The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift
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The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift | |
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Poster for the film |
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Directed by | Justin Lin |
Produced by | Neal H. Moritz |
Written by | Chris Morgan |
Starring | Lucas Black Bow Wow Sung Kang Brian Tee Jason Tobin Nathalie Kelley Keiko Kitagawa |
Music by | Brian Tyler |
Cinematography | Jan Kiesser Stephen F. Windon |
Editing by | Dallas Puett Fred Raskin |
Distributed by | Universal Studios |
Release date(s) | June 16, 2006 |
Running time | 104 min |
Language | English |
Preceded by | 2 Fast 2 Furious |
IMDb profile |
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) is a spin-off to The Fast and the Furious and its sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious. The film features a new cast of characters and a different setting (Tokyo, Japan) from the other two films. Contrary to popular belief, the movie was not entirely shot in Tokyo. Some parts of the movie were shot in a Japanese American ethnic enclave north of downtown Los Angeles. Certain areas of the Los Angeles set were covered with props and lights (like the trees, covered with Christmas lights) to create the illusion of the Tokyo style.
Contents |
[edit] Plot outline
The film opens with Sean Boswell (Lucas Black) looking over a school pep rally with contempt. As he approaches his car (a street sleeper Chevrolet Monte Carlo), Sean meets Cindy (Nikki Griffin), who is in a convertible Dodge Viper. Cindy's boyfriend, Clay (Zachery Ty Bryan) notices her flirting with Sean, and he and his friends confront Sean. As Sean drives off, Clay throws a baseball through the back windshield of Sean's car. Sean steps out of his car with a wrench, but Cindy intervenes by promising to date whichever of the two guys wins a street race. Sean ends up winning the race, but Clay retaliates by ramming Sean's car with his own.
After being arrested by the police, Clay and Cindy are released, but Sean is held in custody due to the fact that he has a prior record. Sean's mother (Lynda Boyd) comes to collect her son, and it is revealed that they've had to move several times due to Sean's racing. Frustrated, she decides to send Sean to Tokyo to live with his dad.
When Sean arrives for the first day of school, he notices an attractive girl named Neela (Nathalie Kelley) in his homeroom. Later in the day, Sean also meets Twinkie (Bow Wow), a cheap hustler who sells American goods such as Air Jordan sneakers, Snickers bars, and the like. As Twinkie is trying to make his sale, Sean notices the detachable Sparco steering wheel to Twinkie's car, a Volkswagen Touran that has been made to resemble the Incredible Hulk. Sean asks where all the action is, and Twinkie takes him to an underground parking lot, where we see many tuned Silvias, Mazda RX-8 and a Veilside Honda NSX.
Sean sees Neela and they start talking while DK, short for Drift King, (Brian Tee) and his business partner Han (Sung Kang) talk and wonder who this Gaijin (Japanese for foreigner) is. DK walks over and claims Neela. Twinkie stops Sean from getting into a confrontation and tells him that DK's uncle is part of the Yakuza crime syndicate. Sean doesn't back down though, and DK challenges him to a race. Han gives Sean the keys to his ride, a Nissan Silvia S15 Spec-R, and the race is on.
At the very beginning Sean has a big lead on DK, but DK just smiles at Sean. Sean sees a very sharp turn, but doesn't go around in time, and smashes Han's ride. DK on the other hand pulls off a perfect drift and he's soon way ahead of Sean. DK ends up winning in a blowout and afterwards, Han just tells Sean not to leave town. Han also reveals he's been doing business with DK, and that DK is trying to prove his worth to his uncle by helping with the money laundering.
When Sean comes home his dad tells him that he knows what's going on. He threatens to send Sean back home (i.e. to jail) if he ever catches him street racing again.
The next day, Sean gets picked up by Han in his new Veilside Fortune Mazda RX-7 and he tells Sean that he will be working with him to pay off the car that Sean smashed in the race with DK. Sean is sent inside a public bath/sauna and is forced to ask a heavily tattooed man for money that he owes Han. After beating and tossing Sean out of the building (literally) the wrestler gives Han his money.
