![]() Furious 7 (Fast & Furious 7) (2015)Īfter finally making Tokyo Drift part of the main plot, the franchise is no longer technically one big prequel series. If you wanted to geek out even further, Han actually appears in the film Better Luck Tomorrow, also directed by Justin Lin (who directed Tokyo Drift to 6). Also, try to ignore all the 2006 technology hanging around and pretend that Han and co. It doesn't make sense as to why Sean appeared to age 10 years in between scenes in the next film, but oh well. They could easily have just kept this as a spin-off movie that had little to do with the overall franchise, but in true geek style, they made the climax of the film an important plot device for a sequel that arrived nine years later.Įssentially this was all down to Han, who's killed off in this film, but everyone loved him so much that they came up with a way of bringing him back into the narrative by delaying the inevitable (complete with hilarious conversation about him 'moving to Tokyo' at every opportunity). This side-step to Tokyo drops Dom and Brian and focuses on future 'drift king' Sean. Although this was the third Fast film to be released, it's actually the sixth film chronologically. ![]() The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) Letty is back after one movie away and that moment when the Stath suddenly shows up when you're least suspecting it is one of the best post-credit reveals ever. Seeing the Rock smash London to bits is worth the ticket price alone. After surpassing everyone's expectations in Fast Five (they decided to be Furious again in this one), the franchise upped the ante with its insane action sequences and settled on a perfect crew. ![]() We picked this as our favourite Fast & Furious movie so far. Watch now: Prime Video | iTunes | Microsoft Storeĭeckard Shaw (Jason Statham – post-credits) ![]() Play icon The triangle icon that indicates to play ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |