F9 (film)

F9
F9 film poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJustin Lin
Produced by
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Justin Lin
  • Alfredo Botello
  • Daniel Casey
Based onCharacters
by Gary Scott Thompson
Starring
Music byBrian Tyler[2]
CinematographyStephen F. Windon[3]
Edited by
  • Greg D'Auria[4]
  • Dylan Highsmith[4]
  • Kelly Matsumoto[4]
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • May 19, 2021 (2021-05-19) (International)
  • June 25, 2021 (2021-06-25) (United States)
Running time
145 minutes[5]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$200–225 million[6][7]
Box office$446.2 million[8][9]

F9 (also known as F9: The Fast Saga and Fast & Furious 9) is a 2021 American action film directed by Justin Lin, who also wrote the screenplay with Daniel Casey. It is the sequel to The Fate of the Furious (2017), the ninth main installment, and is the tenth full-length film in the Fast & Furious franchise. F9 stars Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, John Cena, Jordana Brewster, Nathalie Emmanuel, Sung Kang, Michael Rooker, Helen Mirren, Kurt Russell, and Charlize Theron. In the film, Dominic Toretto and the team come together to stop a world-shattering plot headed by Toretto's brother, Jakob.

With a ninth and tenth film confirmed since 2014, Lin was confirmed to be returning to direct F9 in October 2017, marking his return to the franchise since last directing Fast & Furious 6 (2013). It was later announced Lin would co-write F9 with Casey, thus becoming the first film since 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) not to be written by Chris Morgan. The cast was finalized with the addition of Cena in June 2019 and principal photography began that same month and lasted until that November, with filming locations including London, Los Angeles, Tbilisi, and Thailand.

F9 was originally scheduled for worldwide release in April 2020, but was delayed several times, first due to the releases of Hobbs & Shaw (2019) and No Time to Die (2021), and then the COVID-19 pandemic. It premiered in South Korea and was released internationally on May 19, 2021, and released in the United States on June 25. The film received mixed reviews with praise for the stunts and Lin's direction but criticism for its unrealistic action sequences and formulaic script. It has grossed over $446 million worldwide, making it the third-highest-grossing film of 2021.

Plot

In 1989, Jack Toretto participates in a race, with his sons Dominic and Jakob in his pit crew. Dom argues with rival racer Kenny Linder about his dirty tactics. As the race resumes, Linder's car clips Jack's bumper and causes the car to hit a wall and explode, killing him. After the crash, Linder has an altercation with Dom, who nearly beats him to death. Dom gets arrested and while serving his sentence, he recalls that Jakob had worked on Jack's car the day he died, and realizes that Jakob killed their father. Upon release, Dom confronts and challenges Jakob to a race, forcing him to leave town when he loses.

In the present, two years after the confrontation against cyberterrorist Cipher,[N 1] Dom is retired, raising his son Brian with his wife, Letty Ortiz. Roman Pearce, Tej Parker, and Ramsey arrive with news of Mr. Nobody capturing Cipher, with his plane subsequently being attacked by rogue agents. The plane crashed in Montecito, Central America, and the team convinces Dom to help them find Mr. Nobody. Replaying the distress signal, Dom realizes Jakob is involved. Searching the plane, they find part of a device named Ares, which can hack into any computer-controlled weapons system; the team is then ambushed by a private army led by Jakob, who steals the device. The team rendezvous with Michael Stasiak en route to their safe house. Dom is reluctantly joined by his sister Mia, who wishes to help. The team learns that Han Lue has something to do with Ares, and Letty and Mia go to investigate.

Meanwhile, Jakob meets with Otto, his associate. Cipher is also waiting for him and, after failing to sway Jakob, tells him the other half of Ares is in Edinburgh. Dom meets his father's former mechanic, Buddy, who took Jakob in after his exile, and learns that Jakob is in London. Letty and Mia find Han, still alive, in Tokyo, along with his ward Elle. Roman and Tej recruit Sean Boswell, Twinkie, and Earl Hu, who has been working on a "rocket car". In London, Dom meets Queenie Shaw, who gives him Jakob's location. Dom confronts Otto and Jakob, who tells Dom to leave. Otto has Dom arrested, but Leysa, an old friend of Dom, leads a squad of mercenaries to rescue him.

