Universal, Fast & Furious
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I live my life a quarter of a mile at a time. Nothing else matters: Not the mortgage. Not the store. Not my team and their bullshit. For those 10 seconds or less, I’m free. W
The Fast & Furious franchise is truly one of the great artistic works of our time. No one is disputing that. You don’t get dialogue like that off the back of a Cracker Jack box. But as riveting and artistic as the dialogue is—and as easy as the plots ...
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The Best Car In Each Fast & Furious Movie
It makes sense that the Fast and Furious movies are known for their cars, with each entry in the franchise having a standout model that rises to the top of its individual film's garage. The various vehicles of the franchise have nearly as much personality ...
Dom Torretto drives this suped up 1971 Plymouth GTX in The Fate of the Furious during the time when he has apparently gone rogue and betrayed his family. We see it in New York City, where his friends track him down and finally corner him on a busy street.
It was a giant hunk of cheese. A full wheel of Parmigiano Reggiano. Eighty pounds of a miraculous admixture of raw milk, salt, and rennet that ages into a nutty spectacle of flavor, delicious alone or fantastic as a complex complement to every other food.
The speed, style, and high-octane action of the Fast & Furious franchise is legendary. The original films also have a unique energy that encapsulates much of early-2000s pop culture — a nostalgic feeling for those who lived through the era. Brian O ...