Later that night, Sean is driving Han's Veilside RX-7 down the highway, and after beating another car in a road race, two cops register his speed around 197 km/h but Sean notices that they don't give chase. Han explains that the cop cars are just stock models, and can't go over 180, so they don't even bother to try and catch him. Sean asks Han why he doesn't drift, and he says that there is rarely any good reason to do so. Sean asks why people do it then, so Han shows him by doing donuts around two girls in a Nissan Skyline GT-R R33, and they proceed to give him their phone numbers.
Han takes Sean to a party with lots of beautiful girls, and he takes him to his garage inside. Han gives him a heavily modified Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII, and later on the roof, Han tells Sean that "Life is simple, you make choices, and never look back". Later Sean breaks up a fight between Twinkie and Morimoto, a guy in DK's crew, over a broken iPod. Twinkie is pissed and tells him that everyone will want refunds now.
Sean begins to learn how to drift with the help of Han. Meanwhile, two fishermen make snide comments about Sean's initial technique. However, he starts getting better and he easily beats Morimoto in a race. DK is noticeably mad over Seans rise in fame.
In class later, Sean sends Neela a message on her laptop asking why she never shows him her drifting. She responds with "You never ask" and we see them in Neela's Mazda RX-8, where she tells him that her mother was pretty much a prostitute, and she died when Neela was young. Neela also reveals that DK's grandmother took her in and when they were growing up, she and DK came to the current mountain she's drifting on with Sean, to watch the older kids drift.
The next day, DK pulls up to the harbor where Sean is practicing drifting and he punches Sean until he bleeds from the mouth. DK tells him to stay away from Neela. At school, Neela notices Sean's bruises so she confronts DK in his shop and tells him that they're done. DK says that she owes him and that she'd have ended up just like her mother if it wasn't for him and his family. She slaps him and promptly leaves. She shows up at Han's garage, crying, and Sean holds her and takes care of her.
Meanwhile, DK's uncle comes to see him. His uncle tells him that there is a discrepancy in the books, and that Han must be cheating them out of money. His uncle sighs and says to DK "I wish your father was here," but he starts to laugh. DK is noticeably shaken and scared.
DK confronts Han in his garage and he punches him and pulls out a Sig P226. (DK:I put my reputation on the line for you! We were partners! You think you can keep your side deals from me?!) Han tells him that "this is what we do", and DK cocks his Sig. Twinkie thinks fast and creates a distraction, giving Han, Sean & Neela a chance to escape. A car chase ensues through the Tokyo streets. Morimoto (driving a gold Top Secret Nissan Fairlady Z) rams Sean and when he tries to pass him, he crashes head-on into an oncoming Toyota Aristo and it triggers a massive pile-up. DK is now after Sean, ramming him continuously until Han gets in his way. Sean tries to flee with Neela but he crashes in to an oncoming car, wrecking his Lancer Evolution VIII instantly. DK (driving his Black/Grey Nissan Fairlady Z) overtakes Han and turns his car 180 degrees and he is now driving backwards. DK wields his gun and starts firing at the windshield of the Veilside RX-7 to try and kill Han but Han dodges and rams DK while he is driving backwards, spinning him, but then Han is hit hard by an oncoming car and flips his vehicle, landing upside-down. Han, injured and bleeding on the face, is pinned in his wreck of a car. He reaches out toward Sean. Sean starts to rush to his rescue but the gasoline leaking from his car catches fire and the car explodes, killing Han.
Sean and Neela go to his dad's house but DK follows them. After getting punched three times by Sean, DK pulls out his gun. Sean's dad however draws and aims his Service Beretta M9 at DK and tells him to leave. DK refuses to leave unless Neela goes with him. Neela agrees and they drive off. Sean's dad wants him to get on a plane that night for his own safety, but Sean says it's his mess and he has to fix it.
Twinkie meets Sean and gives him the money that Han took from the Yakuza. Sean takes it to the local Yakuza club, and gives it to DK's uncle. He tells him that he wants to race DK and whoever loses has to leave town because they've both dishonored him. DK's uncle agrees.
Sean goes back to Han's garage, but all the cars are gone, except for the Silvia S15 he ruined in his first race at the parking garage. They take out the Silvia S15's RB26DETT engine, and place it into the 1967 Ford Mustang that Sean's father had been building in his free time. The race is on a touge that DK has the advantage on, because he's the only one to ever make it down to the bottom in one piece.
The race is a sequence of drifts down the hills and there is danger at every turn. Sean's Ford Mustang tries to catch up to DK's Fairlady Z, but when they get side-by-side DK rams him, scraping the paint across their cars. As they go further downhill, DK jumps a rock suffering major damage to his car. At one sharp turn, DK makes a wide drift and collides into a parked car and Sean takes the lead. As a final desperate maneuver DK tries to fishtail Sean, but Sean suddenly stops the car, sending DK flying off the edge of the turn. As Sean makes his way towards the finish line, DK's car comes dropping down, almost crushing the Mustang and killing Sean but he manages to narrowly evade the falling car before it hits the ground. Sean makes his way across the finish line, victorious. The now dethroned DK survives the crash but he suffers a humiliating defeat at the hands of Sean. DK's uncle tells Sean he is free to go, and DK presumably leaves Tokyo.
Later, Sean is hanging out in the underground parking lot with his friends and Twinkie comes up and tells him someone wants to race the new Drift King. He says the guy has been beating everyone across Asia. Sean says no at first but then Twinkie tells him that this guy knew Han and that he considered Han to be family. The mystery car pulls up and we see that it's none other than Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel; from the first "Fast and the Furious" movie), driving his 1970 Plymouth Roadrunner. Dominic tells Sean that he won his car from Han a few years ago and Sean states that he didn't know Han was into American muscle. As the movie comes to a close Sean tells Dom that this is no 10 second race. He responds with "I got nothin' but time", Dominic then says "You ready kid?". Neela counts off the race; the cars take off, and the movie ends without disclosing the race results.
Before the credit roll is shown, a "Don't try this at home" message informs the audience that the racing stunts are performed by professional drivers in controlled environments, and that such practices are dangerous and illegal and by no means should be imitated. Even though the actors didn't do their own driving for the film, they underwent "Drifting School" sessions to get a feel for how the stunt is performed, and to act appropriately for their Bluescreen performances. (Information obtained from DVD bonus content).
[edit] Featured cars
The following cars are featured in the film:[1]
Car | Color | Year | Driven by | Condition/Fate in Film |
APR Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII MR | Red/Black APR Sponsor Graphics | 2006 | Sean Boswell[2] | Wrecked by the incoming car on the side while fleeing, triggering few more cars crashing. |
Ford Mustang Fastback (RB26DETT engine swap) | Dark Green/White Stripes | 1967 | Sean Boswell[3] | Cosmetic damage throughout the entire body. Still driveable. |
