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A Real Human Being and a Real Hero: Stylistic excess, dead time and intensified continuity in Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive
- Source: New Cinemas: Journal of Contemporary Film, Volume 12, Issue 1-2, Jun 2014, p. 43 - 57
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- 01 Jun 2014
Abstract
This article sets forth that Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive (2011) exhibits a ‘complex transformation’ of an American film genre by foregrounding features associated with art cinema and, more specifically, European and auteur film-making. We argue that the film’s appeal derives precisely from an intelligent and cine-literate deployment of the tensions in this dichotomy of European/American film-making. As such, Drive is a film that foregrounds or reveals its own construction in a number of ways, but its appeal lies in the fact that it does not prevent intense emotional engagement on the part of the viewer. It is neither a cold exercise in mere style nor a simple copy of an earlier formula, but rather a film that manages to marry a number of narrative and stylistic features in such a way that the film itself, arguably, is not easy to categorize.