Tej, Roman, and Ramsey join Dom in Edinburgh, where Jakob is using a weapon than can generate a powerful electromagnetic field to steal the second Ares device. Tej and Roman find the truck containing the electromagnet; as they fight Otto's men, Ramsey commandeers the truck to chase after Otto. Dom intercepts Jakob and the two fight throughout the city. Before Otto can extract Jakob, Ramsey runs his car off the road, and Dom uses the electromagnet to capture Jakob.

Otto recruits Cipher to help him find Jakob. At the safe house, Han reveals he was assigned to protect Elle and Ares, as Elle's DNA is its final component. When one of Mr. Nobody's agents went rogue, they used Deckard Shaw to fake Han's death,[N 2] so he could protect Elle. Otto attacks the safe house and frees Jakob, who had been the rogue agent. Jakob reveals that Jack, wanting to escape his debts, instructed Jakob to tamper with his car so he could fake his death in an accident, but the plan went awry due to Linder's interference. Jakob and Otto kidnap Elle and take the second Ares device.

Otto then launches a satellite into orbit, while Jakob has Elle activate Ares. They begin uploading Ares to the satellite, moving throughout Tbilisi in an armored truck. Dom, Letty, Mia, Ramsey, and Han give chase to stop the upload. As Mia and Han try to breach the truck, Otto reveals he has no more use for Jakob, and throws him off the truck. Dom and Mia save him, and Jakob decides to help Dom access the truck. Using the rocket car, Tej and Roman enter orbit and ram themselves into the satellite, stopping the upload. Cipher, remotely flying an attack jet, bombs the truck and kills Otto in an attempt to kill Dom; Dom uses the ricocheting truck to destroy Cipher's plane. Dom and Mia reconcile with Jakob and allow him to escape in Dom's car. A spaceship returns Tej and Roman to Earth.

The team celebrates their success with a barbecue. While preparing to say grace, Brian O'Conner arrives in his car in the driveway. In a mid-credits scene, Deckard is surprised when Han arrives at his door.

Cast

Additionally, Anna Sawai portrays Elle,[11] Thue Ersted Rasmussen portrays Otto,[4] J. D. Pardo portrays Jack Toretto, Jim Parrack portrays Kenny Linder, Martyn Ford portrays Sue, and Cardi B portrays Leysa, a woman who shares history with Dom.[17][4]

Lucas Black, Don Omar and Shea Whigham reprise their respective roles as Sean Boswell, Santos and Agent Stasiak from previous films,[14] while Bow Wow and Jason Tobin also reprise their roles as Twinkie and Earl Hu from The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006), respectively.[18][14] Cered and Ozuna portray young versions of Leo and Santos, respectively.[19] Gal Gadot briefly reprises her role as Gisele Yashar, via uncredited archive footage of Fast & Furious 6, and Jason Statham makes an uncredited cameo during the end credits as Deckard Shaw.[20]

Production

Development

In November 2014, Universal Pictures chairwoman Donna Langley told The Hollywood Reporter that there would be at least three more films in the franchise after Furious 7 (2015).[21] In October 2017, Diesel revealed in a Facebook live video that Justin Lin, who directed from The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift through Fast & Furious 6, would be returning for the ninth and tenth films.[22][23] In May 2018, Daniel Casey was hired to write the screenplay after Morgan left due to his work on the Hobbs and Shaw spin-off film.[24]

Casting

In April 2017, Diesel and Dwayne Johnson confirmed their returns.[25] In October 2017, Jordana Brewster, who portrayed Mia Toretto in five of the franchise's films, would be returning for the ninth and tenth films.[22] On April 4, 2018, Johnson stated that he was unsure if he was returning for the ninth film due to working on the spin-off,[26] and he confirmed in January 2019 that he would not be appearing in the film.[27]