Chevrolet Monte Carlo | Beige/Gray Primer ( Matte/Flat ) | 1971 | Sean Boswell[4] | Rolled multiple times during race with Clay's Dodge Viper. Wrecked and landed upside down. Scrapped by Pima County Sheriff's Department following Sean's arrest. |
C-West Nissan Silvia S15
"Mona" |
Dark Blue/Orange | 2000 | Sean Boswell (originally Han)[5] | Major cosmetic and suspension damage due to Sean's inexperience with drifting. Using a RB26DETT engine taken out of a Nissan Skyline GTR [2.6L Straight Six, Twin Turbo]. |
Veilside Mazda RX-8 | Aqua/Blue/Black fade | 2006 | Neela[6] | Only really seen when Neela takes Sean to the drift mountains, accompanied with a Falken Nissan Skyline R34, a 1997 Apexi Mazda RX-7, blue Nissan Silvia S15 and a sponsored Nissan 200SX. |
Veilside Nissan Fairlady Z (350Z in america) | Flat Black/Gloss Black/Flat Dark Grey | 2006 | D.K.[7] | Flipped multiple times and fell off the road several hundred feet down and landed upside down during the race with the 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback. |
Veilside Mazda RX-7 | Orange/Black two tone | 1994 | Han[8] | Wrecked after a side collision with a Mercedes-Benz S-Class and flipped upside down. Ruptured Fuel lines leaked, ignited, and exploded, killing Han. |
Top Secret Nissan Fairlady Z | Gold Fade/Black Details | 2002 | Morimoto[9] | Smashed into a dark green Toyota Aristo at high speed during the city chase. |
Top Secret Nissan Fairlady Z | Blue/Silver | 2003 | Tea Hair[10] | Major cosmetic damage to roof when crushed by Han's garage door |
DRFT Nissan Silvia S13 | Medium Blue/White Side Stripes/DRFT on hood | 1993 | Virgil[11] | |
Mazda RX-8 | Red | 2006 | Jan Rodriguez[12] | |
Mercedes-Benz S-Class | Black | 1999 | Kamata | |
Volkswagen Golf R32 | Silver/Rose | 2006 | Reiko | Possible front end damage.[13] |
Dodge Viper SRT10 | Red | 2004 | Clay | Collided at high speed with a large concrete pipe, completely destroying it. |
Plymouth Roadrunner | Silver/Blue | 1970 | Dominic | Ended the movie by racing Sean's Nissan Silvia |
Volkswagen Touran | Green | 2004 | Sean (owned by Twinkie) | Exhibited to Sean by Twinkie and later driven by Sean in the film. The car is inspired by The Hulk and is the car in which Sean drives to his introduction to Tokyo's Drift racing circuit. |
[edit] Rumors and information leaked prior to release
Given the nature of the movie, fans of the import and drifting scenes cast a critical eye on information that leaked prior to the release of the movie.
- Modified Magazine pictured in their October 2005 editorial that two of the cars in the film were a Veilside RX-7 and a 1960's Ford Mustang Fastback with an engine swap from a Nissan Skyline. The article also mentioned possible appearances of other show cars from the various Tuning firms.
- The website MovieCarZ was one of several car locating firms that posted a list of wanted cars for the film, mainly background and set cars. According to the Modified Magazine editorial, most of the "Star Cars" were ones from Tuning firms and already filled. Among some of the wanted cars on their list were the Toyota Corolla AE86 (a homage to the anime Initial D); mainstays in the tuning world like Toyota Supra, Mazda RX-7, Nissan Silvia, and Honda Civic; Luxury and Exotic Cars (possibly Japanese luxury cars like the Toyota Celsior/Lexus LS400 and the Nissan Cefiro/Infiniti I30), RHD (Right-Hand-Drive) cars, and even Japanese Classics.
