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The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift is a 2006 action film directed by Justin Lin and written by Chris Morgan. It is the standalone sequel to The Fast and the Furious (2001) and 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003), and the third installment in the Fast & Furious franchise. It stars Lucas Black and Bow Wow. In the film, car enthusiast Sean Boswell (Black) is sent to live in Tokyo with his estranged father and finds solace exploring the city's drifting community.

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJustin Lin
Written byChris Morgan
Produced byNeal H. Moritz
Starring
CinematographyStephen F. Windon
Edited by
Music byBrian Tyler
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures[1]
Release dates
  • June 4, 2006 (2006-06-04) (Gibson Amphitheatre)
  • June 16, 2006 (2006-06-16) (United States)
Running time
104 minutes
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$85 million[4]
Box office$159 million[5]

A third Fast & Furious film was confirmed in June 2005, when Lin was selected as director. Morgan was hired after an open call soon after, thus marking the first film in the franchise's longtime association with Lin, Morgan, actor Sung Kang, and composer Brian Tyler.[6][7] Principal photography began in August 2005 and lasted until that November, with filming locations including Los Angeles and Tokyo, making Tokyo Drift the first film in the franchise to feature an international filming location.

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift premiered at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Los Angeles on June 4, 2006, and was released in the United States on June 16, by Universal Pictures. Tokyo Drift grossed $159 million worldwide, making it the lowest-grossing film in the franchise. The film received mixed reviews from critics, with praise for its driving sequences but criticism for its screenplay and acting performances. In subsequent years, Tokyo Drift has garnered a more favorable view, with some commentators considering it one of the best of the franchise and becoming a cult film.[8][9] It was followed by a prequel trilogy, the first being Fast & Furious in 2009 and the last being Fast & Furious 6 in 2013. A direct-sequel titled Furious 7 was released in 2015. Within the story's continuity, the film is set in-between Fast & Furious 6 and Furious 7.

Plot edit

In Oro Valley, Arizona, high school troublemaker Sean Boswell races classmate Clay in their respective 1971 Chevy Monte Carlo and 2003 SRT-10 Dodge Viper, when they end up ramming each other and crashing. While Clay's family wealth helps him escape punishment, Sean is sent to live with his father, a U.S. Navy lieutenant stationed in Tokyo, to avoid jail time, as he is a repeat offender. He also befriends military brat Twinkie, who introduces him to drift racing. Driving to an underground car meet in Twinkie's 2005 Volkswagen Touran, Sean gets into a confrontation with Takashi, the Drift King (DK), over Takashi's girlfriend Neela. Sean agrees to race Takashi's Nissan Fairlady Z33 in a Silvia S15 Spec-S lent to him by retired drift racer Han Lue. Unexperienced with drifting, Sean wrecks the Silvia and loses.

To repay the debt, Sean agrees to work for Han. Han begins teaching drift racing to Sean, whom he calls the only person ever to stand up to Takashi, who is connected to the yakuza through his uncle, Kamata. Sean masters the art, practicing in a 2006 Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IX, and gains further respect after defeating Takashi's lieutenant, Morimoto. Han and Sean become friends.

Sean eventually asks Neela out on a date; Neela explains that after her mother died, she moved in with Takashi's grandmother. An irate Takashi assaults Sean the next day, telling him to stay away from Neela. Neela leaves Takashi and moves in with Sean and Han.

After Kamata reprimands Takashi for allowing Han to steal from him, Takashi and Morimoto confront Han, Sean, and Neela, who flee after Twinkie creates a distraction. Takashi and Morimoto pursue the trio, with Morimoto crashing, and Han buying Sean and Neela time to escape. The chase ends when Sean and Neela's Lancer Evo IX crashes, while Han's 1994 Veilside RX-7 is broadsided by a 1992 Mercedes-Benz W140 S-Class sedan and then explodes. Takashi later draws a gun on Sean, but his father draws on Takashi; the standoff ends when Neela agrees to leave with Takashi. Sean and his father make amends, while Twinkie gives money to Sean to compensate Kamata for the stolen funds. Sean delivers the cash to Kamata and challenges Takashi to a drift, with the loser leaving Tokyo. Kamata agrees on the condition they downhill-drift a mountain pass that only Takashi has descended successfully. Sean and Han's crew restore Sean's father's 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback and tune it to drift specifications, making use of the engine and other components from the wrecked Silvia.

On the mountain, Takashi initially leads, but Sean's practice and training allow him to catch up. Desperate, Takashi rams Sean repeatedly. Takashi eventually misses, subsequently driving off a cliff and crashing as Sean crosses the finish line. Kamata honors his word, and Sean, dubbed the new Drift King, remains in Tokyo. Neela, Twinkie, and Sean, now driving a Silvia S15 Spec R, enjoy themselves at a car meet when Dominic Toretto arrives in a 1970 Plymouth Road Runner to challenge Sean to a race. Sean accepts after Dom proclaims Han was family.

