Sean gets shipped off to Japan because his mother can’t take
his shit anymore. One too many reckless races
through under construction housing developments I suppose. Anyway his father is stationed in the land of
the rising sun so it’s his problem now.
The setup is contrived but also fortuitous for young Sean because on his
first full day he hooks up with a car guy (and possibly only black person in
Japan (Bow Wow (music shit, Like Mike))),
who introduces him to the drifting scene, they go to a race, and Sean even gets
to be in it despite the fact he’s never drifted before. And of course he smashes the auto to
bits. So he needs to learn this new
style of driving if he’s ever gonna race here.
But there’s also some other conflict thrown in like a rival racer, a
girl Sean and the rival fight over, there’s the disciplinary father and,
somehow, a Yakuza threat. Damn they
crammed a bunch into this.
So as you can guess Sean masters this technique to win the
day and his life back. The story arc is
one you’ve seen many times before but it’s solid. There are enough wrinkles to keep things
interesting but unfortunately they all come into play towards the end of the
picture.
This film is the one that gets shat on the most in the
series, especially the title for some reason.
While I agree number three was definitely some other movie that they
slapped the Fast and Furious brand on
it still works. All the trademarks of
the series are here and I can’t blame them for either attempting to hit the
reset button on the franchise or simply trying something new. I actually did find it refreshing to not have
an undercover cop story for a third time and instead be introduced to a new
style of racing with “new characters” (Sean is basically a teenaged Brian
O’Conner and the Han character (Sung Kang (LiveFree or Die Hard)) shares many traits with Dom Toretto).
Don’t dismiss this one like so many others have done over
the years. It’s not the dumb one in the
series like the world wants you to believe.
I had a good time and would recommend checking it out. It’ll always hold a special place in this
sequence of pictures as the rebel that did its own thing. And without it we may not have gotten any
more. That’s why I show respect to the
drift king.
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