- The forums at Toyota Nation had a posting where the set of F&F: Tokyo Drift took over a portion of downtown LA. In the spy shots, a fleet of modified RX-7's, Nissan 350Z's, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolutions, and a fleet of keicars were stored in a lot, while other shots showed the set crew putting up Japanese signs over existing signs and setting up shots.[14]
- Sport Compact Car tested the cars of the film, and noted that the cars in Tokyo Drift were slightly faster in an acceleration matchup with the cars from 2 Fast 2 Furious.[15]
- Hot Rod Magazine reviewed the domestic cars of the film (The RB26 equipped Mustang, the Monte Carlo, and the Dodge Viper) and noted that most of the drifting action done by the Mustang were handled by Mustangs equipped with the Windsor Engine. They also lamented the possibility that tuners might swap in Japanese motors into American cars.[16]
[edit] Reaction to the film
[edit] Fans' Response
Despite mixed reviews, Tokyo Drift brought in over $24 million on its opening weekend. The movie itself was in limited release in Japan and South Korea. As of November 17, 2006 the domestic box office take has totalled $62,514,415 with another $95,318,994 from the foreign box office, resulting in total receipts of $157,833,409.[1]
[edit] Critics' Response
- The film received mixed reviews by film critics. Michael Medved gave Tokyo Drift 1 1/2 stars (out of four) saying, "There’s no discernible plot...or emotion, or humor."[17]
- James Berardinelli from Reelviews also gave it 1 1/2 stars out of four, saying that "There's something odd about Tokyo Drift. It fetishizes cars in a way that's almost unhealthy. When the vehicles appear in the same scene as a bunch of scantily clad Asian women, the camera is drawn not to cleavage but to carburetors."[18]
- Richard Roeper also levelled strong criticism of the film, writing: "The whole thing is preposterous. The acting is so awful, some of the worst performances I’ve seen in a long, long time."[19]
- Several critics found much to like about the film, including Roeper's cohort Roger Ebert, who rated the film three out of four stars saying director Justin Lin "takes an established franchise and makes it surprisingly fresh and intriguing," and also concludes that the film is "more observant than we expect... the story about something more than fast cars."[20]
- Empire Magazine in the UK gave the film 3 out of 5 stars.
[edit] Trivia
[edit] Cameos
- The Silvia S15 that Sean wrecked at the beginning of the movie was the same S15 that Sean uses to race Dominic at the end of the movie. Sean rreplaced the damaged cosmetic parts, put the engine back in after using it in a Ford Mustang Fastback to race D.K. , and changed the paint and graphics. The car was sold for $12,007,459 to Saif Masood after the filming of the movie.
- Vin Diesel makes an uncredited appearance as Dominic Toretto (his character from the original Fast and the Furious film), claiming to be a friend of Han's.
- Real life "Drift King" and drift pioneer Keiichi Tsuchiya also makes an appearance during the scenes where Lucas Black's character (Sean Boswell) is learning how to drift. He appears as an old fisherman who makes side comments on Sean's lack of proper drift technique.
- Rhys Millen, the primary stunt driver in the film, has a cameo appearance as one of the passengers in the airplane scene.
- John Cho, the Korean American actor who appeared in Justin Lin's Better Luck Tomorrow also appears in the airplane scene.
- Former sumo wrestler Konishiki makes an appearance in the bathhouse scene as one of the collection marks that owes money to Han.
- Japanese pop superstars Ayumi Hamasaki and Mika Nakashima can be seen in background pans around Tokyo.
- Import Models Verena Mei and Mari Jaramillo are in the Skyline drifted around in circles by Han. Mei is also a pro drag racer and drifter.
- During the start lines near the beginning and at the end of the movie, Import Models Aiko Tanaka (Setto) and Kaila Yu (Ready) flank the start line. Satoshi Tsumabuki (Go) starts off the first race in the parking garage.
- Toshi Hayama, the English language speaking commentator at both the US and UK D1 Grand Prix events, makes an appearance at the gate to the parking garage and as a passenger in the airplane scene.
- Japanese comedienne Rie Shibata plays the teacher that Sean encounters on his first day at school.
