‘Fast & Furious X’ turns movie theaters into a party in which the engines roar to the sky and in which there is no lack of gasoline, blood and fire.
‘Fast & Furious X’ arrives in theaters as the beginning of the end of a franchise that, in addition to spending two decades avoiding any hint of credibility within its own universe, has known how to ignore industry trends while reinventing itself over and over again to find your way. Long gone is that title about good-hearted criminals with gasoline in their veins that started it all and, somehow, if one now reviews ‘Full throttle’ (Rob Cohen, 2001) one will discover that it already contained the three ideas on which Vin Diesel has decided that everything pivots: fast cars, furious drivers and family barbecues.
Louis Leterrier arrived as an almost improvised patch to the direction of this tenth installment after “irreconcilable creative differences” between Diesel and Justin Lin, fundamental architects of this hyperbolic traveling fair, but The director has been able to control the steering wheel of the heavy vehicle of which he has been surprisingly seen in command and, along the way, he has given some sense to the journey that had been two chapters taking advantage of his own inertia.
No, Leterrier has not avoided the nonsense epic condition of the bombastic script by Justin Lin and Dan Mazeau, this is still an orgy of the impossible in which all your fantasies are invited, but there is more cohesion between acts than, with flying cars , comic book revenge and soap opera resurrections included, makes us glimpse something similar to a plot, bringing the bombastic despipority that is offered to us on screen closer to the most accurate trilogy within this collection, the one that made up ‘Fast & Furious 5’ (Justin Lin, 2011), ‘Fast & Furious 6’ (Justin Lin, 2013) and ‘Fast & Furious 7’ (James Wan, 2015).
The story refers directly to events that occurred in the episode released in 2011, which showed us that we all won if the laws of physics that govern our universe abandoned the thieves from Las Tunas. Thanks to this mischievous look in the rearview mirror, its status as an endless soap opera increases and, in addition to seeing Paul Walker on the screen again, the nitrous universe finds its own Joker, a villain incarnated by Jason Momoa who has been unable to hide how much fun he was having during filmingmaking the audience share in his joy with a histrionics that, if it weren’t for the fact that it comes out of it and belongs to the world of Diesel, we would be criticizing.
But let’s remember that ‘Fast & Furious X’ isn’t just a movie, it’s a madman’s dream, a celebration of the self-aware blockbuster that, despite everything, takes itself ridiculously seriously. while allowing all the licenses that would be censored in a board meeting with some shame. Maybe it is time to link this with the universe of ‘Jurassic World’. We would all win.
For proud enjoyment, of those who eat the popcorn with the trailers
The best: the party continues. And John Cena.
Worst: The scene with Pete Davidson, what the hell was that?
DATA SHEET
Address: louis leterrier Distribution: Vin Diesel, Jason Momoa, Michelle Rodriguez, John Cena, Tyrese Gibson Country: USA Year: 2023 Release date: 19–5-2023 Gender: Action Script: Justin Lin, Dan Mazeau Duration: 141 min.
Synopsis: During numerous beyond-impossible missions, Dom Toretto and his family have been able to outsmart, outsmart, and outrun any enemy that comes their way. But now they will have to face the deadliest opponent they have ever known: a terrible danger that rises from the past, that is moved by a bloody thirst for revenge and that is determined to tear apart the family and destroy forever everything that Dom holds dear. matter.
Source: Fotogramas

Emily Jhon is a product and service reviewer at Gossipify, known for her honest evaluations and thorough analysis. With a background in marketing and consumer research, she offers valuable insights to readers. She has been writing for Gossipify for several years and has a degree in Marketing and Consumer Research from the University of Oxford.