 'Driven'".
  6. ^ "Williams". Williams.latphoto.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 May 2009. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  7. ^ a b "Driven : Interview With Sylvester Stallone".
  8. ^ "Lakeland Ledger - Google News Archive Search".
  9. ^ Head, Steve (13 April 2001). "IGN FilmForce Interview with Sylvester Stallone".
  10. ^ "ESPN.com - Page2 - Head-spinning experience".
  11. ^ Rooster Teeth Video Podcast #212. 9 April 2013. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 10 August 2013 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ Lyman, Rick (27 April 2001). "AT THE MOVIES; Three Directors In New Roles". The New York Times. Mr. Harlin said he was encouraged by the movie's celebrity premiere at Mann's Chinese Theater on Hollywood Boulevard.
  13. ^ "Driven Eases into Top Spot, Nudging 'Bridget Jones' Aside". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
  14. ^ "Driven (2001) - Weekend Box Office Results - Box Office Mojo". boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  15. ^ "Driven (2001)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  16. CBS Interactive
    . Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  17. ^ "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
  18. ^ Ebert, Roger (27 April 2001). "Driven movie review". Chicago Sun-Times.
  19. ^ Owen Gleiberman (26 April 2001). "Driven". Entertainment Weekly.
  20. ^ Kenneth Turan (27 April 2001). "Cars and Crashes Swifter Than Stallone's 'Driven' Script". Los Angeles Times.
  21. Aint It Cool News
    . Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  22. ^ Mirabella III, Fran (4 April 2002). "Driven". IGN. Retrieved 3 February 2021.

External links