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Driver

Original title: The Driver
  • 1978
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
21K
YOUR RATING
Driver (1978)
Psychological ThrillerActionCrimeThriller

A getaway driver becomes the latest assignment for a tenacious detective.A getaway driver becomes the latest assignment for a tenacious detective.A getaway driver becomes the latest assignment for a tenacious detective.

  • Director
    • Walter Hill
  • Writer
    • Walter Hill
  • Stars
    • Ryan O'Neal
    • Bruce Dern
    • Isabelle Adjani
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    21K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writer
      • Walter Hill
    • Stars
      • Ryan O'Neal
      • Bruce Dern
      • Isabelle Adjani
    • 124User reviews
    • 114Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos167

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    Top cast35

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    Ryan O'Neal
    Ryan O'Neal
    • The Driver
    Bruce Dern
    Bruce Dern
    • The Detective
    Isabelle Adjani
    Isabelle Adjani
    • The Player
    Ronee Blakley
    Ronee Blakley
    • The Connection
    Matt Clark
    Matt Clark
    • Red Plainclothesman
    Felice Orlandi
    Felice Orlandi
    • Gold Plainclothesman
    Joseph Walsh
    Joseph Walsh
    • Glasses
    Rudy Ramos
    Rudy Ramos
    • Teeth
    Denny Macko
    • Exchange Man
    Frank Bruno
    Frank Bruno
    • The Kid
    Will Walker
    • Fingers
    Sandy Brown Wyeth
    Sandy Brown Wyeth
    • Split
    Tara King
    • Frizzy
    Richard Carey
    • Floorman
    Fidel Corona
    • Card Player
    Victor Gilmour
    • Boardman
    Nick Dimitri
    Nick Dimitri
    • Blue Mask
    Bob Minor
    Bob Minor
    • Green Mask
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writer
      • Walter Hill
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews124

    7.120.8K
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    Featured reviews

    WDD

    A Fine Study In Cool

    I looked long and hard for this film and finally found it online... About a year ago I found the novelization at a local used bookshop and was enthralled. Then I shook loose a repressed memory of a scene from the Driver -well more like an image. That of Ryan O'Neal behind the wheel -shades in place, a study in cool.

    Well I was obsessed and had to find the film. Once I did, it was like some sort of archaeological find. I popped it in the vcr (old school all the way) and sat back ready to be taken into a dangerous world of ruthless and amoral characters who live by some sort of twisted samurai code and law of thieves.

    In a nutshell, this film delivered in spades. If you can find a copy of it, buy it or rent it. The car chases are extraordinary. The performances and cinematography are gloriously minimal and committed to the aesthetic of 'cool'.

    It's a shame that junk like "The Transporter" and "Gone In Sixty Seconds" have come to embody the modern day equivalent of the existential bad guy and wheelman. Those films aren't fit to shine the chrome of this one.

    One of Walter Hill's Best.

    Thumbs Up.
    TheFerryman

    A matter of style

    As many other Walter Hill films, The Driver portraits a stripped universe inhabited by archetypes. These are nameless, speechless and can trace their roots to the principles of Epic.

    It can happen in any city, during the late 70s or nowadays but as a film noir in its essence, exclusively at night.

    The performances are great and the car chases register no equal in film history. The pace of the delivery of lines is almost as suspensful as the story itself.

    The minimalism of Hill's execution resembles the cinema of Jean Pierre Melville and the film's universe picks up there where Hawks, Walsh and Siegel left.

    It's an exercise in style, a triumph of a clever mind, a loveable barren film that adresses, from particular detail, general, eternal issues.
    8Hey_Sweden

    An overlooked film on an under-rated director's filmography.

    Action specialist Walter Hill is in his element here with this tense, entertaining thriller that he both wrote and directed. Ryan O'Neal stars as a getaway driver for hire, who is hounded by offbeat detective Bruce Dern. Dern is dying to righteously bust O'Neal for something, but O'Neal is simply very good at his job. The detective will resort to any method necessary, but the driver is smart and seemingly always one step ahead of him.

    One can hardly fail to notice the way that Hill deliberately doesn't personalize his characters too much, giving them descriptions or nicknames rather than proper names. And with the help of his very able cast, they create some very good character moments that are the real meat of this story. Its car chases are among the best you'll see in this genre, but serve to support the story instead of the story setting up the action set pieces. Hill again recalls styles from films of earlier decades - while, for example, his "Streets of Fire" was an ode to '50s rock 'n'roll, this film does owe a fair bit to the film noir of the '40s.

    The people who populate this story are often all business, especially The Driver, who lives by his own code. There are things he'll do and things he won't do. Among other things, he employs a "witness" (French beauty Isabelle Adjani) and works with a "connection" (Ronee Blakley) who comes to him with job offers. The actors are all great, with the supporting cast also including Matt Clark and Felice Orlandi as Derns' fellow detectives, Joseph Walsh and Rudy Ramos as thieving lowlifes, and Bob Minor & Peter Jason in bit parts.