Cast edit

  • Lucas Black as Sean Boswell: A young man interested in street racing.
  • Bow Wow as Twinkie: Sean's first friend he meets in Tokyo, who sells various consumer goods and introduces Sean to drift racing.
  • Sung Kang as Han Lue: DK's business partner and old friend of Dominic Toretto, who befriends Sean and teaches him how to drift.
  • Brian Tee as Takashi: Sean's enemy who is acknowledged as the best drift racer and given the title "Drift King", or simply "D.K.".
  • Nathalie Kelley as Neela: Takashi's girlfriend who later falls for Sean.
  • Sonny Chiba (credited as JJ Sonny Chiba) as Kamata: Takashi's uncle who is the head of the yakuza.
  • Leonardo Nam as Morimoto: Takashi's right-hand man.
  • Brian Goodman as Lieutenant Boswell: Sean's father.
  • Zachery Ty Bryan as Clay: The quarterback of Sean's school whom Sean races at the beginning of the film.
  • Lynda Boyd as Ms. Boswell: Sean's mother who is fed up with moving them around and sends him to Tokyo, Japan to live with his father.
  • Jason Tobin as Earl: One of Han's friends who specializes in tuning the cars, along with Reiko.
  • Keiko Kitagawa as Reiko: Earl's friend and fellow tuner.
  • Nikki Griffin as Cindy: Clay's girlfriend, who suggests that Clay and Sean race to win her.
  • Satoshi Tsumabuki as Exceedingly Handsome Guy: Who starts the first race between Sean and Takashi (cameo)
  • Keiichi Tsuchiya as an elderly fisherman (uncredited cameo)[3]
  • Kazutoshi Wadakura as an elderly fisherman (uncredited cameo)[3]
  • Vin Diesel as Dominic Toretto (uncredited cameo)[3]

Character development after the events of Tokyo Drift edit

Han Lue went on to make a brief appearance in Fast & Furious before returning as a main character in Fast Five, Fast & Furious 6, F9 and Fast X. Sean Boswell, Twinkie and Earl also returned to the series in F9. During the events of F9, Boswell, Twinkie and Earl had left Japan and were involved in rocket development in Germany.[10] How they came from their circumstances of the Japanese drift scene to their work in the military industry is not explained in the series.[11] They are shown testing rockets by attaching them to the top of motor vehicles,[12] which came to use in F9.

Production edit

Development edit

"After I'd seen Better Luck Tomorrow, I knew Justin was a director I wanted to do business with. He was the first we approached, and he loved the idea of filming it. This movie needed enthusiasm, and he was the director to do it."

Producer Neal H. Moritz[13]

Writer Chris Morgan was a fan of the Fast & Furious series, and the producers had an open writing call for the third film. Morgan originally pitched Dominic Toretto in Tokyo, learning to drift and solving a murder, but Universal Pictures wanted a high school-themed story.[14]

Neal H. Moritz, who had produced the two previous installments, began working on the film in 2005. In June 2005, Moritz hired Justin Lin to direct it.[6] Lin, who wasn't intimately familiar with drifting when he was approached to helm the project, recalled, "I was in film school when The Fast and the Furious came out, and I saw it along with a sold-out crowd who just ate it up. What really excited me about directing this film was the chance to harness that energy—create a whole new chapter and up the ante by bringing something new to the table for the audience who loves action and speed."[13] Lin was not enthusiastic at first and was unimpressed by earlier drafts of the script, saying, "I think it's offensive and dated, and I don't have any intention of doing it."[15] The producers allowed him to develop the film in his own way, although it was a constant challenge and he was always battling Universal to make the film better, but Lin said that "to their credit, they were very fair and reasonable."[15]

It was impossible to get the necessary filming permits in Tokyo, so they went ahead without permission. According to Lin, "I wanted to shoot in Shibuya, which is the most crowded place in Tokyo. The cops, they're all so polite, so it takes ten minutes for them to come over and kick you out." Unknown to Lin, the studio had hired a fall guy, who stepped in when the police came to arrest him, and said he was the director and spent the night in jail instead.[16]

Following respectable test screenings of The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, Universal still felt it needed a star cameo appearance; Vin Diesel agreed to reprise his role as Dominic Toretto for a brief cameo, in exchange for Universal's ownership to rights of the Riddick character, in lieu of financial payment.[17][7][18]

Technical edit

 
A Mazda RX-7 Veilside Fortune

Races and stunts were coordinated by Terry J. Leonard, who also served as second unit director. The film used almost 250 vehicles, cutting up 25 and destroying more than 80.[19]

The Nissan Silvia which Sean trashes in his first race in Japan is depicted as having an RB26DETT engine swap which itself is donated to the Ford Mustang. However, the car in the movie was actually powered by the Silvia's original engine.[20] The Veilside body-kitted Mazda RX-7, (dubbed "Fortune"), driven by Han was originally built by Veilside for the 2005 Tokyo Auto Salon, but was later bought by Universal and repainted from dark red, to orange and black, for use in the movie.[21] The car in which Dominic appears in at the end of the film is a highly customized 1970 Plymouth Road Runner, which was built for the SEMA Show.[22]

SCC magazine tested the cars of the film, and noted that the cars in Tokyo Drift were slightly faster in an acceleration match up with the cars from 2 Fast 2 Furious.[23]

Notable drifting personalities Keiichi Tsuchiya (who also made an uncredited cameo in the film), Rhys Millen, and Samuel Hübinette were consulted and employed by the movie to provide and execute the drifting and driving stunts in the film.[24] Nobushige Kumakubo, Kazuhiro Tanaka, Tanner Foust, Rich Rutherford, Calvin Wan and Alex Pfeiffer were also brought in as none of Universal's own stunt drivers could drift.[25] Some racing events were filmed within the Hawthorne Mall parking lot in Los Angeles, as filming in Tokyo required permits the studio was unable to obtain.[26] They instead used street lights and multiple props to help recreate Tokyo.

