Product Description Vin Diesel and Paul Walker re-team for the ultimate chapter of the franchise built on speed--Fast & Furious. Heading back to the streets where it all began, they rejoin Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster to blast muscle, tuner and exotic cars across Los Angeles and floor through the Mexican desert in the new high-octane action-thriller. When a crime brings them back to L.A., fugitive ex-con Dom Toretto (Diesel) re-ignites his feud with agent Brian O’Conner (Walker). But as they are forced to confront a shared enemy, Dom and Brian must give in to an uncertain new trust if they hope to out-manoeuvre him. From convoy heists to precision tunnel crawls across international lines, two men will find the best way to get revenge: push the limits of what’s possible behind the wheel. .co.uk Review Fast & Furious feels like something of a reunion for the popular franchise. After neither filled out the starring roles in the third film, Tokyo Drift, both Vin Diesel and Paul Walker returned to the franchise for this fourth, and between them managed to power it to become the most successful in the series to date. With Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster also returning, Fast & Furious goes back to the streets where the series started, as once-rivals Diesel and Walker face, for the first time, a shared enemy. This, of course, is just the necessary groundwork before all concerned can jump into a series of impressive vehicles and drive them really, really quickly. Which, of course, they do.It’s brilliantly shot, too, with razor-sharp editing, fast pacing and some outstanding camerawork that leaves you feeling at the very heart of the action. There’s not a great script underpinning it all, and a few more action sequences wouldn’t hurt, but the slower moments are ably carried by the returning cast. It’s hard to work out whether Fast & Furious needed Diesel and Walker the most, or whether the actors themselves needed the film, but marrying them all together really does pay dividends.Naturally enough, there’s scope left behind for a fifth film, which given the major success that Fast & Furious deservedly enjoyed is no threat whatsoever. It might not be anywhere near the most intelligent film you’ll see in your life, but it’s a movie that knows what it wants to do, and has a great deal of fun doing it. More, please… --Jon Foster
A**T
Good film
Good film
A**C
It's car's.
Action packed and alot of cars.
A**R
Great Film and in good condition.
I have watched this on my Fast and Furious Blu ray collection but this 4K as been put away for Christmas as I'm upgrading them so will get watched again when I have got the rest of the films on 4K.
C**T
An intelligent action movie - be still my heart!
I came to the F&F franchise late and unintentionally (see F&F5 review), having been disappointed by the usual "fare" in this sub-genre (and the blockbuster genre overall, to be honest). Maybe it's because I'm female (shock, horror) although I do know what e-diff and slip-diff are, but I get instantly bored with something that is just a montage of car chase/crash/explosion clips strung together without context, cohesion or connection. I can do that myself on my laptop without forking out hard-earned cash at a cinema or to buy a DVD of it.It's always hard for sequel series/franchise movies or however you want to label them. Fans/viewers know perfectly well that the studio has no interest in us other than cash-cows to fleece (sorry to mix metaphors) of our hard-earned money so always approach the follow-on films with a degree of suspicion; "going to the movies" certainly isn't reasonable in terms of cost, I can tell you - and that's without having 2.4 kids pestering and whining for snacks, wanting to watch the 3D version with spectacles and the rest of it - and to then go and buy the DVD afterwards because we liked it that much, well...we expect a certain level of care and respect.The further down the line you get from the original, the harder it gets to stay original, even if you do a derivative of the original (Puss in Boots from Shrek) or prequel it (Prometheus). For every Toy Story 3 and the Ice Age franchise and Star Trek: Into Darkness, there is a myriad of...Prometheus, Pirates of the Caribbean, Shrek4, Die Hard 5, Dark Knight Rises and so on that epitomize the phrase "you should have quit while you were ahead" or bluntly, "yes, you have hit rock-bottom, stop digging!"F&F3 (Tokyo Drift) did so-so box office and was lacklustre enough that the franchise was clearly heading for straight-to-DVD land. A huge part of the potential for success for F&F4 was that the original central cast came back (the tagline was: new model, original parts), allowing for continuity and meaning that an established "universe" existed that could be built on rather than having to start from scratch and trying to get the audience into being interested - and one step further than that, actively care about the characters - all over again.A big chunk of kudos goes to the writer, Chris Morgan (who has, quite rightly and sensibly, been retained as the writer for 4,5,6 and 7) who kept all the needed elements for the franchise: car chases/crashes/explosions/ stunts of varying degrees of loudness/HD colour/rapid motion, but he also gave F&F4 subtlety, irony, pathos, emotional depth and proper characterization, which is pretty amazing considering some studio suit was probably pestering him, "look: chase, crash, boom, chase, crash, gratuitous [and therefore offensive] pointless sex scene with lots of bare boobs close up, chase, cash, bigger boom. Money, money, money! What do you mean, telling a proper story!?"In the series' internal chronology, F&F3 actually takes place after F&F6, but that's a technicality (since they didn't know at the time if any further movies would be made if F&F4 tanked). F&F4 picks up a few years after the events of F&F1 and F&F2, but follows on from that. What makes F&F4 a cut above are:There is no Star Trek solution - unlike where the central cast make Lazarus look like a rank amateur and routinely