- MC Hammer makes numerous cameo appearances throughout the film, hawking electronics and cell phones on advertisements. The cameos stem from a chance encounter with Lin at the Sundance Film Festival before he made Better Luck Tomorrow.[21]
[edit] Technical
- The RB26DETT (Motor found in the Nissan Skyline GT-R) powered Mustang in the film has been subject to much criticism by fans of both USDM cars and JDM cars. The criticism grew when it was revealed that the car itself barely had any screen time, and regular stunt Mustangs used for the drifting scenes were powered by 351cid Windsor V8 engines.[22][23]
- According to SCC, 1 Mustang received the RB26 swap, while 5 other Mustangs were created for drifting purposes. 2 were destroyed in the process.[24]
- In addition, the RB26 Mustang was shown to be faster than its V8 powered kin, with times of 0-60 in 5.38 seconds, and the quarter mile in 13.36 seconds at 109.83 MPH. The V8 powered machine was designed for drifting and suffered from no traction, while the inline 6 version was set strictly for straight line performance.[25]
- The S15 Silvia which Black's character trashes in his first race in Japan is depicted as having an RB26DETT engine swap which itself is donated to the Mustang. However, the car used was actually powered by the S15's base SR20DET engine.[26]
- The Veilside Fortune body-kitted RX-7 driven by Sung Kang's character was originally built by Veilside for the 2005 Tokyo Auto Salon but was later bought by Universal and repainted (the original was dark red, not orange and black like in the film).[27]
- Notable drifting personalities Keiichi Tsuchiya, Rhys Millen, and Samuel Hubinette were consulted and employed by the movie to provide and execute the drifting and driving stunts in the film.[28] Tanner Foust, Rich Rutherford, Calvin Wan, and Alex Pfeiffer were also brought in when it was revealed that none of Universal's own stunt drivers could drift.[29]
- Toshi Hayama was also brought in to keep elements of the film portrayed correctly after being contacted by Roger Fan, an old high school friend that starred in Justin Lin's Better Luck Tomorrow, the organizers of the Japanese D1 Grand Prix series, and his former boss at A'PEXi. Among them are keeping certain references in check (the usage of Nitrous Oxide in straights but not in turns, keeping the usage of references from sponsors to a minimum, etc.).[30]
- Toshi Hayama also claims that a prop car was "stolen" by some of the action stars and taken for an impromptu "Drift Session" and never returned by the stars.[31]
[edit] Inside references
- The sentō proprietor is reading Initial D, an anime and manga franchise about a young teenage boy whom has a hidden talent for touge racing in the mountain passes of Gunma Prefecture.
- DK bets his "86 Corolla" with Han on the result of a race, while Han puts up the "72 Skyline". "Drift King" Keiichi Tsuchiya is famously known for drifting in a Toyota AE86 Corolla Sprinter Trueno, while the 1972 Nissan Skyline (popularly known by the Japanese as the Hakosuka (ハコスカ), meaning box-Skyline) happens to be Keiichi Tsuchiya's first drift car.
[edit] Miscellaneous
- The drifting done inside the parking lot was actually filmed in Los Angeles's old Hawthorne Mall parking lot.[32]
- A section of Wilshire Blvd. in Downtown Los Angeles was retrofitted with signs and other props to resemble Tokyo's Shinjuku District during the city chase scene.
- An intersection in Burbank, CA, was used to film the Shibuya District high-speed drift scene. Thousands of boxes were placed to represent the buildings, which were later added to the final print via CG, along with the swarm of pedestrians.
- The North Hollywood station of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority Red Line subway line, in addition to a Red Line train, were used as stand-ins for the subway station and train that Sean and Neela flee to following the accident that killed Han.
[edit] Original Soundtrack
- 1. Teriyaki Boyz - "Tokyo Drift (Fast & Furious)" - 4:15
- 2. DJ Shadow feat. Mos Def - "Six Days the Remix" - 3:53
- 3. The 5.6.7.8's - "The Barracuda" - 2:28
- 4. Evil Nine - "Restless" - 4:56
- 5. Far*East Movement - "Round Round" - 3:21
- 6. N.E.R.D. - "She Wants to Move" - 3:35
- 7. Teriyaki Boyz - "Cho Large" - 5:15
- 8. Dragon Ash - "Resound" - 4:09
- 9. Atari Teenage Riot - "Speed" - 2:50
- 10. Don Omar feat. Tego Calderon - "Bandoleros" - 5:07
- 11. Don Omar - "Conteo" - 3:18
- 12. Brian Tyler feat. Slash - "Mustang Nismo" - 2:23
[edit] Music from the movie that is not on the soundtrack CD
- Kid Rock - "Bawitdaba"(found on the CD "Devil Without a Cause")
- Fanny Pack - Hey Mami
- MC Hammer - I Got It From the Town
- Jake One - Jake Alert
- Pharrell feat. Daddy Yankee - Mamacita
- Qypthone - Mission Banana Muffins
- GRITS - "My Life Be Like (Ooh Aah)"
- Brian Tyler - Neela Drifts (found on the Tokyo Drift score soundtrack CD)
- The Crystal Method - Realizer
- N.E.R.D. - Rockstar (Jason Nevins Mix)
- Brian Tyler - Saucin' (found on the Tokyo Drift score soundtrack CD)
- Juelz Santana - "There It Go (The Whistle Song)" (Found on CD "What The Game's Been Missing!")
