Review - from Rolling Stone
- 06/26/2003 - p.87 by Peter Travers (Rolling Stone Critic) "...2 FAST
2 FURIOUS is loaded with sex on wheels..." Review - from Chicago Sun-Times
- 06/06/2003 - p.25 by Roger Ebert (Critic and screenwriter) "...2 FAST
2 FURIOUS is a video game crossed with a buddy movie....It's made with skill and
style and, boy, is it fast and furious..." Review - from Variety -
06/09/2003 - p.25-31 by Todd McCarthy (Film Critic for Variety/ Directed VISIONS
OF LIGHT (1992)) "...Returning star Paul Walker and star Tyrese establish
some peppery onscreen chemistry that injects good-humored rivalry into the narrative
filler between high-speed set pieces..." Review - from Total Film -
08/01/2003 - p.94 by Jamie Graham (Film Critic) "...As sequels go, this
is pretty much what you want to see, a movie that retains much of the B-movie
flavour of its excitable predecessor..." Muze Description - The
sequel to the racing smash THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS may not have Vin Diesel as
its star, but it burns with even higher octane than its predecessor, and a whole
lot less extraneous drama. Back in action is undercover cop Brian O'Connor (Paul
Walker) whose career has hit the skids since he let Diesel's character escape
at the last film's end. He has sunk in status and is now a fringe dweller on the
Miami street racing scene. A chance at redemption arrives when the fuzz recruits
him to investigate Carter Vellone (Cole Hauser), a top-dog street racer with dangerous
drug connections. O'Connor recruits his bickering childhood pal (model/singer
Tyrese), now a nitro-burning ex-con from the Diesel school of toughness, to help
him pull the bad guys to the curb with a tire-spinning vengeance. John Singleton
(BOYZ IN THE HOOD, HIGHER LEARNING) directed, and obviously had great fun delivering,
a straight-up racing thriller that's free of the message-bearing pressure of being
a "John Singleton film." 2 FAST fairly roars off the screen with comic
book exuberance and a cheerful disregard for anything that gets in the way of
its forward momentum. Best of all is Tyrese, a natural, laid-back star--he's not
afraid to poke fun at his own shirtless model-boy image and amply compensates
for the mighty Vin's absence. Rapper Ludacriss is also memorable as O'Connor's
mechanic, as is model Devon Akoi as a cute female racer. |