Toshi Hayama was also brought in to keep elements of the film portrayed correctly, who was contacted by Roger Fan, an old high school friend who starred in Lin's Better Luck Tomorrow. Hayama ensured certain references were deployed correctly, such as the use of nitrous oxide in straights but not in turns, and keeping the use of references to sponsors to a minimum. One of Kamata's henchmen has missing fingers, a punishment typically deployed by the yakuza. He had to have the missing fingers digitally added in to appease cultural concerns.[25]

Music edit

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, composed of 12 songs, was released on June 20, 2006, through Universal Motown. It features contributions from Don Omar, Teriyaki Boyz, Atari Teenage Riot, Brian Tyler, DJ Shadow, Dragon Ash, Evil Nine, Far East Movement, Mos Def, N⋆E⋆R⋆D, Tego Calderón and The 5.6.7.8's. Brian Tyler's Original Score was released on June 27 via Varèse Sarabande, a week after Original Motion Picture Soundtrack.

Reception edit

Box office edit

Tokyo Drift brought in over $23 million on its opening weekend, placing at #3 behind Cars ($33.7 million) and Nacho Libre ($28.3 million).[27][28][29] The film itself was in limited release in Japan (released under the name Wild Speed 3). The US box office was $62,514,415, and it grossed another $96,450,195 internationally, resulting in total receipts of $158,964,610.[5] According to opening weekend polling by Universal the audience was 58% male and 60% under 25.[29]

Critical response edit

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift gained a 37% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews from 142 critics; the average rating is 5/10. The site's consensus reads: "Eye-popping driving sequences coupled with a limp story and flat performances make this Drift a disappointing follow-up to previous Fast and Furious installments."[30] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 45 out of 100 based on reviews from 32 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[31][32] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A− on scale of A to F.[33][29]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times praised the film, giving it three out of four stars, saying that director Justin Lin "takes an established franchise and makes it surprisingly fresh and intriguing," adding that Tokyo Drift is "more observant than we expect" and that "the story [is] about something more than fast cars".[34] Michael Sragow of The Baltimore Sun felt that "the opening half-hour may prove to be a disreputable classic of pedal-to-the-metal filmmaking" and "the last downhill race is a doozy."[35] Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter said that "it's not much of a movie, but a hell of a ride".[36] Todd McCarthy of Variety gave the film a positive review and praised the "good, old-fashioned genre filmmaking done in a no-nonsense, unpretentious style", adding it "stays in high gear most of the way with several exhilarating racing sequences, and benefits greatly from the evocative Japanese setting." McCarthy particularly praised the work of stunt coordinator Terry Leonard.[37]

Michael Medved gave Tokyo Drift one and a half stars out of four, saying: "There's no discernible plot, or emotion, or humor, but the final race is well-staged and nicely shot. ... The main achievement of this vapid time-waster involves its promotion of new appreciation for the first two movies in the series."[38] James Berardinelli wrote: "When it comes to eye candy, the film is on solid ground—it offers plenty of babes and cars (with the latter being more lovingly photographed than the former). However, it is unacceptable that the movie's action scenes (races and chases) are boring and incoherent. If the movie can't deliver on its most important asset, what's the point?"[39] Richard Roeper strongly criticized the film, saying, "The whole thing is preposterous. The acting is so awful, some of the worst performances I've seen in a long, long time."[40] Ethan Alter of Premiere magazine was particularly critical of Black's character: "during the course of this movie, Sean makes so many dumb decisions it's a wonder that anyone wants to be associated with him."[41] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said that Tokyo Drift "suffers from blurred vision, motor drag and a plot that's running on fumes. Look out for a star cameo—it's the only surprise you'll get from this heap."[42] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle thought "It quickly tanks, thanks to a lead character with no goals, focus, appeal or intelligence and a lead actor who's just a little too convincing at playing a dunce", adding: "As for the racing scenes, who cares about the finesse move of drifting, compared to going fast? And who wants to watch guys race in a parking lot?"[43] Matt Singer of Village Voice called it "a subculture in search of a compelling story line, and Black's leaden performance makes you pine for the days of Paul Walker."[44]

Rob Cohen, who directed the first film of the series, was very critical of this film, saying: "If you were to just watch Tokyo Drift, you'd say 'I never want to see anything related to Fast & Furious again.'"[45][46]

Retrospective reviews edit

In critics' rankings of the series, Tokyo Drift had in the past often appeared on the bottom of the list. However, over time it has been seen more favorably, and was ranked second best in a list of all the Fast movies by IndieWire,[47] The Washington Post,[48] TheWrap,[49] Screen Rant,[50] and Collider.[51] Esquire magazine and BuzzFeed News ranked it the best of the series.[52][53]

It has become a favorite with car enthusiasts, seen as the film in the series most specifically dealing with car culture and focusing on cars themselves.[54][55][56] Critics and fans have come to appreciate Tokyo Drift for introducing Sung Kang and Justin Lin to the franchise, and enjoyed the simple story, stylish direction, and that the film never takes itself too seriously. As the film series became more elaborate and incorporated less realistic storylines including heists and spying, the relative simplicity of Tokyo Drift has become more appreciated by critics.[51][57][58] Tokyo Drift has been described as "the movie that kept the series alive" since "Vin Diesel abandoned his other projects, and came back—with Lin at the helm".[59]

In a 2020 interview, Christopher Nolan said that although the first film was his favorite, he had a "soft spot" for Tokyo Drift.[60][61]

