Film Fast And Furious 7

The seventh installment in Universal's Fast & Furious franchise hit theaters in 2015 and quickly became the highest-grossing entry in the series. The James Wan-directed action flick earned over $1.5 billion worldwide after receiving great reviews. Released in 2015, Furious 7 remains the best movie within the Fast and Furious franchise as it explores the theme of family, honors Paul Walker, and more. We proudly announce that currently metube.id is integrated with RCTI+ to serve you better. Next visit rctiplus.com.

  1. Fast Furious 7 Cast
  2. Film Fast And Furious 7 Complet En Arabe
  3. Film Fast And Furious 7
  4. Film Fast And Furious 7 Complete

The seventh instalment of the Fast & Furious franchise is the strongest yet

Sometimes parting company with a friend is as simple as reaching a fork in the road. WhenPaul Walker, one of the rapidly growing roster of stars of the Fast & Furious franchise, died in a high-speed road accident just over a year ago, the widespread shock at the news of his death was followed by a realisation that the next film would somehow have to address it.

In the 14 years since the series’ modest beginnings, its joyriding heroes have been all but bulletproof. To date, two lead characters have 'died' on screen only to reappear in later instalments. But Walker’s death changed that: it came loaded with an acknowledgement that these ferocious, fast-living young stars were mortal too.

Walker died part-way through the making of Fast & Furious 7; the film was completed with help from his two younger brothers, Caleb and Cody, and some subtle, unobtrusive computer graphics. Ghouls hoping to spot the joins will be disappointed. Only in a martial-arts brawl in a warehouse in the film’s final, Los Angeles-set act, are the use of a body double and tactical shadows conspicuous, and there are at least five more pressing reasons than those that the scene is hard to follow. But as a commemoration of his talent – the peculiar one, vital to Hollywood’s survival, of being able to shine like a brilliant-cut gemstone the moment you climb behind a steering wheel – the film does him justice.

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In a gut-twisting mid-film car chase through the mountains of Azerbaijan, we see his character, the FBI agent Brian O’Conner, tightrope-walk across the roof of a bus as it teeters on a crumbling cliff-edge. The film cuts away to another scene of Vin Diesel and Jason Statham careering through a forest driving muscle cars like dodgems, but you wish the camera had stayed with Walker, and allowed him to complete the stunt without allowing us a pause for breath. Even low-born, trash cinema like this can cheat time and beat death. That’s the movies’ single greatest power – and why I found myself unexpectedly shedding a tear at the film’s perfectly judged, sunbathed, final fade to white.

But few people (Green Party members?) go to Fast & Furious films to cry. They go, as the title suggests, for loud cars and bad tempers, of which this seventh instalment delivers plenty – and perhaps a little too many. At two-and-a-quarter hours, Fast & Furious 7 is long and lumpy, and expectations that a new director – James Wan, recruited from the relatively cheap Saw and Insidious horror series – might bring a Roger Corman-like efficiency to the franchise go mostly unmet.

What Wan does understand, though, is what made the earlier movies internationally successful, and how to replicate it. Just as the early James Bond films allowed cinemagoers passage to foreign countries in the 1960s and 1970s, so the Fast & Furious films do with foreign street cultures. (The first film was based around Walker’s character’s infiltration of an illegal Los Angeles drag-racing syndicate.)

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Where the fifth film had Brazil and the sixth London, the seventh decamps to Abu Dhabi, for the purpose of locating a computer chip, The God’s Eye, that Dominic Toretto (Diesel) and the gang are trying to locate, while occasionally swatting off Statham’s murderous villain.

Or at least, that’s what the script says. The real point of their visit, of course, is to ogle the country’s finely tuned, outrageously expensive supercars – and then drive them, very fastly and furiously, over dunes and out of windows. The film is a day-pass to a dream lifestyle, with all the gold furniture, white tuxedos and bronzed bottoms that entails. And unlike Bond, its characters, like the ex-con playboy Roman Pearce (Tyrese Gibson) and the ace mechanic Tej Parker (Chris ‘'Ludacris' Bridges), aren’t too cool to savour it.

This cast, or “family”, as the film never misses a chance to call them, has snowballed with every film. As the Fast & Furious series rolled round the world, it kept picking up actors and actresses in its path, giving it an organic multiracial appeal that studios probably spend tens of thousands trying to manufacture in other franchises.

New additions to the family include Kurt Russell as a grizzled governmental order-giver, the former Hollyoaks actress Nathalie Emmanuel as a gifted hacker, and the martial artists Ronda Rousey and Tony Jaa as star henchmen you hope might be turned in future episodes. They’re all welcome. In Fast & Furious films, they always are.

The series’ single most popular star – Dwayne Johnson, an American-Canadian former wrestler of mixed Black Nova Scotian and Samoan heritage – disappointingly sits most of this chapter out. But he makes the most of his limited screen time – and while he’s leading Statham’s (white) villain to his cell in chains, there’s a charge to Johnson’s line “If you want to escape, you bes’ start diggin’, boy” that tips the wink to the audience that the old racial hierarchies are being overturned.