come back from anything including total vaporisation to the sub-atomic level - Letty is murdered. Full-stop. It isn't a mistake; there isn't a feel-good get out clause (unconscious Jane Doe/in a coma) at the end or post-credits. This gives the movie its emotional power, its pain, its angst.There is sex-appropriate behaviour: when a misandrist left-wing "feminist" explained to my great-grandaunt the concept of "equality between the sexes" (by which she meant preferential treatment), my great-grandaunt (former suffragette) looked her up and down and barked, "Men are apples, women are oranges; to criticise one for not tasting like the other is the definition of lunacy, my girl." I've never forgotten that and nothing drives me away faster from "page, stage or [big or small] screen" than movies that have been beaten into submission by the bigoted doctrine that is Political Correctness, a nonsensical visual where men notice pastel colours, clothing, hairstyles and accessories and talk about their feelings and the non-white/non-Christian man is always a living saint never the evil bad guy and so forth and you can practically see them cringing as they utter the crap or being strapped down screaming and having the manliness and masculinity sucked out of them via I/V before they're allowed in front of a camera...In F&F4 Dom, Brian, etc., - they are grieving, angry, vengeful - and it is dealt with in appropriately masculine ways by bristling, snapping, snarling, punching and yet always having each others' back and flank. Its subtle bromance without being as knowingly tongue-in-cheek as the TV series Hawaii Five-O - Season 1 [DVD] nor as pretentiously pseudo-philosophical as Point Break [DVD]. Not a bro-hug or "maddle" (man-cuddle) in sight, thank you, thank-you, thank-you. There are situations in which violence is the answer, or at least makes you feel better, and if you or your loved one are the victim of the wrongdoing, your opinion is the only one that counts.Finally, there is context: I work in a stressful, sensitive career where I routinely hear foul-mouthed wastes of oxygen screeching and my eyes are assaulted by people who wear handkerchiefs with delusions of grandeur over grotesquely skeletal or fat tattooed flesh. I do not wish to pay my good money to sit through 90 minutes of the same. F&F4 has bad words but they are in context, and skimpily clad females/nice eye-candy muscle-tone but there is no litany of verbal filth like in Die Hard 3, where Willis and Jackson come across as if their mouths were a burst raw sewage pipe, or pointless misogynistic sex scenes - even the physical fights are in context and not gratuitous.There is also the fact that Morgan has been careful to interweave continuity and connection to make the story flow to match Vin Diesel's apparent aim for a 3-chapter visual novel, if you take 1 as chapter 1, 2 as chapter 2 and 4 as chapter 3 (ignore Tokyo Drift for now). For example in F&F1, Brian abandons Mia (and Dom) to protect them; although in the story Dom and Brian have a big fight about several things including this fact, Chris Morgan points us in a nicely understated way to the subtle irony that the whole outplaying of this movie F&F4 stems from the very fact that in the beginning Dom does the same thing to Letty that Brian did to Mia (and him) but Dom can't see that. It is the eternal protest, "but that was different!" And there is also the angst quotient - O'Connor has to make a choice between (sorry, Harry Potter quote) doing what is right or what is easy in a situation each of us could believably face.And of course, F&F4 does work as a standalone if you stop the DVD at the right point, so if you decided F&F5 really isn't your thing, you can take 1-4 as the complete "story" trilogy;, but it deserved to do as well as it did at the box office and showed that handled in the right way, the franchise could go on. Although it is a "street race" movie its a definite cut above the rest of the genre, and worth a watch by a wider audience that includes those of the XX-Chromosome like me and those who don't know a dipstick from a yardstick.(NB - differential is what enables cars to go around corners, so, yes, up there on the "is it important?" scale)
C**L
false information above
loved this film when I first got this years ago even bought the 2 disc edition on dvd back in the day but that is where all of that stops.... got it on bluray recently after browsing though and finding this for the above price, looked through the finer details 12 cert yes bluray yes english yes number of discs 2.....er no this is a one disc baby no two disc false information the person who put this on here to sell as well as amazon need to start checking there information better and get the correct information on here if they want to sell these things apart from that film is great the disc (lol disc/s) look unused and play great can't fault the film 5*
K**N
Enjoyed this Fast and furious film alongside the recent Fast ...
Enjoyed this Fast and furious film alongside the recent Fast and Furious 7 the most. Great Action and Car Stunts . Especially enjoyed the sequence s with the cars going through the tunnels through the mexican border. And the race sequence between Dom Vin Diesel and Brian Paul Walker near the beginning of the film was also exciting. The Bad Guy Felix was also a great adversary in this film driving his Green Torino.
A**.
Amazing and super entertaining
I gave this movie 5 stars as I was completely hooked from the moment I started watching the movie right until the last second. In my opinion, Paul Walker and Vin Diesel make one of the best on-screen teams and always deliver because you end up having one hell of a ride together with them!As I haven't seen it mentioned in the product description, for those who are considering buying Fast & Furious: this is a slipcover edition, which makes it all even more worth it!
C**5
Enjoyable film
We all enjoyed this film, I always thought they were just about car racing but there’s a good story line. A great cast too.
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