- Driven
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For other uses, see Driven (disambiguation).
Driven
Theatrical release posterDirected by Renny Harlin Produced by Renny Harlin
Elie Samaha
Sylvester StalloneScreenplay by Sylvester Stallone[1] Story by Jan Skrentny
Neal TabachnickStarring Sylvester Stallone
Burt Reynolds
Kip Pardue
Til Schweiger
Gina Gershon
Estella Warren
Cristián de la FuenteMusic by ERA Studio Franchise Pictures Distributed by Warner Bros. Release date(s) April 27, 2001 Running time 116 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $72 million Box office $54,744,738 Driven is a 2001 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 ChampCar World Series (since merged with IndyCar). Prior to production of the movie, Stallone was seen at many Formula 1 races, but he was unable to procure enough information about the sport due to the secrecy with which teams protect their cars, so he decided to base the film on the ChampCar World Series.
Contents
Plot
Mid-season, rookie driver Jimmy Bly has already won 5 races. His brother/business manager Demille is seen to be more concerned with working out endorsement deals and press engagements than racing, putting tremendous pressure upon Jimmy.
Jimmy's winning is also angering former champion Beau Brandenburg who decides he's not doing very well this year because of his fiancee Sophia. He breaks up the engagement and he immediately starts winning again.
As Brandenburg returns to form, Bly's wheelchair-using team owner Carl Henry is concerned that Bly is becoming more prone to driving errors. He sees parallels to his former Joe Tanto, who he convinces to come out of retirement to mentor Jimmy. Joe agrees and is brought in to replace Jimmy's teammate, Memo Moreno. To complicate matters, Joe's ex-wife Cathy Heguy is now married to Memo, the driver that Joe replaced.
Joe 's comeback race is extremely close, with Jimmy leading and Brandenburg a close second. Jimmy can't seem to pull away from him so Carl orders Joe to pit and holds him there until the leaders are about to come by. At the last second, Joe leaves the pit just in time to block out Brandenburg, allowing Jimmy to win the race. However, Jimmy's brother/manager takes a dislike to Joe's mentoring and tries to break their contact. Meanwhile, Joe urges Brandenburg not to break off his relationship with Sophia because she is beginning to get involved with Jimmy and causing him to lose focus on raceday.
At a party in Chicago, where the prototypes of next years cars are being introduced, Brandenburg gives Sophia her ring back and they are together again. She apologizes to Jimmy but he is so upset that he takes one of the new cars and races it out of the convention center. Joe hops into another of the new cars and chases him down the streets of Chicago.
Carl decides that bringing back Joe isn't successful so he reinstates original driver Moreno.
The next race is a road course in Germany and it's another close one with Jimmy and Brandenburg fighting it out for first. Bly needs one more win to take the championship, and so Moreno is instructed to protect Bly's race. Cathy gets on the radio and convinces Memo to ignore those instructions, and as a result he collides with Bly in a horrific crash that sends him flying through the air and crashing into a lake on the far end of the course. Jimmy does a quick u-turn and drives his car to the lake and dives in after him. Brandenburg does the same and the two of them rescue Memo.
Carl, angered by Jimmy's decision to stop and rescue Moreno instead of fighting on for the championship, decides to replace Jimmy with Brandenburg for the next season and negotiates a deal with Jimmy's brother who will now represent Brandenburg. With Memo now hospitalized, Joe is racing again as Jimmy's teammate. It looked like Jimmy wouldn't be able to race due to an ankle injury but Carl finally decides to clear him for the race. Demille tries to get Brandenburg to sign the new contract but he rips it up.
At the final race of the year in Detroit, Jimmy and Brandenburg are contenders for the championship. In the final laps Joe has taken the lead but by avoiding an accident, goes flying through the air, lands safely but damages his axle. He can't block for Jimmy now and the two leaders pass him on the final lap. It's neck and neck coming down to the finish. Jimmy is starting to have a mental lapse, but then he hears Joe's words of wisdom and in a long slow motion sequence, we see Jimmy beating Brandenburg by just a few inches as Joe crosses in third while doing donuts in his now out of control car. Jimmy is the new champion and he, Tanto and Brandenburg, celebrate together on the podium drinking champagne.
Production
Stallone had originally intended to make a film based on Formula One, attending the 1997 Italian Grand Prix[2] and stating his goal in a press conference. However the plan to base the movie on F1 was dropped.
