The Sons of Katie Elder

The Sons of Katie Elder
"First, we reunite, then find Ma and Pa's killer...then read some reviews."

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Fast Five

I'm a sucker for the Fast and the Furious series. There I said it. After watching Tokyo Drift a few summers back, I talked with my cousin about how cool it would be if a sequel brought together all the stars of the first three F and F movies. It seemed like a natural progression. Team up all those cool tough guys. Now, I'm not saying I can predict the future or anything, but 2011's Fast Five hit theaters April 29 to huge business with basically that premise. Bring together all the stars from the first four movies (including Fast and Furious) and let them go to work. If this early -- very early -- summer release is any sign of things to come, it's going to be a fun summer at the movies.

What's odd about the franchise (to me at least) is that by the end of the first movie, racing almost became a secondary thing. By this movie -- the fifth in the franchise -- that trend continues. It's funny because like so many movies, the first one was really good and could have served as a stand-alone, single movie.  That's not how things work nowadays, and four sequels later, here I sit writing a review. I liked 2 Fast 2 Furious, enjoyed Tokyo Drift, enjoyed Fast and Furious, and to my complete surprise, I L-O-V-E-D Fast Five. Loved it. It follows the same formula (cool cast, badass cars, exotic locations, gorgeous women, awesome soundtrack) and amps it up to 10 or 11. This sounds like some bad line you would see on a movie poster, but I haven't had this much fun at a movie in a while, maybe back to the Bourne movies.

After freeing Dom Torreto (Vin Diesel) as he's being transported to prison, former FBI agent Brian O'Conner (Paul Walker) and his girlfriend, Mia (Jordana Brewster), are on the run, hiding out in Brazil as countless law enforcement agencies track them down. Needing some sort of bankroll, they take a job robbing three high-end cars but find out they've messed with the wrong guy. Three DEA agents are killed in the heist by enforcers from the local kingpin, Reyes (Joaquim de Almeida), but the murders are pegged on Dom and Brian. Things closing in on them, they know they have to take down one last epic job and fade away, but to do so they're going to need a ton of money. Putting together a team of specialists and drivers, Dom and Brian put together a job that will hit Reyes where it hurts most, his drug money. The job seems impossible though as he's put all his money -- over $100 million -- in a bank vault...in a police station. As if that wasn't enough, a hardcore FBI agent, Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and his team are hunting Dom and Brian down, and nothing is going to stop him.

If you're a fan of the previous movies (even casually), this is the movie for you. Everyone is back. A little more than 45 minutes into the movie when Brian says "We need a team" there was a genuine buzz in the theater, that sense of 'Here we go, this is gonna be fun.' Rounding out the team is Roman (Tyrese Gibson) and Tej (hip-hop artist Ludacris) from 2 Fast 2 Furious, Han (Sung Kang) from Tokyo Drift, and Leo (Tego Calderon), Leo (Don Omar), and Gisele (Gal Gadot) from Fast and Furious. Even Vince (Matt Schulze) from the original is back. It's Fast and the Furious, the reunion tour, back after a 10-year absence! All these characters were really cool on their own, and then you throw them all into one movie? Too perfect. This is a men on a mission movie for a younger, hip hop audience. It's that team pulling off that one last dangerous, even suicidal, but necessary last job. As the movie developed, I just kept smiling. A ridiculously cool cast, a team of specialists working together, and trying to pull of an improbable heist. I'm in movie heaven.

You don't head into these movies thinking you'll be hearing Shakespearean dialogue, words spoken so eloquently and beautiful that it gives you faith in writing and movies. Not this series, and not anytime soon.  To counter that, I will say that this is a well-written movie. No, I'm not talking Academy Award winning stuff, but director Justin Lin and screenplay writer Chris Morgan clearly know their characters and how to have them interact. Some of the movie's best scenes come from the cast just hanging out, talking, busting each other's balls, planning out the job. There is an ease to the scenes that never comes across as contrived or forced, just a genuine group of friends working together. There's some laughs, some male bonding, some possible love connections brewing, so basically a little bit of everything. Something to please everyone in the audience.

To the credit of the franchise, they've always tried to keep things fresh. And here Fast Five is no exception. If you're going to assemble this team of super criminals/crooks and drivers, you need an opponent who is equally as big and bad, imposing just standing there. Enter stage left...Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson looking like he lived in the gym for several months prior to filming.  This guy looks absolutely jacked, like he could rip a man's head off with ease. His FBI agent Luke Hobbs is a great addition to the series. And thankfully, he's not some clueless dupe for Dom and Brian and Co. to keep on taking advantage of.  He's a worthy adversary, always keeping up with them. And yes, his one-on-one knock down, drag 'em out, it hurts just watching the confrontation fight with Vin Diesel is appropriately epic.  Two heavyweights beating the crap out of each other is just one of many highlights of this flick. Oh, and sequels? Yeah, it looks like the Rock will be back for more. Stick around through the credits. Also joining the cast -- because the gorgeous actress category hadn't been filled enough already -- is Elsa Pataky as Elena, a Brazilian police officer working with Hobbs' team.

Okay, enough with all this talk about characters and plot and dialogue. You go into these movies for the action, the blow you out of your seat, crazy, ridiculous could never happen in the real world action. All other things aside as mentioned earlier, this movie is an incredible action flick. The opening sequence showing Dom getting busted out of the prison bus is quick and hard-hitting in its effectiveness.  A railway heist on a speeding train is classic. A later chase through the Brazilian favelas shows how to do a foot-chase with multiple chases going on at once through the crowded backstreets of Rio de Janiero. And in a throwback to the racing roots of the franchise, an epic, truly epic quarter mile race between Dom, Brian, Han and Roman through Rio...in stolen police cars at that...is a thing of beauty. Action, this movie has plenty of it. You may be disappointed about any number of things. But action? No way. Even better is that the movie is edited so you can actually see what's going on. It is edited in that hyper-quick fashion, but never to the point where they're just incoherent blurs. As a fan of the sometimes incomprehensible Bourne movies, I say thank you.

All those action scenes mentioned, they pale in comparison to the finale. Driving some souped up cars, Dom and Brian attach an immense bank vault to their cars and chased by basically all of the corrupt cups in Rio try to make away with over $100 million bucks. The movie itself is 130 minutes long -- by far the longest in the series -- and I'm thinking that longer running time is because of this sequence. We're talking a full 15 minutes of non-stop chaos and action through Rio as this vault tears the city and its police up.  It's an orgy of explosions, crashes and fast cars that rivals The Blues Brothers in terms of fullscale destruction. That's the movie. Ridiculous amounts of fun. It's great to look at (Rio even in its squalor is incredibly visual) and the montage of where everyone ends up (to Don Omar's Danza Kuduro) is a great wrap-up. As for that post-credit scene, it certainly leaves it open for another sequel with a not so great twist. Who am I kidding? I'll be seeing that one too. Hopefully, it's just as good as this one.

Fast Five <---trailer (2011): ****/****

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