Later in the franchise stolen © recently hit the screens and with the other being a good way to spend a few hours, I was hoping for a type of film it with a lot of cars large and prosecution of the car to start similar.
Set after Fast & Furious (No. 4), but before the Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift (No. 3), this time the action is played in Rio at the Brazil after Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) has escaped custody to the United States with the help of his old pal Brian (Paul Walker) and sister Mia (Jordana Brewster) and spent in hiding. With them needing money to disappear forever, Dom hatches a plan to steal money by the cartel of the Underworld more renowned Rio Reyes (Joaquim de Almeida).
At the same time they are hunted down by the Federal agent elite Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and his team attempting to capture and return to prison. Although it is possible to watch the film without seeing the previous 4 there will be some parts that can drag you by as writers have assumed that, if your coming to see this film and then it is very possible, you have seen at least a couple of the préquelles / suite.
One thing that I was very surprised about was the lack of actual cars in the scenario. They were slightly more involved than a normal action film but I was expecting much more. There were probably only 2/3 scenes involving stunts racing or car, and when the whole film is supposed to be based around cars that I was expecting just little more. If done in a scene just when you plan a good old fashioned made drag racing, they cut away to reveal the car in the garage and have already won!
The action is to do well and fast flowing in as they jump from a scene of the explosion and fight to the next. The casting of Johnson as a bad-ass was a stroke of genius with him bringing his former catch smack talk to the character. It gives you really want to hate him and I particularly enjoyed the combat scene Johnson vs Diesel, as the tenors of the 2 party exchanged blows.
More than 2 hours, it is by far the longest in the franchise, and although in general the time passes quickly, they could easily have chopped off the coast of a few minutes here and there to stop the risk of it by dragging for some people. The acting and the script is nothing special and you'll have to sit through a little just to speak of "we do this for the family", but this is not what people will come to watch this movie for.
With Neal h. Moritz announcing, in March, the development of a sixth and seventh film in the series, it is doubtful that this amazingly long free period will go quietly. Despite having many good action and success in filling a gap in my day, lets just hope that they return to the basics of base to the next rather than forget the primary reason for these films was to be the cars.
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