The film was filmed primarily in Toronto, Canada in the summer of 2000 as well as at a variety of worldwide races which were sanctioned by CART. In Driven, the German race took place on a road course, but in fact, the CART race is on an oval.
The film premier took place at Grauman's Chinese Theatre, with several CART competitors driving and demonstrating pit stops in modified Champ Cars down Hollywood Blvd.
Cast
- Sylvester Stallone as Joe Tanto
- Burt Reynolds as Carl Henry
- Kip Pardue as Jimmy Bly
- Stacy Edwards as Lucretia Clan
- Til Schweiger as Beau Brandenburg
- Gina Gershon as Cathy Heguy
- Estella Warren as Sophia Simone
- Cristián de la Fuente as Memo Moreno
- Robert Sean Leonard as Demille Bly
- Jacques Villeneuve as himself (cameo)
- Jean Alesi as himself (cameo)
- Juan Pablo Montoya as himself (cameo)
- Mark Blundell as himself (cameo)
- Roberto Moreno as himself (cameo)
- Kenny Bräck as himself (cameo)
- Tony Kanaan as himself (cameo)
Montoya, Gugelmin & 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").
Reception
Box office
The film was a commercial failure, and grossed only $32 million against a $72 million budget.[3] This poor performance ended a modestly successful recovery from director Harlin's critical also financial failure, Cutthroat Island; with 1999 film Deep Blue Sea and 1996 film The Long Kiss Goodnight.
Critical response
The movie received poor reviews, with Rotten Tomatoes consensus saying "Underdeveloped characters, silly plot dynamics, and obvious CG effects." When Jay Leno appeared as a guest critic on the television show Ebert & Roeper, both Leno and Richard Roeper described Driven as the worst car film ever made, and a terrible depiction of auto racing.
It also earned seven nominations at the 22nd Golden Raspberry Awards, including Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay, Worst Screen Couple (Burt Reynolds and Sylvester Stallone) and twice for Worst Supporting Actor (Reynolds and Stallone), with Estella Warren "winning" Worst Supporting Actress (also for Planet of the Apes)
References
- ^ "Driven Starts Up on DVD". The Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/2001/sep/20/entertainment/ca-47597. Retrieved 2011-05-20.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Driven Eases Into Top Spot, Nudging 'Bridget Jones' Aside". The Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/2001/apr/30/entertainment/ca-57479. Retrieved 2011-05-20.
External links
- Official website
- Driven at the Internet Movie Database
- Driven at AllRovi
- Driven at Rotten Tomatoes
- Driven at Box Office Mojo
- Driven at Metacritic
- Driven.co.uk UK Motoring Magazine.
Films directed by Renny Harlin 1980s 1990s Die Hard 2 (1990) · The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (1990) · Cliffhanger (1993) · Cutthroat Island (1995) · The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996) · Deep Blue Sea (1999)2000s Driven (2001) · Mindhunters (2004) · Exorcist: The Beginning (2004) · The Covenant (2006) · Cleaner (2007) · 12 Rounds (2009)2010s 5 Days of War (2011)Works of Sylvester Stallone Director Paradise Alley (1978) · Rocky II (1979) · Rocky III (1982) · Staying Alive (1983) · Rocky IV (1985) · Rocky Balboa (2006) · Rambo (2008) · The Expendables (2010)Writer The Lords of Flatbush (1974) · Rocky (1976) · F.I.S.T. (1978) · Paradise Alley (1978) · Rocky II (1979) · Rocky III (1982) · First Blood (1982) · Staying Alive (1983) · Rhinestone (1984) · Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985) · Rocky IV (1985) · Cobra (1986) · Over the Top (1987) · Rambo III (1988) · Rocky V (1990) · Cliffhanger (1993) · Driven (2001) · Rocky Balboa (2006) · Rambo (2008) · The Expendables (2010)Producer Staying Alive (1983) · Heart of a Champion: The Ray Mancini Story (1985) · Driven (2001) · The Contender (2005–present)Soundtrack Paradise Alley (1978) · Rhinestone (1984)Related articles Categories:- 2001 films
- American films
- English-language films
- 2000s action films
- 2000s drama films
- Auto racing films
- Films directed by Renny Harlin
- Warner Bros. films
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