The Fast and the Furious Review

by "Robin Clifford" (rclifford AT teloquent DOT com)
June 21st, 2001

"The Fast and the Furious"

Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) owns the streets of L.A. During the day he puts together high-performance racing cars. At night, he pilots his own little pocket rocket and wins upwards to $10,000 if someone has the nerve to race him. A young loner, Brian (Paul Walker), wants to hook up with the outlaw motor maestro. Dom is suspicious, until a confrontation with a ruthless gang leader, Johnny Tran (Rick Yune), changes his mind. But, enough about plot. It's about racing in Rob Cohen's "The Fast and the Furious."

Over the past year, we've had a couple of auto-based, adrenalin rush pics with "Gone in 60 Seconds" and "Driven." Neither film had much in common and neither was very good, but they both carried the central theme of a need for speed. Helmer Cohen takes the hunger to drive fast to the streets with his pop-culture look into that microcosm of Americana, Los Angeles.
The desolate nighttime streets of sections of L.A. become tribal territory for the adrenalin junkies whose pride is in their hopped up imports. They gather every night, monitoring the whereabouts of the police, and risk their pink slips against their ability to drive fast. Dom is the leader of this tribe, along with his team, and he rules the outlaw races. But there is danger lurking on the horizon for those involved in a major hijack ring and members of the clan of night drivers may well be involved.

Brian is a loner who comes into the scene with a desire to impress Dom and his posse with his guts and ability. But, the young man has a hidden agenda - he's an undercover cop and he suspects that the hijackers may be hidden among the tribe. When he and Dom have a run-in with Johnny Tran's team, a bunch of gun toting, motorcycle driving hotheads, it looks like these are the bad guys the cop is searching for. Brian and his bosses jump the gun and raid Johnny's operation, much to their eventual embarrassment.
At about this point, things start to sort themselves out as the real story, one of honor and loyalty, kicks in. This is also where the film gets very derivative of such action flicks as "Speed" and "Point Break" - is it significant that Keanu Reeves starred in both of those films? But, derived does not mean bad and "The Fast and the Furious" delivers its action bits in tense portions. The racing that dominated the first half of the film takes a back seat, so to speak, to the meat of the story and the relationship between Brian and Dominic and his team.

"The Fast and the Furious" benefits from the charismatic presence of Vin Diesel. The actor was one reason "Boiler Room" worked and he cuts a good figure here. Diesel is so likable, though, that it is hard to get angry with him for being a bad guy, too. Paul Walker is OK as the undercover cop, but any good-looking actor could have filled the role. The folks making up Dom's team - Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, Chad Lindberg, Johnny Strong and Matt Shulze - are all supportive, if a little bland. A love interest between Diesel and Rodriguez simply does not work - not their fault. Chad Lindberg, as Dom's brilliant, but dyslexic, mechanic, Jesse gets to play up the troubled martyr role well enough. Don't look for Oscars here though.

The screenplay by Gary Scott Thompson, Erik Bergquist and David Ayer is action packed and has some slickly executed race scenes. The cars, ranging from souped up Toyotas to NOS (nitrous oxide) boosted Volkswagen Jettas, are what the teens and twenties are going to see, and we get some good, though not great, racing.

The F/X are a combo of live action and computer-generated images and look very good. You won't have tires and fenders flying off the screen at you, a la "Driven," which is a very good thing. The CGI stuff is so convincingly done the line between computer-generated action and live is agreeably blurred and works well. The action-packed hijack, which is the showcase for the flick, is straight out of "Speed," but is so tightly wound it keeps your attention with slick car stunts and crash bang action.

"The Fast and the Furious" is B-movie entertainment that is ideal for the drive-in on a warm summer's night - if you can find a drive-in still alive and kicking. The tweenies will love it. In my town, the kids are planning to meet, with their hot cars, and head to the theater en masse on the opening weekend. Their exuberance will be well met. I give it a B-.

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