    This tale is taut and convincing, told in a straightforward yet compelling manner; technically it's expertly done, with excellent editing by Tina Hirsch & Robert K. Lambert, cinematography by Philip H. Lathrop, and music by Michael Small. Hill's screenplay is full of interesting dialogue, especially in exchanges between Dern and Clark.

    Hill has certainly done many fine and entertaining movies over the years, but this is one that tends to get overshadowed by his bigger hits such as "48 Hrs". It's a little gem worthy of discovery or re-discovery.

    Eight out of 10.
    8andymcneill75

    " I don't work with people like you!"

    Those were The Driver's words after he take a crew of bank robbers for a test drive in their dodgy looking orange Mercedes and proceeds to trash it completely, knocking off both bumpers, tearing off a door, bumping both sides and flattening the roof. A classic scene and this is a good, late 70s action thriller from Walter Hill. It's film noir at it's best and it's pretty cool that every character doesn't have an actual name, we've got The Driver, The Detective, The Player and so on. Ryan O'Neal is cool without actually having to say very much and Bruce Dern is just Bruce Dern, wild eyed and crazy as the Detective determined to catch the Driver by using some strange policing. Isabelle Adjani is very quiet and a sexy foil for things to revolve around. The car chases and mash-ups are as good as some of the stuff used in Bullit, French Connection, The Seven-Ups and other top rate chase scenes.

    Dern is a highlight as he is bonkers as ever and Walter Hill does a great job in direction and keeping things nice and compact.

    Check it out!
    8Teebs2

    Empty Lives

    The Driver (1978)

    Walter Hill's underrated film may have been forgotten completely had it not been for the success of the "Driver" series of Playstation games on which this film is a massive influence. Ryan O'Neal plays the Driver, a ronin-like character, willing to act as an unbeatable getaway driver for anyone as long as the price is right because, well...it's what he does. Bruce Dern is the Cop set on finally catching the elusive criminal, even if it means aiding and abetting criminal activity himself.

    This most reminded me of Michael Mann's crime films from the 80s onwards such as "Thief" and "Heat" - Hill's film shares the same kind of existentialist themes about identity - men defined and ruled by their actions, to the extent that they have no room in their lives for anything else. It also shares Mann's style - creating an urban environment that's both chic, yet realistically gritty.

    Ryan O'Neal may not have quite the cult status of Steve McQueen but his portrayal of the Driver as an empty, emotionless human being is strengthened through the characters sheer self-confidence and survival instinct. Bruce Dern gives the Cop a nice contrast to his lifeless target, bringing a kind of goofy, obsessive tenacity, as he sets up a bank job with some petty criminals in his attempt to be the first cop to catch the Driver. Isabelle Adjani is strikingly vacant, although her role in the proceedings is far from well defined.

    It has to be said that the car chases are brilliant - from the opening getaway police chase to the Driver's calculated destruction of a very shiny Mercedes in an underground parking lot and the final cat and mouse game in a labyrinthine warehouse. The dramatic scenes do inevitably feel a bit sluggish sometimes and the constant hard-boiled dialogue does start to grate. Despite a seemingly sparse, clear-cut plot there are moments towards the climax which are confusing and frustrating.

    The existential aspect of the plot is emphasised with a complete absence of character names, so maybe it is fitting that the film, and it's central character, only really comes alive during the car chase scenes - though this may be very relevant to the film's philosophy it does limit the sheer entertainment value as those looking for constant thrills, which the film does deliver, may find the wait between them in such a barren landscape a little tedious while armchair philosophers may find the existential "coolness" forced.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film was originally written for Steve McQueen, but he turned it down. According to Walter Hill, "He didn't want to do anything that had to do with cars at that time. He felt he had already done that and it was pretty hard to argue with that." Hill had been assistant director on Bullitt (1968) and L'Affaire Thomas Crown (1968) and wrote Guet-apens (1972).
    • Goofs
      In a couple of shots in the first car chase the lid is missing from the trunk of the Driver's car. However, it isn't until a couple of minutes later that we see the police actually blow the lid off with a shotgun blast.
    • Quotes

      The Detective: I respect a man that's good at what he does. I'll tell you something, I'm very good at what I do.

    • Crazy credits
      The 20th Century Fox logo plays without the fanfare.
    • Alternate versions
      A version of The Driver seen on TV years ago included a pre-credit prologue, in which Bruce Dern's and Matt Clark's characters meet for the first time, and Ronee Blakley gives Isabelle Adjani her assignment as an alibi. The CBS/Fox home video version begins abruptly with the opening credits, omitting this prologue.
    • Connections
      Featured in Automan: The Biggest Game in Town (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      One Fine Day
      (uncredited)

      Written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King

      performed by Julie Budd (uncredited)

      Heard just prior to the first chase in the pool room

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    FAQ18

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    • What are the differences between the US Version and the German TV Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 23, 1978 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Driver, el conductor
    • Filming locations
      • Torchy's Bar - 218 1/2 West Fifth Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA(Exterior bar scenes as detectives exit.)
    • Production companies
      • EMI Films
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,324
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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