Accolades edit

Award Category Nominee Result Ref.
Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie: Male Breakout Star Lucas Black Nominated [62]
Choice Summer Movie: Action/Drama The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Nominated

Legacy edit

Initially seen as a one-off character in an almost straight-to-DVD release, Han Lue became a fan favorite due to his portrayal by Sung Kang and was brought back by director Justin Lin.[59] Following Tokyo Drift, Han is retroactively introduced as a member of Dominic Toretto's crew in the next trilogy of films in the franchise: Fast & Furious (2009), Fast Five (2011), and Fast & Furious 6 (2013), each of which are set prior to Tokyo Drift.[63][64]

Subsequent films have pivoted around Han's Tokyo Drift car crash scene: Fast & Furious 6 foreshadowed that the crash was no accident; Furious 7 (2015) featured a new villain, Deckard Shaw, who intercepted Han during the street race; and F9 (2021) reveals how and why Han's death was staged.

Following Lin's continuing work with the series, he attempted to bring back Lucas Black, with media reports that Black had signed on for a succession of movies. Black returned for Furious 7 in a minor role and was used to establish the story of Han's death, and indicated that he wanted his character's continuing story to be told for the fans, and that he was willing to be involved past his appearance in F9.[65] Lin succeeded in getting all four main actors from Tokyo Drift—Kang, Black, Wow and Tobin—to return to the franchise in F9.[66]

References edit

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  2. ^ Munoz, Lorenza (January 20, 2006). "2 Studios Acquire Financial Partner". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
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External links edit

  • Official site April 2, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  • The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift at AllMovie
  • The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift at IMDb  
  • Behind the Scenes of The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

