And even with these changes, the rendering still manages to remind us of a time when Fast and Furious was about cars, drivers and, to some extent, family - and not gadgetry, spies, and relatives no one mentioned, ever, throughout the previous eight movies. The rendering strays from the original Veilside RX-7s in that it comes with pop-up headlights, and packs an altered rear that can accommodate the stock lights. For the record, it was Han who was brought back in F9 (the car wasn’t), complete with a petty justification for his return, from what not-that-many-movies-ago seemed like a death no one could escape from, A rendered Veilside RX-7, granted, but one not unlike the one Han Lue drove during the character’s first outing in the series, in the 2006 Tokyo Drift. And that kind of raised my expectations when it came to F9 - despite the countless warnings that hinted to the series going to space, reviving long-dead characters just to fill some plot hole, and justifying the absence of Paul Walker in the pardon-the-expression stupidest way imaginable.Īnd then, today, I came across this thing here. After all, there’s not much not to like (and expect) in Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham throwing punches left and right. Once I’ve seen that flick though, I realized I kind of enjoyed it. That rant was prompted by the release of the Hobbs and Shaw spinoff, one that irreversibly took the franchise into the world of spies and, yes, believe it or not, bulletproof superhumans. Not long ago, I ranted a bit about the perversion of Fast and Furious.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |