

It has no returning cast - save that fun cameo from Dom at the film's end - and Lucas Black's southern drawl as Sean Boswell isn't great. Look, there's no denying " Tokyo Drift" is definitely the outlier of the franchise. Honestly, the best thing the fourth film does is set up the next few films in the series. The first is when Dom, Letty, Han, and several others are robbing a fuel truck at the film's start. The second is when Dom describes Letty to Gisele (Gal Gadot) after he believes she's dead. Other than reuniting Brian and Dom on screen as the ultimate racing bros, the film has two good scenes. You better bet that Dom, who tracks down Letty's killer to one of Braga's men, and Brian wind up on this same team. The story itself is downright silly, offering two of the franchise's worst villains of the series: a Mexican drug lord, Braga, and his henchman, Fenix, who both believe the easiest way to get drugs across the border is with a team of racers through secret underground tunnels. Dom may be a car mechanic, but he's definitely not Batman.

THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS 2001 MOVIE
The most ridiculous scene of the movie may be when Dom goes to the crash site where Letty supposedly died and amazingly can decipher and see exactly how she was killed. The movie has little to do with family as it becomes a huge revenge film for him when he hears his wife Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) has been "killed." (In great soap-opera fashion, she returns from the dead two films later). The fourth film shows Dom at one of his lowest points. "Fast & Furious" may have reset the entire franchise before it nearly went straight to video, but it's the worst-reviewed of the franchise and it's not too difficult to see why. This is the one where Dom and Brian realize they're best friends. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.