fast, furious, tokyo, drift, confused, with, tokyo, drifter, tokyo, drift, redirects, here, song, featured, 2006, film, tokyo, drift, fast, furious, 2006, action, film, directed, justin, written, chris, morgan, standalone, sequel, fast, furious, 2001, fast, fu. Not to be confused with Tokyo Drifter Tokyo Drift redirects here For the song featured in the 2006 film see Tokyo Drift Fast amp Furious The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift is a 2006 action film directed by Justin Lin and written by Chris Morgan It is the standalone sequel to The Fast and the Furious 2001 and 2 Fast 2 Furious 2003 and the third installment in the Fast amp Furious franchise It stars Lucas Black and Bow Wow In the film car enthusiast Sean Boswell Black is sent to live in Tokyo with his estranged father and finds solace exploring the city s drifting community The Fast and the Furious Tokyo DriftTheatrical release posterDirected byJustin LinWritten byChris MorganProduced byNeal H MoritzStarringLucas Black Bow WowCinematographyStephen F WindonEdited byFred Raskin Kelly MatsumotoMusic byBrian TylerProductioncompaniesUniversal Pictures 1 Relativity Media 2 Distributed byUniversal Pictures 1 Release datesJune 4 2006 2006 06 04 Gibson Amphitheatre June 16 2006 2006 06 16 United States Running time104 minutesCountriesGermany 3 United States 3 LanguageEnglishBudget 85 million 4 Box office 159 million 5 A third Fast amp Furious film was confirmed in June 2005 when Lin was selected as director Morgan was hired after an open call soon after thus marking the first film in the franchise s longtime association with Lin Morgan actor Sung Kang and composer Brian Tyler 6 7 Principal photography began in August 2005 and lasted until that November with filming locations including Los Angeles and Tokyo making Tokyo Drift the first film in the franchise to feature an international filming location The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift premiered at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Los Angeles on June 4 2006 and was released in the United States on June 16 by Universal Pictures Tokyo Drift grossed 159 million worldwide making it the lowest grossing film in the franchise The film received mixed reviews from critics with praise for its driving sequences but criticism for its screenplay and acting performances In subsequent years Tokyo Drift has garnered a more favorable view with some commentators considering it one of the best of the franchise and becoming a cult film 8 9 It was followed by a prequel trilogy the first being Fast amp Furious in 2009 and the last being Fast amp Furious 6 in 2013 A direct sequel titled Furious 7 was released in 2015 Within the story s continuity the film is set in between Fast amp Furious 6 and Furious 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 2 1 Character development after the events of Tokyo Drift 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Technical 3 3 Music 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 4 3 Retrospective reviews 4 4 Accolades 5 Legacy 6 References 7 External linksPlot editIn Oro Valley Arizona high school troublemaker Sean Boswell races classmate Clay in their respective 1971 Chevy Monte Carlo and 2003 SRT 10 Dodge Viper when they end up ramming each other and crashing While Clay s family wealth helps him escape punishment Sean is sent to live with his father a U S Navy lieutenant stationed in Tokyo to avoid jail time as he is a repeat offender He also befriends military brat Twinkie who introduces him to drift racing Driving to an underground car meet in Twinkie s 2005 Volkswagen Touran Sean gets into a confrontation with Takashi the Drift King DK over Takashi s girlfriend Neela Sean agrees to race Takashi s Nissan Fairlady Z33 in a Silvia S15 Spec S lent to him by retired drift racer Han Lue Unexperienced with drifting Sean wrecks the Silvia and loses To repay the debt Sean agrees to work for Han Han begins teaching drift racing to Sean whom he calls the only person ever to stand up to Takashi who is connected to the yakuza through his uncle Kamata Sean masters the art practicing in a 2006 Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IX and gains further respect after defeating Takashi s lieutenant Morimoto Han and Sean become friends Sean eventually asks Neela out on a date Neela explains that after her mother died she moved in with Takashi s grandmother An irate Takashi assaults Sean the next day telling him to stay away from Neela Neela leaves Takashi and moves in with Sean and Han After Kamata reprimands Takashi for allowing Han to steal from him Takashi and Morimoto confront Han Sean and Neela who flee after Twinkie creates a distraction Takashi and Morimoto pursue the trio with Morimoto crashing and Han buying Sean and Neela time to escape The chase ends when Sean and Neela s Lancer Evo IX crashes while Han s 1994 Veilside RX 7 is broadsided by a 1992 Mercedes Benz W140 S Class sedan and then explodes Takashi later draws a gun on Sean but his father draws on Takashi the standoff ends when Neela agrees to leave with Takashi Sean and his father make amends while Twinkie gives money to Sean to compensate Kamata for the stolen funds Sean delivers the cash to Kamata and challenges Takashi to a drift with the loser leaving Tokyo Kamata agrees on the condition they downhill drift a mountain pass that only Takashi has descended successfully Sean and Han s crew restore Sean s father s 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback and tune it to drift specifications making use of the engine and other components from the wrecked Silvia On the mountain Takashi initially leads but Sean s practice and training allow him to catch up Desperate Takashi rams Sean repeatedly Takashi eventually misses subsequently driving off a cliff and crashing as Sean crosses the finish line Kamata honors his word and Sean dubbed the new Drift King remains in Tokyo Neela Twinkie and Sean now driving a Silvia S15 Spec R enjoy themselves at a car meet when Dominic Toretto arrives in a 1970 Plymouth Road Runner to challenge Sean to a race Sean accepts after Dom proclaims Han was family Cast editMain articles List of Fast amp Furious cast members and List of Fast amp Furious characters Lucas Black as Sean Boswell A young man interested in street racing Bow Wow as Twinkie Sean s first friend he meets in Tokyo who sells various consumer goods and introduces Sean to drift racing Sung Kang as Han Lue DK s business partner and old friend of Dominic Toretto who befriends Sean and teaches him how to drift Brian Tee as Takashi Sean s enemy who is acknowledged as the best drift racer and given the title Drift King or simply D K Nathalie Kelley as Neela Takashi s girlfriend who later falls for Sean Sonny Chiba credited as JJ Sonny Chiba as Kamata Takashi s uncle who is the head of the yakuza Leonardo Nam as Morimoto Takashi s right hand man Brian Goodman as Lieutenant Boswell Sean s father Zachery Ty Bryan as Clay The quarterback of Sean s school whom Sean races at the beginning of the film Lynda Boyd as Ms Boswell Sean s mother who is fed up with moving them around and sends him to Tokyo Japan to live with his father Jason Tobin as Earl One of Han s friends who specializes in tuning the cars along with Reiko