If 2015’s Furious 7 was a bit too
reserved and subdued—what with cars parachuting from cargo planes and leaping
skyscraper to skyscraper—don’t worry, The Fate of the Furious,
also known as the eighth Fast and Furious movie (AKA #F8),
rectifies that with gleeful abandon. It walks a fine line between sheer idiocy and
inspired brilliance, often leaping back and forth between the two, and
represents a marked drop in quality in the franchise for the first time in
almost a decade.
Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) and his rag-tag, self-appointed
“family” of gear-heads-turned-street-racing-James-Bonds are back with full
tanks, jazzed-up cars, and a blatant disregard for the laws of physics. At this
point, they’re basically an international special ops team, and the Rock has
become a full-on cartoon superhero—he seriously tears his way out of a pair of
handcuffs and shrugs off getting shot point-blank multiple times.
Here’s the twist: a mysterious hacker and cyber terrorist, the
unfortunately named Cipher (Charlize Theron), pressures Dom to do the one thing
he’d never do, turn his back on his family. Beyond that, the plot is insanely convoluted,
which leads to far too many overlong scenes that rely on questionable dialogue.
But all that’s necessary to know is the betrayal, everything else is background
noise. In The Fate of the Furious, it’s Dom versus his own crew.
The Fate of the Furious has all the bells
and whistles: exotic locations, an absurd toy box of automobiles, ludicrous
action, and barely covered butts. The usual team is back—Letty (Michelle
Rodriguez), Tej (Chris ‘Ludacris’ Bridges), Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson), and Roman
(Tyrese Gibson)—along with recent additions like Mr. Nobody (Kurt Russell) and
Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel). A few familiar faces pop up, like Jason Statham’s
Deckard Shaw, who actually joins the team in what’s a huge middle finger to
anyone who loved Sung Kang’s Han. (Deckard did brutally murder him in cold
blood a few movies ago, after all, a fact the “family” conveniently seems to
forget—though now the franchise has reached the point where it’s successfully retconned
out every last thread of Tokyo Drift.) There are even a
handful of new puzzle pieces, like Scott Eastwood’s Little Nobody and Kritofer
Hivju’s Rhodes, as well as a few best left unmentioned.
Charlize Theron’s villain leaves much to be desired in the antagonist
department. Her motivation remains nonexistent for most of the movie, and when
the script does deign to clear it up, it’s somehow even worse than not knowing.
She’s basically a generic James Bond villain who’s evil for the sake of being
evil and nothing more, and the movie hits a wall every time she appears on
screen. I don’t know that white-girl dreads are enough to build a character on,
and she her primary defining personality trait is that she looks like the albino
twins from the Matrix sequel.
What The Fate of the Furious lacks most
is the emotional resonance of its predecessors. It trades on inherited goodwill
and pre-existing connections, and it’s never fully engaging as a result. Sure,
Roman and Tej bicker like a married couple, Letty never loses faith in Dom, and
Hobbs and Deckard bantering back and forth about causing the other grievous bodily
harm is a highlight (again, if you never cared about Han, you cold, soulless
bastard). But the heart that makes the audience care about these characters isn’t
there, and it becomes obvious early on how much the franchise misses Paul Walker.
The attempts to fill that rather sizeable void fall far short of the mark, and
the movie struggles to find an identity in a post-Brian O’Connor reality.
Instead of action driven by emotional stakes, The
Fate of the Furious is action for the sake of action. It’s fun,
occasionally spectacular, but it rings hollow and the bigger picture suffers.
The sequence through the streets of New York is fantastic and inventive, and is
where new director F. Gary Gray (Straight Outta Compton) leaves
his most significant mark. He clearly lets loose and makes the movie most his
own—there’s a moment where the sky literally rains cars and another where a
throbbing pile of automobile corpses pulses like a dying beast. But then there’s
the submarine chase that forms the centerpiece of film’s marketing, which plays
out like a rehash of the airport runway scene at the end of Fast and Furious 6.
The answer to the question of why anything happens in
The Fate of the Furious is: because it’s awesome. Why does
Tej drive a tank with a machine gun on the top? Because it’s awesome. Why are
there jetpacks? Because it’s awesome. Why does the movie start with Dom in Cuba
racing a flaming car backwards through the streets of Havana? I think you get
the point. The whole film is constructed on the logic, “What’s the craziest
thing we can do here?” and it leaves gaping plot holes you can drive a ‘roided
out muscle car through.
I can respect and appreciate the constant one-upmanship of the
action. After all, that’s the foundation of the franchise: continual
escalation. It’s not even the dodgy science or willful ignorance of gravity,
but for all of the spectacle, The Fate of the Furious lacks
the binder and cohesion of the last few installments; the special sauce that
makes these movies more than just throwaway eye candy. Though the characters
and formula are the same, it’s missing key ingredients and picks and chooses
which bits of its heritage and continuity to remember. The eighth chapter feels
like something different, and not necessarily in a good way.
The Fate of the Furious should ultimately
satisfy many fans. It’s packed with absurd action and moments of inspired
lunacy. Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham form the beefy center of an epic prison
brawl, but watching Hobbs unleash intimidation tactics against a pee wee girl’s
soccer team is pure joy—my newest life goal is to get a rah-rah motivational speech
from the Rock. There’s a great Raiders of the Lost Ark
homage, along with the requisite well-meaning quips and insults. It’s mindless
fun, which is fine, but we’ve seen how much more these movies can be. And while
it sates some devotees, it leaves others wanting more, wondering what could
have been, and curious about where it’s all heading. [Grade:
B-]
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