- tobyMac - The Slam (song from the trailer)
- The Prodigy - You'll Be Under My Wheels (found on the CD "Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned", is also on the Need for Speed: Most Wanted Soundtrack)
[edit] References
- ^ Kris Palmer The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Motorbooks ISBN 0-7603-2568-5 ISBN-13 9780760325681
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 94-99
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 94-99
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 70-75
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 76-79
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 86-89
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 90-93
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 94-99
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 100-103
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 106-109
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 104-105
- ^ The Fast and the Furious The Official Car Guide Pg 86-89
- ^ The DVD features a deleted scene where Earl (Jason J. Tobin) shoots his mouth about everyone in the garage. As a result, he gets tied up to the roof of the Golf R32 while Twinkie (Bow Wow) and Reiko (Keiko Kitagawa) take it for a spin.
- ^ "Toyota Nation Forums Posting." Toyotanation.com. Accessed 24 February 2006
- ^ Sport Compact Car "Fast, Furious, & Drifting" By John Pearley Huffman July 2006 Pg. 56-92
- ^ Hot Rod Magazine "Build Fast. Fabricate Furiously." By John Pearley Huffman July 2006 Pg. 56-64
- ^ "Michael Medved's Eye On Entertainment." MichaelMedved.com. Accessed 21 June 2006
- ^ "Review: Fast and The Furious, The: Tokyo Drift." ReelViews: James Berardinelli's Movie Reviews. Accessed 3 July 2006
- ^ Richard Roper rottentomatoes.com accessed July 18, 2006
- ^ "Reviews :: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift." RogerEbert.com. Accessed 3 July 2006
- ^ Interrogation Room: What up, Toshi? by Jonathan Wong Super Street September 2006, pg. 116
- ^ Hot Rod Magazine "Build Fast. Fabricate Furiously." By John Pearley Huffman July 2006 Pg. 59 Sidebar
- ^ Tokyo Drift: Skyline-Powered 1967 Ford Mustang modifiedmustangs.com Accessed 2006, 25 July.
- ^ Sport Compact Car "Tokyo Drift by the Numbers" By John Pearley Huffman July 2006 Pg. 92
- ^ Sport Compact Car "Ford Mustang GT-R; Pony with a Skyline's Heart" By John Pearley Huffman July 2006 Pg. 84-86
- ^ "IGN Cars: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: Han's S15." IGN Cars Accessed 19 June 2006
- ^ "IGN Cars: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: VeilSide RX-7." IGN Cars Accessed 19 June 2006
- ^ http://media.filmforce.ign.com/media/665/665274/vid_1535879.html
- ^ Interrogation Room: What up, Toshi? by Jonathan Wong Super Street September 2006, pg. 116
- ^ Interrogation Room: What up, Toshi? by Jonathan Wong Super Street September 2006, pgs. 144-118
- ^ Interrogation Room: What up, Toshi? by Jonathan Wong Super Street September 2006, pg. 116
- ^ http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do/Features/articleId=115709 Edmund's Article
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Official site in Japan
- The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift at the Internet Movie Database
- Tokyo Drift Reviews at Metacritic
- Yahoo! Movies - Theatrical trailer
- The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift at Rotten Tomatoes
- Internet Movies Car Data Base Info and pics of the cars @ IMCDB
- Nichi Bei Times commentary Analysis of API representation
- Official Fast and Furious Tokyo Drift Soundtrack