Full text transcript of Fast and Furious movie review
If Rohit Shetty dreams of a heaven, this must be it, a world in which cars jump out of airplanes, cars hurtle from one high rise building to the next cars of fetishized more than women’s bodies, Gaza weapons, Gaza power, Gaza, modern day miracles. Everything else is an afterthought.
But who needs a coherent narrative or even a glimmer of acting when you can have the sheer head rush of souped up vehicles crashing into each other and into everything else you can dream of, including a helicopter? The action sequences are so audacious and outrageous that I just laughed out loud. Can you believe even a nanosecond of this? No, but I have fun. Absolutely.
So what is Furious 7 about a trained assassin Decken shortly budget six seven is out to get the men who put his brother in the hospital so don’t play by Vin Diesel and his gang of street racers are being hunted down. Even FBI Agent Hobbs, played by Dwayne Johnson, whose arms are like small tree trunks and ends up in hospital.
Naturally, they can’t take this lying down. And mayhem ensues in exotic locations like the Caucasus Mountains and Abu Dhabi, where we get a glimpse of our very own Ali futsal. Of course, all of this is just an excuse to put together superbly sexy gods stunts, dazzling female ends, bromance speeches about the importance of family, and even an emotional farewell to actor Paul Walker, who died while the film was the production. No Matter Where You. Whether it’s a quarter mile or halfway across the street, then Director James when juggles all these elements very well. But what works against this rollercoaster ride is the length a head rush can’t go on for almost two and a half hours because then it becomes a migraine. So venture in knowing that you will be an equal parts, exhilarated and exhausted. I’m going with three stops.
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