Keiko Kitagawa as Reiko Earl s friend and fellow tuner Nikki Griffin as Cindy Clay s girlfriend who suggests that Clay and Sean race to win her Satoshi Tsumabuki as Exceedingly Handsome Guy Who starts the first race between Sean and Takashi cameo Keiichi Tsuchiya as an elderly fisherman uncredited cameo 3 Kazutoshi Wadakura as an elderly fisherman uncredited cameo 3 Vin Diesel as Dominic Toretto uncredited cameo 3 Character development after the events of Tokyo Drift edit Han Lue went on to make a brief appearance in Fast amp Furious before returning as a main character in Fast Five Fast amp Furious 6 F9 and Fast X Sean Boswell Twinkie and Earl also returned to the series in F9 During the events of F9 Boswell Twinkie and Earl had left Japan and were involved in rocket development in Germany 10 How they came from their circumstances of the Japanese drift scene to their work in the military industry is not explained in the series 11 They are shown testing rockets by attaching them to the top of motor vehicles 12 which came to use in F9 Production editDevelopment edit After I d seen Better Luck Tomorrow I knew Justin was a director I wanted to do business with He was the first we approached and he loved the idea of filming it This movie needed enthusiasm and he was the director to do it Producer Neal H Moritz 13 Writer Chris Morgan was a fan of the Fast amp Furious series and the producers had an open writing call for the third film Morgan originally pitched Dominic Toretto in Tokyo learning to drift and solving a murder but Universal Pictures wanted a high school themed story 14 Neal H Moritz who had produced the two previous installments began working on the film in 2005 In June 2005 Moritz hired Justin Lin to direct it 6 Lin who wasn t intimately familiar with drifting when he was approached to helm the project recalled I was in film school when The Fast and the Furious came out and I saw it along with a sold out crowd who just ate it up What really excited me about directing this film was the chance to harness that energy create a whole new chapter and up the ante by bringing something new to the table for the audience who loves action and speed 13 Lin was not enthusiastic at first and was unimpressed by earlier drafts of the script saying I think it s offensive and dated and I don t have any intention of doing it 15 The producers allowed him to develop the film in his own way although it was a constant challenge and he was always battling Universal to make the film better but Lin said that to their credit they were very fair and reasonable 15 It was impossible to get the necessary filming permits in Tokyo so they went ahead without permission According to Lin I wanted to shoot in Shibuya which is the most crowded place in Tokyo The cops they re all so polite so it takes ten minutes for them to come over and kick you out Unknown to Lin the studio had hired a fall guy who stepped in when the police came to arrest him and said he was the director and spent the night in jail instead 16 Following respectable test screenings of The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Universal still felt it needed a star cameo appearance Vin Diesel agreed to reprise his role as Dominic Toretto for a brief cameo in exchange for Universal s ownership to rights of the Riddick character in lieu of financial payment 17 7 18 Technical edit nbsp A Mazda RX 7 Veilside FortuneRaces and stunts were coordinated by Terry J Leonard who also served as second unit director The film used almost 250 vehicles cutting up 25 and destroying more than 80 19 The Nissan Silvia which Sean trashes in his first race in Japan is depicted as having an RB26DETT engine swap which itself is donated to the Ford Mustang However the car in the movie was actually powered by the Silvia s original engine 20 The Veilside body kitted Mazda RX 7 dubbed Fortune driven by Han was originally built by Veilside for the 2005 Tokyo Auto Salon but was later bought by Universal and repainted from dark red to orange and black for use in the movie 21 The car in which Dominic appears in at the end of the film is a highly customized 1970 Plymouth Road Runner which was built for the SEMA Show 22 SCC magazine tested the cars of the film and noted that the cars in Tokyo Drift were slightly faster in an acceleration match up with the cars from 2 Fast 2 Furious 23 Notable drifting personalities Keiichi Tsuchiya who also made an uncredited cameo in the film Rhys Millen and Samuel Hubinette were consulted and employed by the movie to provide and execute the drifting and driving stunts in the film 24 Nobushige Kumakubo Kazuhiro Tanaka Tanner Foust Rich Rutherford Calvin Wan and Alex Pfeiffer were also brought in as none of Universal s own stunt drivers could drift 25 Some racing events were filmed within the Hawthorne Mall parking lot in Los Angeles as filming in Tokyo required permits the studio was unable to obtain 26 They instead used street lights and multiple props to help recreate Tokyo Toshi Hayama was also brought in to keep elements of the film portrayed correctly who was contacted by Roger Fan an old high school friend who starred in Lin s Better Luck Tomorrow Hayama ensured certain references were deployed correctly such as the use of nitrous oxide in straights but not in turns and keeping the use of references to sponsors to a minimum One of Kamata s henchmen has missing fingers a punishment typically deployed by the yakuza He had to have the missing fingers digitally added in to appease cultural concerns 25 Music edit Main article The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift soundtrack Original Motion Picture Soundtrack composed of 12 songs was released on June 20 2006 through Universal Motown It features contributions from Don Omar Teriyaki Boyz Atari Teenage Riot Brian Tyler DJ Shadow Dragon Ash Evil Nine Far East Movement Mos Def N E R D Tego Calderon and The 5 6 7 8 s Brian Tyler s Original Score was released on June 27 via Varese Sarabande a week after Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Reception editBox office edit Tokyo Drift brought in over 23 million on its opening weekend placing at 3 behind Cars 33 7 million and Nacho Libre 28 3 million 27 28 29 The film itself was in limited release in Japan released under the name Wild Speed 3 The US box office was 62 514 415 and it grossed another 96 450 195 internationally resulting in total receipts of 158 964 610 5 According to opening weekend polling by Universal the audience was 58 male and 60 under 25 29 Critical response edit The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift gained a 37 approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews from 142 critics the average rating is 5 10 The site s consensus reads Eye popping driving sequences coupled with a limp story and flat performances make this Drift a disappointing follow up to previous Fast and Furious installments 30 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 45 out of 100 based on reviews from 32 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 31 32 Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A on scale of A to F 33 29 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times praised the film giving it three out of four stars saying that director Justin