Baby Driver [ EXTENDED ]

Edgar Wright’s Baby Driver transcends the conventional heist-action genre by embedding its entire narrative structure within the cognitive and phenomenological framework of its protagonist, Baby. This paper argues that the film functions as an extended case study in the politics of attention, the therapeutic function of aesthetic control, and the impossibility of escaping systemic violence. By analyzing the film’s diegetic synchronization, its use of tinnitus as a metaphor for trauma, and its subversion of the “getaway driver” archetype, we will demonstrate how Baby Driver interrogates the boundaries between art and labor, autonomy and exploitation, and the curated self versus the capitalist imperative for speed and efficiency.

Edgar Wright, Baby Driver , film phenomenology, diegetic music, trauma studies, post-cinema, rhythmic montage. 1. Introduction: The Audiovisual Fugue In an era dominated by CGI spectacle and fragmented editing, Edgar Wright’s Baby Driver (2017) offers a radical return to classical musicality in cinema, albeit filtered through a postmodern sensibility. Unlike traditional musicals where characters break into song, or action films where music underscores violence, Baby Driver presents a world where action is constitutively musical. The film’s central premise—a young, tinnitus-afflicted getaway driver uses meticulously curated playlists to drown out a perpetual ringing in his ears—is not merely a gimmick. It is a structural and thematic engine. baby driver

The secondary criminals—particularly Buddy (Jon Hamm) and Darling (Eiza González)—represent different failed responses to systemic entrapment. Buddy is a former Wall Street trader turned violent psychopath, suggesting the thin line between legitimate and illegitimate capital. Griff (Jon Bernthal) is a liability precisely because he refuses rhythm; his improvised violence shatters the musical order. When the film descends into its third-act bloodbath, the music becomes fragmented, skipping, or stopping altogether—a breakdown of aesthetic control that signals the return of the repressed violence beneath all capitalist exchange. 5. The Ethics of the Final Chase: Autonomy vs. Determinism The climactic chase, set to “Brighton Rock” by Queen, is a philosophical set piece. Baby refuses Doc’s order to abandon the hostages and instead orchestrates a crash that kills Buddy but spares the innocent. In that moment, Baby breaks his own rhythm—he acts off-beat, unpredictably. This is the film’s thesis on free will: true autonomy is not the ability to follow the beat perfectly, but the ability to choose which beat to follow . Edgar Wright, Baby Driver , film phenomenology, diegetic

Crucially, nearly all music in the film is diegetic: it originates from Baby’s earbuds, car stereo, or environmental sources (e.g., the diner jukebox). This choice grounds the film’s musicality in psychological realism. When Baby times a drift to the guitar riff of “Bellbottoms” by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, he is not performing for an audience; he is maintaining his own cognitive stability. The rhythm becomes a scaffold for his perception of time and space. or environmental sources (e.g.

The Choreography of Chaos: Rhythm, Resistance, and Recuperation in Edgar Wright’s Baby Driver

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Santiago García Caraballo

Santiago García Caraballo se licenció en veterinaria en 1980. Tiene una amplia experiencia como veterinario en diversos centros por toda España, destacando como cofundador en 1995 del Centro Veterinario Gattos, especializado en comportamiento y patología felina. Es colaborador de programas de radio y televisión ('Como el perro y el gato', con Carlos Rodríguez) además de impartir charlas por toda España sobre comportamiento felino. Ha escrito varios libros sobre el tema. Colabora en programas de televisión y radio ("Como el perro y el gato", con Carlos Rodriguez), además de publicaciones y charlas por toda España sobre comportamiento felino. Autor de varios libros sobre gatos ("El lenguaje de los gatos", "Gatos felices, dueños felices", "¿Qué le pasa a mi gato?"), más otro sobre "Terapias alternativas para mascotas".

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Santiago García Caraballo