Friday, April 03, 2009

FAST & FURIOUS

This is opening weekend for FAST & FURIOUS, which is the fourth movie of the high charged Fast & Furious movie franchise!

Here's a brief review of the previous films:

In the first movie, "The Fast & The Furious", Brian, played by Paul Walker, is a cop who goes undercover into a street gang to find out who is stealing high priced electronic equipment. Dom, played by Vin Diesel, is the leader of the gang who is under suspicion of committing the the crimes. Brian becomes involved with Dom's sister and ends up trying to prove Dom's innocence.

In 2 Fast & 2 Furious, the second movie, Brian has left LA due to his illegal actions from the first movie, and now he's in Miami, making a living by street racing. Once he gets caught, he's offered a deal: go undercover to bring down a drug lord, and his criminal record will be wiped clean. He recruits an old friend to help him with the same deal that he was offered himself. (Vin Diesel does not appear in this one)

The third movie, The Fast & The Furious - Tokyo Drift, parts ways with both Brian and Dom, and we meet Shawn Boswell, a high school student who keeps getting into trouble until he finally has no choice but to go live with his father in Tokyo. However, he gets involved in street racing there as well. When he loses a race to the "Drift King", he goes to the underworld to pay his debt.

Now that you're up to speed...

FAST & FURIOUS opens up to an adrenaline charged scene where the gang is hi-jacking a bigrig for its oil - although they're trying to do it without the driver knowing it. We see our old friend Han (from Tokyo Drift). Later, he tells Dom that he's gonna check out Tokyo - so from that scene we know that this story takes place at the same time or a little bit before the story of Tokyo Drift takes place.

After that heist, the gang splits up. Since Dom is a fugitive, he doesn't want his friends going down when the police finally catch him. After some time on the run, he gets word that a friend has been murdered. So he goes back to LA to find out who did it.

This is where Brian comes in. He is still a cop, and he's also looking for the murderer. Eventually, Brian crosses paths with Dom, and while there are some hard feelings there, they end up working towards the same goal. Which proves challenging since Brian is trying to maintain his clean record with the LAPD, while Dom is trying to keep from getting caught by the LAPD. It was good to see those two back together in a movie! Eventually, their search leads them to a big time drug smuggler. They are forced to trust each other to make sure that they get their man.

Of course, there are races, chases, explosions, crashes...the usual. If you are a fan of the series, you will like this one too.

FROZEN RIVER

Melissa Leo was nominated for Best Actress for her role as Ray, a single mom raising two sons and barely getting by. They live in a small town on the New York/Quebec border, which is a Mohawk Reservation. Her husband has abandoned her and her sons, and she struggles to provide for them with her meager paycheck from her part time job at the Yankee Dollar Store. They are so impoverished that their meals consist of popcorn and Tang.

Ray meets up with a Lila, a Mohawk woman, also a single mother. Lila introduces Ray to a little known crossing area over the frozen St. Lawrence River on Mohawk territory. There, Lila has a contact that pays her for illegally smuggling immigrants into the US. The first time, Ray is tricked into doing it. But once she sees how easy it is to make a lot of money, and considers that her boys needs food and even Christmas presents, she goes back for more. She also needs money to pay off the double-wide trailer that they'd been saving for, since her wayward husband left with the money. She just wants to be able to pay that off before she loses it, and then she will walk away from smuggling. But how long can she push her luck?

While neither woman exhibit a lot of emotion about their situation, we see the pain and fear that they hold inside. We also feel so much compassion for Ray's two boys. The younger boy is oblivious about needing money, but the teenager takes on a lot of responsibility to take care of his brother. FROZEN RIVER won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2008. It was a a great movie, slow moving at times, but still, a well-told and sad story.