I’ve always enjoyed the idea of the Fast & Furious films more than their execution, but this feels like the series’ strongest, even though some of its action sequences are so muddled they can barely walk straight. One set piece, a drone attack on Los Angeles, plays out almost in its entirety while Diesel and Statham’s characters stand on the roof of a car park and hit each other with massive spanners. After 15 minutes, surely even they’d give up and ponder the subtext.

But for each of those moments, there are two more that work. Walker’s bus-roof scramble, for instance; or the scene in which a £2.3 million cherry-red Lykan HyperSport jumps between the three Etihad Towers, and everything – vehicle, driver, window-shards, audience – remains silently suspended in mid-air for what feels like minutes. You couldn’t mistake this for polished blockbuster filmmaking: perhaps if you could, it wouldn’t be Fast & Furious. But it speaks straight to your adrenal glands, and for the most part, the conversation flows.

A Detailed Look at The Full Cast of Furious 7

The Fast and the Furious has been one of the most successful action film series and it’s made apparent as we anxiously await the seventh release. Since the first film’s release in 2001, the auto industry saw a surge of new fans looking to modify their rides just like the characters of the flick. Whether you’re a fan of cars or just a fan of car movies, Furious 7 is sure to be exciting. From the original favorites to a few new characters, here’s a look at some of the faces you’ll see in the April 3rd release.

Film fast and furious 7 doble farsi

Paul Walker (Brian O’Conner)
Sure, Paul Walker may have appeared in other films, but he is certainly most recognizable as the lead character from The Fast and the Furious series. The films reflected his passion of racing. Walker competed in the Redline Time Attack and owned a high-end vehicle performance shop called Always Evolving. During production of Furious 7, Walker tragically died in a car accident with his friend and business partner, Roger Rodas, shortly after an event for Walker’s charity Reach Out WorldWide.

Vin Diesel (Dominic Toretto)
Vin Diesel’s start into acting was unexpected. At the age of seven, he broke into a theatre with friends with the intention of vandalizing the building. Instead, a woman stopped them and offered $20 and a script as long as they attended every day after school. From there he continued acting and eventually got his major screen start in Saving Private Ryan but his career exploded when he starred opposite Paul Walker in The Fast and the Furious.

Fast Furious 7 Cast

Michelle Rodriguez (Letty Ortiz)
Michelle Rodriguez may have a pretty face, but she always wants you to know that she is a tough woman as well. In addition to her reoccurring role in The Fast and the Furious series, she’s also played the role of strong characters in Avatar, Resident Evil, and the television series “Lost,” as well as her first lead role in Girlfight.

Jordana Brewster (Mia Toretto)
She got her start as a teen in the soap opera industry, but Jordana Brewster had demonstrated that she is more than just a pretty face. While reaching stardom through her roles in The Fast and the Furious, Brewster continued her education until graduating from Yale University in 2003.

Film Fast And Furious 7 Complet En Arabe

Tyrese Gibson (Roman Pearce)
Tyrese Gibson may have gotten his start as an R&B singer, but the screen was calling his name. The Grammy Award-winning artist first appeared in small cameos on television series before becoming an MTV VJ. It wasn’t long before his role in The Fast and the Furious projected him into the film world. He continues to release music albums while he pursues the world of film production.

Film Fast And Furious 7

Chris ‘Ludacris’ Bridges (Tej Parker)
Ludacris may be known more for his platinum award-winning rap albums and love for Atlanta, Georgia, but he’s made his place in his role in The Fast and the Furious series. He’s continued his acting career with small roles in films and in television series.

Dwayne Johnson (Luke Hobbs)
Dwayne Johnson is most recognizably known for his career as a professional wrestler named “The Rock.” His muscular physique led him to a role in The Mummy Returns and from there he went on to appear in many television series and films. Since Fast Five he has played a lead role in the series and still maintains his wrestling career.

Jason Statham (Deckard Shaw)
Jason Statham may not have been in the previous six releases, but he is no stranger to the world of action flicks or even car-themed action flicks. You first saw him in Lock, Stock, And Two Smoking Barrels, but he’s also participated in hits like Snatch, The Transporter, The Expendables trilogy, and even did a voiceover for Gnomeo & Juliet. Yet you may most recognize him from his roles as Handsome Rob in The Italian Job. Statham portrays the main antagonist in Furious 7 who is avenging his brother’s death.

Film Fast And Furious 7 Complete

Many of the faces you know and recognize from the six existing films will make appearances as their roles are revived. You may see some favorite faces such as Lucas Black, Sung Kang, and Gal Gadot make their return. You’ll even see some familiar faces make their The Fast and the Furious debut including Ronda Rousey, Kurt Russell, and Iggy Azalea.