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Freeman Cebu Entertainment

The song that begat a quasi-musical on wheels

The Freeman
 The song that begat a quasi-musical on wheels

“Baby Driver” director Edgar Wright with actors Ansel Elgort, Lily James, Jon Hamm, Eiza Gonzalez and Jamie Foxx

CEBU, Philippines - In the jagged grooves and quivering violins of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion song “Bellbottoms,” a young Edgar Wright heard a movie.

When Wright first started fanatically listening to the lead track off the band’s “Orange” album in 1995, the British writer-director had a vision that has culminated, more than two decades later, with his new film, “Baby Driver.”

“I was either 20 or 21 and I had just moved to London,” Wright said. “I was working on my first movie. I was completely broke. I think I had a cassette of ‘Orange’ that I had copied off of someone else. I listened to ‘Bellbottoms’ all the time. I just started to visualize this car chase. I’d think, ‘This would be the perfect car chase song in a movie, but what’s the movie?’”

“Baby Driver,” it turned out, was the movie, but it took years for Wright to find the story that matched his initial inspiration. Eventually he hit on his protagonist: an uncommonly young, fresh-faced getaway driver (Ansel Elgort) who obsessively syncs his life and his car chases to the music of his iPod. The movie wouldn’t just tie together song and cinema; it would be about the fusion of music and action.

While not exactly a musical, “Baby Driver” was built on top of its soundtrack, starting with “Bellbottoms.” Martha and the Vandellas’ “Nowhere to Run” plays during a tight squeeze. A hair-raising escape is set to the Damned’s “Neat, Neat, Neat.” Things happen on the beat.

“It’s something about trying to assign order to life by soundtracking your every move,” said Wright. “It’s that thing when everything breaks right and it’s the right song and the right moment. It’s something that a lot of people do on a sort of everyday level, but what if you put it together with an extremely high pressured job, like being a getaway driver for a very dangerous gang?”

So it’s fitting that the movie was essentially born from a single song. It’s the start of the film, too: “Bellbottoms” kicks off the high-octane opera that is “Baby Driver.”

It’s an especially high-profile role in one of the summer’s best-reviewed releases — not to mention one of the season’s few refreshingly original tales — for a band that has for decades proudly lived in the underground. Spencer even makes a cameo late in the film.

Wright’s idea underwent many iterations. He tested a version of it in a 2002 music video.

“I thought: What a waste. I just burned off a great idea on this music video,” said Wright. “Ironically, years later, it became a way of post-dating the idea.”

But Wright decided to keep at it. He estimates he wrote the script around 2010, when he started talking to ex-convicts for research, peppering them with questions about what, if anything, they listened to during heists.

One mentioned that he was superstitious enough that if a truly awful song came on the radio, the gig was off. The offensive song to him was Guns ‘N Roses’ “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” cover, but the “hex song” in “Baby Driver” comes from a tune Jamie Foxx actually detests: the Eagles’ “Hotel California.”

“The World’s End,” Wright’s 2013 apocalyptic reunion movie, got pushed ahead of “Baby Driver.” Then came years writing and developing Marvel’s “Ant-Man.” Shortly before production was to begin, he and the studio parted ways over creative differences, a painful end to a big-budget passion project of Wright’s.

Wright acknowledges it was “a heartbreaking experience” but there was a quick U-turn. “Maybe the day after I left the other movie, literally one of the first emails I got from (production company) Working Title just said ‘Baby Driver next?’” recalled Wright.

So “Baby Driver” was in that way a homecoming for Wright: a return to a movie he could control and to a song that’s been in his head most of his adult life.

“The lightbulb moment was listening to that song,” said Wright. “The fact that 22 years later it exists in the film and ‘Bellbottoms’ is the first track, it’s dream stuff for me.” (AP)(FREEMAN)

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