Lin takes an established franchise and makes it surprisingly fresh and intriguing adding that Tokyo Drift is more observant than we expect and that the story is about something more than fast cars 34 Michael Sragow of The Baltimore Sun felt that the opening half hour may prove to be a disreputable classic of pedal to the metal filmmaking and the last downhill race is a doozy 35 Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter said that it s not much of a movie but a hell of a ride 36 Todd McCarthy of Variety gave the film a positive review and praised the good old fashioned genre filmmaking done in a no nonsense unpretentious style adding it stays in high gear most of the way with several exhilarating racing sequences and benefits greatly from the evocative Japanese setting McCarthy particularly praised the work of stunt coordinator Terry Leonard 37 Michael Medved gave Tokyo Drift one and a half stars out of four saying There s no discernible plot or emotion or humor but the final race is well staged and nicely shot The main achievement of this vapid time waster involves its promotion of new appreciation for the first two movies in the series 38 James Berardinelli wrote When it comes to eye candy the film is on solid ground it offers plenty of babes and cars with the latter being more lovingly photographed than the former However it is unacceptable that the movie s action scenes races and chases are boring and incoherent If the movie can t deliver on its most important asset what s the point 39 Richard Roeper strongly criticized the film saying The whole thing is preposterous The acting is so awful some of the worst performances I ve seen in a long long time 40 Ethan Alter of Premiere magazine was particularly critical of Black s character during the course of this movie Sean makes so many dumb decisions it s a wonder that anyone wants to be associated with him 41 Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said that Tokyo Drift suffers from blurred vision motor drag and a plot that s running on fumes Look out for a star cameo it s the only surprise you ll get from this heap 42 Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle thought It quickly tanks thanks to a lead character with no goals focus appeal or intelligence and a lead actor who s just a little too convincing at playing a dunce adding As for the racing scenes who cares about the finesse move of drifting compared to going fast And who wants to watch guys race in a parking lot 43 Matt Singer of Village Voice called it a subculture in search of a compelling story line and Black s leaden performance makes you pine for the days of Paul Walker 44 Rob Cohen who directed the first film of the series was very critical of this film saying If you were to just watch Tokyo Drift you d say I never want to see anything related to Fast amp Furious again 45 46 Retrospective reviews edit In critics rankings of the series Tokyo Drift had in the past often appeared on the bottom of the list However over time it has been seen more favorably and was ranked second best in a list of all the Fast movies by IndieWire 47 The Washington Post 48 TheWrap 49 Screen Rant 50 and Collider 51 Esquire magazine and BuzzFeed News ranked it the best of the series 52 53 It has become a favorite with car enthusiasts seen as the film in the series most specifically dealing with car culture and focusing on cars themselves 54 55 56 Critics and fans have come to appreciate Tokyo Drift for introducing Sung Kang and Justin Lin to the franchise and enjoyed the simple story stylish direction and that the film never takes itself too seriously As the film series became more elaborate and incorporated less realistic storylines including heists and spying the relative simplicity of Tokyo Drift has become more appreciated by critics 51 57 58 Tokyo Drift has been described as the movie that kept the series alive since Vin Diesel abandoned his other projects and came back with Lin at the helm 59 In a 2020 interview Christopher Nolan said that although the first film was his favorite he had a soft spot for Tokyo Drift 60 61 Accolades edit Award Category Nominee Result Ref Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Male Breakout Star Lucas Black Nominated 62 Choice Summer Movie Action Drama The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift NominatedLegacy editMain articles Han Lue Fast amp Furious 2009 film Fast Five Fast amp Furious 6 Furious 7 and F9 film Initially seen as a one off character in an almost straight to DVD release Han Lue became a fan favorite due to his portrayal by Sung Kang and was brought back by director Justin Lin 59 Following Tokyo Drift Han is retroactively introduced as a member of Dominic Toretto s crew in the next trilogy of films in the franchise Fast amp Furious 2009 Fast Five 2011 and Fast amp Furious 6 2013 each of which are set prior to Tokyo Drift 63 64 Subsequent films have pivoted around Han s Tokyo Drift car crash scene Fast amp Furious 6 foreshadowed that the crash was no accident Furious 7 2015 featured a new villain Deckard Shaw who intercepted Han during the street race and F9 2021 reveals how and why Han s death was staged Following Lin s continuing work with the series he attempted to bring back Lucas Black with media reports that Black had signed on for a succession of movies Black returned for Furious 7 in a minor role and was used to establish the story of Han s death and indicated that he wanted his character s continuing story to be told for the fans and that he was willing to be involved past his appearance in F9 65 Lin succeeded in getting all four main actors from Tokyo Drift Kang Black Wow and Tobin to return to the franchise in F9 66 References edit a b The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift AFI Catalog of Feature Films Retrieved June 27 2017 Munoz Lorenza January 20 2006 2 Studios Acquire Financial Partner Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 25 2020 a b c d e The FAST AND THE FURIOUS TOKYO DRIFT 2006 British Film Institute Retrieved May 1 2017 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Box Office Data The Numbers Retrieved July 29 2011 a b The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Box Office Mojo Retrieved July 29 2011 a b Justin Lin Will Direct The Fast and the Furious 3 About com Archived from the original on April 14 2013 Retrieved July 29 2011 a b Borys Kit September 4 2013 Vin Diesel s Shrewd Move Trading Fast amp Furious Cameo to Own Riddick Rights The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved August 20 2022 Rotten Tomatoes Is Wrong About The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Retrieved March 3 2024 It has developed a cult following that argues it is a franchise high point Cotonou Chris How Tokyo Drift Became a Misunderstood Cult Classic InsideHook Retrieved March 3 2024 McGuire Keegan June 29 2021 F9 Finally Shows What Happened To Sean Boswell After Tokyo Drift Looper Retrieved December 28 2022 Noronha Remus January 21 2022 Fast X New Cast Release Date and Everything We Know So Far Collider Retrieved December 28 2022 David Jamil June 29 2021 F9 Reveals What Happened to Sean After Tokyo Drift CBR Retrieved December 28 2022 a b The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Writing