They don’t have associates — they’ve household. So much has occurred in the Fast and Furious universe since the franchise debuted, each onscreen and off.
Back in 2001, few viewers may have imagined that the first entry in the collection, The Fast and the Furious, would spawn even one sequel, not to mention a multibillion-dollar franchise that features an animated TV collection and a theme park experience.
The authentic movie was loosely based mostly on Ken Li’s “Racer X,” a Vibe journal article about unlawful road racing in New York City. The late Paul Walker, then comparatively unknown, starred as Brian O’Conner, a Los Angeles police officer despatched to infiltrate a heist crew led by Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel). Naturally, Brian involves respect Dom for his driving abilities and strict ethical code, and by the finish of the film decides to let him go free.
While the film racked up $40 million at the field workplace throughout its opening weekend, critics weren’t blown away. “The Fast and the Furious is Rebel Without a Cause without a cause,” the Washington Post wrote in June 2001. “The Young and the Restless with gas fumes. The Quick and the Dead with skid marks.”
The late Roger Ebert, nonetheless, was barely extra impressed by the film’s unusual mix of intense motion scenes and honest bromance. “It doesn’t have a brain in its head, but it has some great chase scenes,” he wrote. “The Fast and the Furious is not a great movie, but it delivers what it promises to deliver, and knows that a chase scene is supposed to be about something more than special effects.”
Diesel, then pursuing marquee stardom in XXX and The Chronicles of Riddick, didn’t return for 2003’s 2 Fast 2 Furious or 2006’s The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift, however by film No. 4 — 2009’s Fast & Furious — he had seen the error of his methods. (The actor did make a cameo in Tokyo Drift, however solely after Universal agreed to offer him the movie rights to the Riddick collection.)
The California native now sees the franchise as his legacy, particularly since Walker’s 2013 loss of life in a automotive accident.
“It’s not uncommon that I’ll give a speech on set where I’ll say, ‘We’re making this franchise for people that are no longer with us,’ which is very real, and the implications of that are very heavy,” he informed Men’s Health in June 2021. “‘But at the same time, we’re making the franchise for the people that aren’t born yet.’ When you have a unique perspective of creating a franchise that spans generations, you realize, OK, we all have to be as brilliant as possible. We have to reach as high as we can. Because it may be more important than just a movie. More important than two hours of escapism. There may be something more at play.”
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Keep scrolling to have a look again at all the pieces that’s occurred in The Fast Saga:
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