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Brian is a wanderer and he always wanted to experience the speed limit. He is proud of his driving talent, but with racers, he';;s just a novice. With the car was fitted with NOS speed accelerator, he went looking for Dominic – the king of speed in Los Angeles to apply to attend the race village. After the recklessly race and the chase of polices, Brian came back to rescue Dominic from the police. Since then, Brian was admitted to the team of Dominic and from that the relationship between Brian and Mia – Dominics sister starts to be built. In fact, Brian is a FBI';;s secret agent sent out to break the Speed Robber Team which ​​is spreading terror throughout highways. But now he feel that he have a close relationship with Dominic and the love between him and Mia could not be separated. Brian have to decide where he should put his loyalty and find out his true limits.
Returning the series to solid ground after 2 Fast 2 Furious leaned too heavily on cartoonish CGI effects, Tokyo Drift relies on old-fashioned stunt work that gives its best sequences a sense of brute physicality.
June 15, 2006
Combustible Celluloid
It's all testosterone and swagger, and tries so hard to be cool that it's just the opposite.
While few of the paper-thin characters register long enough to make much of an impression, Diesel carries the movie with his unsettling mix of Zen-like tranquillity and barely controlled rage.
Even those who've never heard of 'rice rockets' (Japanese imports souped up with computerized hydraulics and customized engines) might be charmed by the film's blend of kineticism, car-culture rituals, and hilariously flat-footed dialogue.
June 26, 2001
ColeSmithey.com
Sure it's a guilty pleasure watching stunt drivers put flashy state-of-the-art streetcars through impossibly daring maneuvers, but it's a happy indulgence nonetheless.
It doesn't matter that we know where it's going, what counts is that Cohen keeps his pedal to the floor and that his actors gun their lines with absolute conviction. Loud cars, fast music: this movie knows exactly what it's about.
A gritty and gratifying cheap thrill, Rob Cohen's high-octane hot-car meller is a true rarity these days, a really good exploitationer, the sort of thing that would rule at drive-ins if they still existed.