studio April 21 2008 Archived from the original on October 29 2007 Retrieved February 9 2013 Mike Ryan April 11 2017 Vin Diesel Was Written As The Star Of Fast And Furious Tokyo Drift UPROXX a b Yang Jeff June 8 2006 ASIAN POP Switching Gears SFGate Reynolds Simon April 10 2009 F amp F director got man arrested in Tokyo Digital Spy Lang Brent May 22 2013 How an Extreme Movie Makeover Saved Fast amp Furious From Going Direct to DVD TheWrap Archived from the original on April 27 2017 Retrieved September 6 2022 How Vin Diesel Made an Indie Movie September 3 2013 Kenneth Turan June 16 2006 calendarlive com MOVIES REVIEW The Fast and Furious Tokyo Drift Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on June 18 2006 Justin Kaehler June 16 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Car of the Day Han s S15 IGN Justin Kaehler June 13 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Car of the Day VeilSide RX 7 IGN Cars Archived from the original on July 8 2012 Retrieved June 19 2020 Hammer Pure Vision Huffman John Pearley July 2006 Fast Furious amp Drifting Sport Compact Car pp 56 92 ISSN 1062 9629 Archived from the original on July 7 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Video 1535879 IGN News Corporation permanent dead link a b Wong Jonathan September 2006 Interrogation Room What up Toshi Super Street Motor Trend Group p 116 ISSN 1093 071X Huffman John Pearley June 9 2006 The Drifting Drivers and Stuntmen of The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Inside Line Edmunds Archived from the original on January 6 2010 Flagging Cars Pins Chipper Nacho Box Office Mojo June 19 2006 Archived from the original on April 1 2022 Retrieved April 1 2022 Domestic 2006 Weekend 24 June 16 18 2006 Box Office Mojo a b c Josh Friedman June 19 2006 Cars Still Outpacing Competitors Los Angeles Times Our movie has no stars the cars are the stars She also pointed to the movie s rating of A minus in audience surveys by CinemaScore The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift reviews Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved August 17 2023 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift reviews Metacritic CBS Legan Mark Jordan June 16 2006 Slate s Summary Judgment Tokyo Drift The Lake House Nacho Libre NPR Retrieved May 9 2020 The critics are also split on this one FAST AND THE FURIOUS TOKYO DRIFT THE 2006 A CinemaScore Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Ebert Roger June 16 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift movie review 2006 Chicago Sun Times Michael Sragow June 28 2006 Third time s a charm for The Fast and the Furious Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on June 28 2006 Honeycutt Kirk June 14 2006 Fast and Furious Tokyo Drift The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on July 19 2006 Retrieved August 22 2022 McCarthy Todd June 14 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Variety Medved Michael June 21 2006 Review MichaelMedved com Archived from the original on October 22 2006 Berardinelli James Review Fast and the Furious The Tokyo Drift Reel Views Retrieved September 15 2022 Roper Richard July 18 2006 Review At the Movies Archived from the original on October 27 2006 Ethan Alter 2006 The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Premiere Magazine Archived from the original on July 20 2006 Travers Peter June 19 2006 Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Rolling Stone LaSalle Mick June 16 2006 All the excitement of parking lot motoring San Francisco Chronicle Matt Singer 2006 Tracking Shots The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Village Voice Archived from the original on July 3 2006 Kevin Jagernauth October 8 2012 Rob Cohen Hated The First Two Fast amp Furious Sequels Because They Were Just Done For The Money IndieWire Matt Joseph October 7 2012 Rob Cohen Offers xXx Update Wants To Direct Fast And Furious Again We Got This Covered Ehrlich David April 10 2017 All 8 Fast And Furious Movies Ranked From Worst to Best IndieWire Retrieved October 29 2022 Chu Hau June 24 2021 F9 Fast and the Furious Franchise Ranking The Washington Post Gilchrist Todd June 24 2021 All 10 Fast amp Furious Movies Ranked From Worst to Best Photos TheWrap Retrieved October 29 2022 Wilson Kyle June 27 2021 Every Fast amp Furious Movie Ranked From Worst to Best Plus F10 Updates Screen Rant Retrieved October 29 2022 a b Foutch Haleigh April 13 2017 Every Fast and Furious Movie Ranked Collider The most unfairly maligned of the Fast and Furious films Sintumuang Kevin June 25 2021 Every Fast and the Furious Movie Ranked Esquire Retrieved October 29 2022 Alison Willmore April 3 2015 How Furious 7 Stacks Up To The Other Fast And Furious Movies BuzzFeed News Archived from the original on April 2 2015 The driving sequences in The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift are also the series most beautiful DaSilva Steve December 8 2021 Hear Me Out Tokyo Drift Is The Best Fast And Furious Movie For Car People Jalopnik G O Media Retrieved August 22 2022 Tokyo Drift simply has more focus on the cars themselves Franich Darren April 17 2017 Every Fast amp Furious movie ranked Entertainment Weekly this is the one that feels closest in spirit to genuine car culture Chu Li Wei November 2 2020 Fast amp Furious Tokyo Drift remains a cultural touchstone but it s not great From the Intercom Retrieved October 30 2022 C Molly Smith April 5 2015 In defense of The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Entertainment Weekly Sims David April 10 2020 Unexpected Movie Masterpieces to Watch in Quarantine The Atlantic makes this one of the best in the franchise a b Klinkenberg Brendan June 23 2021 Sung Kang s Road Home How His Fast amp Furious Character Became a Lightning Rod GQ Adam Chitwood December 10 2020 Christopher Nolan Loves Fast and Furious Says He Has a Soft Spot for Tokyo Drift Collider Retrieved March 7 2022 Happy Sad Confused Christopher Nolan Vol II on Apple Podcasts Apple Podcasts Retrieved March 7 2022 TEEN CHOICE Nominated People Fox Broadcasting Company 2006 Archived from the original on October 17 2006 Retrieved September 18 2022 Franich Darren May 25 2013 Fast amp Furious 6 Han s Tokyo Drift journey Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on April 1 2022 Retrieved September 11 2023 Davids Brian June 28 2021 F9 Star Sung Kang on That Post Credit Scene and Why Justice for Han Hasn t Been Served Yet The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved September 11 2023 Prosser Keegan May 15 2021 Tokyo Drift s Lucas Black Talks His Fast amp Furious Return CBR Retrieved December 28 2022 Eisenberg Eric September 16 2013 Lucas Black Signs On For Fast amp Furious 7 8 And 9 CinemaBlend External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Official site Archived April 2 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift at AllMovie The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift at IMDb nbsp Behind the Scenes of The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift Portals nbsp United States nbsp Film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift amp oldid 1216127079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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