REEL CRITICS
‘Driven’ takes bumpy road, but makes it
“Driven” is much like a rookie racer. The cinematography is jumpy to
begin with, but that’s just adrenaline. There are at least six side
stories that never get developed properly, but that’s besides the point.
There’s just a bit of trouble focusing on the goal -- the racing. Yet,
when “Driven” does finally settle down, it’s a great film full of fun and
adrenaline.
Rookie Jimmy Bly (Kip Pardue) is winning races right and left and
falling apart. Former champion Joe Tanto (Sylvester Stallone) is brought
in to settle Jimmy down and keep him winning. A problem springs up when
Tanto arrives, thinking he was given another chance at the championship,
only to find that he’s just a baby sitter for Jimmy. Can Joe stand aside
and help Jimmy?
Stallone certainly didn’t help his cast mates when he wrote the script
for “Driven.” The movie is filled with a great cast that never gets a
chance to do much. Gina Gershon and Sean Patrick Leonard are completely
wasted in their roles. Pardue manages to fend off Stallone’s omnipresence
and hold his own, barely. Yet, even Pardue is held back from his full
potential.
Stallone eventually finds his groove, and the movie hops into
overdrive. Everything works smoothly and all comes together. It just
could have happened a lot sooner. Sly owes the cast and crew a lot of
thanks that the movie turned out so well.
Bottom line: “Driven” is tons of excitement and fun for all involved.
Its racing heart is found, and that’s when the movie just shines. With
brilliant photography work, “Driven” is almost interactive in quality.
Pure adrenaline rush. Even with its distractions, “Driven” is a great way
to start a wonderful weekend.
“Driven” is rated PG-13.
* MELISSA RICHARDSON is a Costa Mesa resident and a junior at UC
Irvine.
Weaver and Hewitt con way through ‘Heartbreakers’
An amusing diversion, “Heartbreakers” puts a new spin on the familiar
Hollywood tale of the con artist with a heart of gold. With elements
taken from “The Sting” and “The Grifters,” this film also offers some
good actors having a very good time with lightweight, but entertaining
material.
Sigourney Weaver (Max) and Jennifer Love Hewitt (Page) play a mother
and daughter team who make their living setting up wealthy men for fast
marriages and even faster divorce settlements.
The men are caught in the whirlwind romances orchestrated by the two
women taking full advantage of the worst male traits in relationships.
The sexual teasing that traps the men offers many excuses for ribald
humor. It also provides numerous opportunities for Hewitt to appear in
some of the most skintight and skimpy mini-dresses ever seen on screen.
Gene Hackman proves to be the most disgusting target of the con.
Anti-smoking jokes abound as he plays a yellow-toothed tobacco
millionaire whose constant smoking has turned him into a human phlegm
factory. Ray Liotta is energetic as the owner of a chop shop who is also
taken to the cleaners by the girls.
At times, the story gets bogged down in overlong scenes of contrived
sentiment. They seem out of place in the midst of all the raunchy fun
that produces the laughs. But overall, director David Mirkin has produced
a caper comedy that hits the mark he intended.
“Heartbreakers” is rated PG-13 for sex-related content, including
dialogue.
* JOHN DEPKO, 48, is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
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