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The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) (2 Disc Set Limited Edition)

Product Details: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

Edition:DVD 2 Disc Set Limited Edition
MPAA Rating:PG-13
Release Date:03/24/2009
UPC:025192019517
Directed by:Justin Lin
Featuring:Lucas Black, Shad Gregory Moss, Nathalie Kelley, See all cast

Synopsis: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

An American drummed out of the U.S. because of his passion for street racing moves to Tokyo and soon learns about "drift racing," where cars accelerate into turns and then spin out of them, leading to hairpin, hair-raising races around city blocks. The youth runs afoul of the top drift racer.

Other Available Editions: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

Features: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

2-Disc Set
Region [unknown]
Snap Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 2.35
Disc 1: THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS: TOKYO DRIFT
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround English, French, Spanish
Subtitles - English, SDH, French, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Audio Commentary: by Director Justin Lin
Featurette:
1. Drifting School
2. Cast Cam
3. The Big Breakdown: Han's Last Ride
4. Tricked Out to Drift
5. The Real Drift King
6. The Japanese Way
7. Don Omar "Conteo" Music Video
Disc 2: Digital Copy
Additional Release Material:
Previews
Featurette:
1. Making of The Fast Franchise
2. Drift: A Sideways Craze

User Reviews: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

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    Mad DVD coming out soon

    By KiD ™  Sep 11, 2006 | 2 out of 2 found this The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) review helpful

    Pros: Nice cars, nice races, nice girls ^^

    Cons: Avarage main characters, below avarage storyline

    There arent much sequels that can live up to their predecessor's name, but I was really impressed with 2 Fast 2 Furious, and had really high hopes for the third one. The first "The Fast and the Furious" amazed me with the fabulous cars ...and the world of street racing, while the second impressed with even BETTER cars and a round-trip race instead of a just a quarter-mile drag. So I was really curious how they would improve in this one, and HELL YEAH! they improved! The scene is Tokyo city, this is where the cars and parts and tune-ups actually come from, so you wouldn't find anything better in the world. And this sequel introduce a whole new type of racing - DRAG! Anyone familiar with the NFS: Underground should know about this type of racing, if you don't know wat it is, well ... i dun really know how to explain really, juz watch the film, basically they race in a multi-storey car park ok? The storyline is basically similar to the previous two, and the cars are still nice, the races are UNREAL but I think they made serious mistakes in the casting: the appearances are worse than the second one, and the main character is from TEXAS for GOD's SAKE!!! A texas lone star in the Tokyo street racing crowd?!? Give me a break!! The background casting is alrite though, but the main chacs, apart from Han and Bow Wow, was absolutely terrible. Apart from that, I think that this film is one that a tune-up addict and any fan of NFS would enjoy. Read more Less

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    The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

    By corleone_0110  Oct 16, 2006 | 2 out of 3 found this The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) review helpful

    Pros: Graphics, sounds, casting, cars

    Cons: Violence

    Vin Diesel has gotten good at creating action movies and then abandoning sequels as producers attempt to start a franchise. He jumped ship before the 2003 sequel to his The Fast and the Furious started filming and many expected the sequel to be a cut... above “direct to video” movies. However, apparently neither the stupid 2 Fast 2 Furious title or Paul Walker’s acting could kill the growing franchise because the fast cars, hot women, and pumping music are back for a third go round, this time titled The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. The third chapter leaves America, and with it the cast of the first two films, using the franchise name to tell the story of a new racer. That new racer is Sean (Lucas Black of Friday Night Lights fame) who gets into a race against a jock at high school and winds up in a bunch of trouble. His parents aren’t as well connected as his opponents, meaning he’ll be the one to face the racing and property destruction charges left from the film’s opening high-octane race through a house -- construction site. Instead of heading to juvie or jail, Sean’s mother ships him off to Tokyo, Japan to live with his military father. A structured combination military and Japanese lifestyle isn’t about to stop Sean from racing however, and he quickly finds himself making the right and wrong kind of friends, diving headfirst into the underground world of racing, the yakuza, and the drift – a Japanese form of racing that accommodates the curves of parking garages and winding roads. Anyone who heads into Tokyo Drift expecting world-class acting and drama is sadly mistaken. This movie is about living fast (and furious one would presume). It offers exactly what you’d expect: Fast races? Check – the adrenaline will be flowing through its tightly filmed and breathtaking race stunts. I keep the complaint I have about most combat scenes these days – the camera runs too tight to get a big picture idea of what’s going on, but most of the time that works to this movie’s advantage and is well used. Hot women? Check – if Asian women turn you on this is especially the movie for you, as they trope around in tight, tiny skirts and make out with each other. Female lead Nathalie Kelley joins the list of women I’d most like to see gracing the cover of Maxim soon. Loud music? Check – although for my tastes, the music could have been louder, especially during racing scenes. The sound editor chose to push the sounds of the vehicles (engines roaring, tires squealing, etc) over the music. Not a bad choice, but I think pushing the music up could have added even more to the movies incredible stunt sequences. Tokyo Drift does suffer some minor flaws - resorting to stereotypical Yakuza connections in a Japanese set film, and some weak CGI effects (crowds, not racing) but with this type of movie who really cares? This is true summer popcorn at its best. Wave goodbye to Paul Walker and Tyrese, say hello to Lucas Black and Bow Wow and fasten your safety belt for the hottest new racing moves to ever hit the screen… until Fast and the Furious 4 comes out at least. Read more Less

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