Flashy, some fun fast and furious race scenes,
campy dialogue shifts lanes from fun to feeble in 0.5
seconds. Paul Walker and Tyrese give relatively
strong performances; they're believable, likable and
amusing together. As in the first, the plot is rather
dodgy. Sometimes you'll laugh with the film,
sometimes at it, and sometimes you'll be fumbling for
the seatbelt.
Director John Singleton says, "When I saw
'The Fast and the
Furious,' I was like, 'Damn, why didn't I
think of that?' Growing up in South Central LA, we
had street races all the time. We sort of had car
shows along Crenshaw Boulevard, people lining up
their cars with the snazzy wheel rims and hydraulics.
And late at night, they'd race between Crenshaw and
Florence, and into Inglewood and around Centinela
Park. I referenced it in 'Boyz N the Hood.'"
Here's the studio's synopsis:
F2 is the highly -anticipated follow-up to the Summer
2001 box office sensation about the super-charged
world of street racing. Paul Walker returns as former
cop Brian O'Conner, who teams up with his ex-con pal
Roman Pearce (Tyrese) to transport a shipment of
"Dirty" money for shay Miami-based import-export
dealer Carter Verone (Cole Hauser), while actually
working with undercover agent Monci Clemente
(newcomer Eva Mendes) to bring Verone down. Ludacris,
James Remar and Devon Aoki are also in the cast of
this new high-adrenaline adventure directed by John
Singleton (Boyz N the Hood, Baby Boy) and produced by
Neal Moritz with a whole new line-up of dazzling
high-performance vehicles ready to burn up the
screen.
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