New Jersey Drive -
New Jersey Drive ends not with a triumphant escape, but with Jason in prison. The final shot is claustrophobic: bars, institutional green walls, and the sound of a door slamming. This is the film’s brutal honesty. The joyride was always an illusion of movement; the destination was always the cell.
The character of Midget serves as the film’s tragic center. He is pure id—uncontrolled, euphoric, and self-destructive. While Jason seeks a way out (working at a garage, trying to appease his mother), Midget knows no other language but theft. His desire for a "Cherry '79" (the Firebird) is a desire for the sublime. Yet, the film is ruthless in its realism: Midget’s fate is sealed not by the police, but by the internal logic of the street. His death—shot by Roscoe after a chase—is neither heroic nor melodramatic. It is a brief, ugly thud. New Jersey Drive
The film opens with a title card reminding viewers that Newark had the highest per-capita auto theft rate in the United States. Yet, director Nick Gomez refuses to moralize. Instead, he depicts Newark as a city hollowed out by deindustrialization and white flight. The absence of legitimate economic opportunity is visible in every frame: boarded-up row houses, empty lots, and the omnipresent graffiti of the "Illtown." New Jersey Drive ends not with a triumphant