Ah, the mysterious soul of the buddy-action movie
At times it’s hard to comprehend the baffling idea that some new, unspoken trend in American culture created the “bromance” movie as it exists today. Somewhere in between decades of buddy-action movies and that part in 2 Fast 2 Furious where Paul Walker and Tyrese roll around on top of each other in a cloud of dust, there would seem to be a long history of such movies, albeit ones that avoid uncomfortable questions with explosions rather than queasy jokes. If there was ever a doubt, the latest, Fast & Furious, supplies a helpful exchange: “Are you one of those guys who prefers cars to girls?” a nominal female love interest asks one of the heroes. “I appreciate a fine body,” he replies, “no matter the make."
Release Date: April 3
Director: Justin Lin
Writer
: Chris Morgan
Cinematographer
: Amir Mokri
Starring: Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster
Studio/Run Time: Universal, 106 mins.
Awkward! It’s hard to know what that's supposed to mean, but it
helps to observe that Fast & Furious, the fourth film in the
car-racing franchise, plays like an overgrown parody of the
first three movies combined. With the same writer-director team that
brought us the third, the film
reunites the original cast members (Walker, Vin Diesel,
Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster) and sends them on yet another
redemptive mission that involves a murder, interchangeable
jargon about car engines and some of the least competent action
sequences of the series. There’s enough har-har dialogue and lingering
shots of half-clothed extras to satiate an adolescent crowd, and
perhaps even a sense of humor tucked in here somewhere. But there’s
also the inescapable impression the movie only half understands
what it’s actually about, and we’re stuck in the back of the theater,
amused but depressingly underwhelmed.