In June 2019, John Cena was officially cast in the film, after an initial announcement from Diesel in April.[12] In July 2019, Finn Cole, Anna Sawai, and Vinnie Bennett joined the cast of the film.[11] That same month, it was announced Helen Mirren and Charlize Theron would reprise their roles,[16] with Michelle Rodriguez was also confirmed to reprise her role.[28] Michael Rooker and MMA Fighter Francis Ngannou[29] were added to the cast in August.[15] In October 2019, Ozuna and Cardi B joined the cast of the film.[19][17]

Filming

Principal photography began on June 24, 2019, at Leavesden Studios in Hertfordshire, England.[30] Filming took place in Los Angeles, Edinburgh,[31][32] and London,[33] and also took place in Thailand for the first time, with Krabi, Ko Pha-ngan, and Phuket used as locations.[34] Part of the film was also shot in Tbilisi, Georgia.[35][36] Filming wrapped on November 11, 2019.[37]

In July 2019, stuntman Joe Watts, who doubled for Diesel, sustained a serious head injury during filming at Leavesden Studios.[38][39] In September 2020, Michelle Rodriguez confirmed the film would be set in outer space as well, which was teased by Diesel.[40]

Music

On July 31, 2020, a mixtape titled Road to F9 was released, and features music inspired by the film. The mixtape was preceded by the lead single "One Shot" by YoungBoy Never Broke Again and Lil Baby.[41] The official soundtrack was released on June 17, 2021.[42] The score album, composed by Brian Tyler was released on July 2, 2021.

F9
Soundtrack album by
various artists
ReleasedJune 17, 2021
Label
Fast & Furious soundtrack chronology
The Fate of the Furious: The Album
(2017)
F9
(2021)
F9 track listing
No.TitleLength
1."Fast Lane" (Don Toliver, Lil Durk, Latto) 
2."Lane Switcha" (Skepta and Pop Smoke featuring ASAP Rocky, Juicy J and Project Pat) 
3."Hit Em Hard" (Offset, Trippie Redd, Kevin Gates, Lil Durk and King Von) 
4."I Won" (Ty Dolla Sign, Jack Harlow, 24kGoldn) 
5."Rapido" (Amenazzy, Farruko, Myke Towers, Rochy RD) 
6."Breathe (Liam H and René LaVice Re-Amp)" (The Prodigy featuring RZA) 
7."Real" (Justin Quiles, Dalex, Konshens) 
8."Bussin Bussin" (Lil Tecca) 
9."Furiosa" (Anitta) 
10."Ride da Night" (Kevin Gates featuring Polo G and Teejay3k) 
11."Bushido" (Good Gas and JP the Wavy) 
12."Speed It Up" (NLE Choppa featuring Rico Nasty) 
13."Mala" (Jarina De Marco) 
14."Exotic Race" (Murci featuring Sean Paul and Dixson Waz) 

Charts

Chart performance for F9 soundtrack
Chart (2021) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[43] 29
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[44] 90
UK R&B Albums (OCC)[45] 13

Release

F9 had its world premiere in South Korea on May 19, 2021,[46] and was released in the United States on June 25.[47] The film had five previous release dates in the United States between 2019 and 2021; primarily changed due to the releases of Hobbs & Shaw and No Time to Die as well as the COVID-19 pandemic,[48] before moving to its current date.[47]

Reception

Box office

As of July 4, 2021, F9 has grossed $110.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $335.6 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $446.2 million.[8][9]

In the United States and Canada, F9 was projected to gross $55–65 million from 4,179 theaters in its opening weekend.[49] The film made $30 million on its first day (including $7.1 million from Thursday night previews), both the best totals of the pandemic. It went on to debut to $70 million, the highest-grossing weekend since Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker ($72.4 million) in December 2019. Like previous Fast & Furious films, the audience was diverse (with 37% Hispanic, 35% Caucasian, 16% Black and 8% Asian) and skewed to both younger (51% under the age of 25) and male (57%) crowds.[50][6]

Over its five-day international opening weekend, F9 was projected to gross $160–180 million from eight countries, including China, Russia, and South Korea.[51] It went on to debut to $163 million, the biggest international opening for a Hollywood film since the pandemic began in March 2020. It also set the pandemic-record for IMAX gross ($14 million), and was the second-biggest May international opening ever, despite playing in 26 fewer countries than the current record holder, Captain America: Civil War. The top markets from the weekend were China ($136 million; the second biggest-ever opening of the franchise in the country), South Korea ($9.9 million), Russia ($8.3 million), Saudi Arabia ($2.67 million), and the UAE ($2.64 million).[52] In its second weekend of international release the film made $30.8 million, including $20.3 million (-85%) in China and $3.7 million (-42%) in South Korea.[53]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 60% of 258 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 5.70/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "F9 sends the franchise hurtling further over the top than ever, but director Justin Lin's knack for preposterous set pieces keeps the action humming."[54] According to Metacritic, which assigned a weighted average of 58 out of 100 based on 53 critics, the film received "mixed or average reviews".[55] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale, the lowest of the series since the first film. PostTrak reported 80% of audience members gave it a positive score, with 62% saying they would definitely recommend it.[50]

From TheWrap, Alonso Duralde summarized the film by writing that "Physics, gravity, and logic in general have long since been thrown out the window, but the jolts of pleasure keep coming."[56] Matt Patches of Polygon criticized the film for its lack of characterization, saying "After 20 years of Fast films, Dom is a totally functional blockbuster superhero" and that "F9 counteracts any character development by devoting a grating amount of time to meta-commentary on its own ridiculousness." However, he also praised Lin's direction and the set pieces by saying "Each location fills Lin’s pockets with the currency of imagination, which he cashes in with absolute delight. Where previous installments built off the glory of The Italian Job, The French Connection, and Mad Max: Fury Road, F9 finds inspiration in the Harlem Globetrotters. The cars catch falling bystanders, flip over enemy off-roaders, and stage intricately choreographed attacks using amped-up magnets."[57]

Variety's Owen Gleiberman found one of the opening scenes to be "the suspenseful high point of the movie" and wrote, "The scene is so over-the-top ludicrous that it's if the filmmakers were saying, 'Let's put what would have been the grand climax of Fast and Furious 4 in the opening half hour.' Good enough. But what do you do for an encore?"[5] Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, John DeFore said that the feature "probably sounds like more fun than it is", and concluded his generally negative review by saying that "Furious 7 was a lot more fun. And, not that anyone cares, but it was more believable as well."[58] Meanwhile, IndieWire's David Enrlich gave a more positive response with a C+ rating, and praised Lin's direction, writing, "This is a movie that sling-shots so far past self-parody that it loops all the way back to something real."[59] Jesse Hassenger of The A. V. Club also gave the film a C+ rating, remarking that "Lin’s writing just isn’t as fleet as his directing—and his directing in F9 isn’t as fleet as his work on Fast Five or Fast & Furious 6" and that "The problem is all the runway in between the highlights, even longer than the endless literal concrete of the Fast & Furious 6 climax. After a reinvention as a warmer, more diverse Mission: Impossible (practically name-checked here), the series has wound up more like a mid-period James Bond movie in its channel-surfing bloat."[60]

Sequels

F9 will be followed by a tenth installment.[61] In October 2020, it was revealed that the series will conclude with a tenth and an eleventh installment, with Lin set to direct and the cast set to return for both.[62]

Notes

  1. ^ As depicted in The Fate of the Furious (2017).
  2. ^ As seen in The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006), Fast & Furious 6 (2013), and Furious 7 (2015).

References

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