Clusterfu**
Did I like anything about this movie? Yeah, I really got into the scenes where the characters are just talking to each other. No guns going off, no fast cars, no explosions, just people talking. Yes, the “romantic” dialogue in a few of the quieter places was a bit clunky, but the actors’ commitment to the whole “We are Family” concept of the film made me believe them, that they really felt the love for each other that the script dictated. And I—YES I DID—I did, have a bit of a tear in my left eye as I watched the heart felt tribute to Paul Walker at the very end of the show.
n.
A chaotic situation where everything seems to go wrong. It is often caused by
incompetence, communication failure, or a complex environment.
v.
To fu** (something) up, to make a total mess of. –Wiktionary Creative Commons
I’ve
been a closet fan of the Fast & Furious Franchise from the get go. Yes, I
admit it, I did NOT express my love for this series of
movies until F&F 5
and 6, but I WAS dedicated. I loved the simple stories, stereotypical antihero
characters AND I have always dug the hell out of the fast cars, the live action
crashes and stunts. The F&F franchise brought the car chase back
from the edge of extinction by snubbing CGI effects and relying (mostly) on practical car stunts
and live action, precision driving. Yeah, life was good for us closet couch-jockey
street racers . . . until something awful happened:
Car
Chases & Stunts
What
was (in all the other F&F movies) fast, precision car chases, turned into
muddled mush when the previous director, Justin Lin, decided to call it quits
and the production team hired James Wan to take over. Wan's got a pretty good résumé
as a director of horror films but nothing when it comes to high octane action
films . . . and it really shows. His mistake was to think that if you jump cut all the time, use thousands of
camera shot changes (long, medium, close-up and variations of such) through all the action scenes it
will make the action seem faster and more urgent. Unfortunately, it has the opposite
effect on the audience. Too many changes in point of view confuses the mind, it
doesn’t have enough time to figure out what the hell it’s looking at. before it changes to something else So,
instead of seeing a car chase that is Fast
& Furious we experience action sequences that are Slow & Tedious. Want to see some incredibly exciting car chase
choreography? Checkout any of the previous F&F movies, and some of these
old favorites: Bullitt (1968), The French Connection (1971),
Vanishing Point (1971), The Seven-Ups (1971), To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)
Vanishing Point (1971), The Seven-Ups (1971), To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)
Explosions
& GUNS . . . LOTS of BIG GUNS
Okay,
we do go to these action films to see cars crashing into each other, buildings
exploding, guns going off . . . No, BIG GUNS going off, but in this film it’s
far too much BOOM! BOOM! BANG! BANG! So much that after about the third explosion in
the last action sequence I was thinking . . . “I wonder, should I have pizza for dinner?”
Hand-to-Hand
Combat
And
my pet peeve, “Don’t over use camera
tricks in a Fight sequence.” They are using this camera technique these
days that sort of cuts section out of a fight so you don’t really see the fluid
movement of the actors. It was used pretty well in Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) but they didn’t over use
the technique. In Furious 7 all the fight
scenes are in a state of constant blurriness. You never really see the fight,
and you never really connect with the action: “Hmmm, maybe some pepperoni on that pizza.” Some of my favorite
hand-to-hand combat movies are: Enter the
Dragon (1971), Kill Bill: Vol. 1
(2003), Haywire (2011), Merantau (2009), The Matrix (1999)Did I like anything about this movie? Yeah, I really got into the scenes where the characters are just talking to each other. No guns going off, no fast cars, no explosions, just people talking. Yes, the “romantic” dialogue in a few of the quieter places was a bit clunky, but the actors’ commitment to the whole “We are Family” concept of the film made me believe them, that they really felt the love for each other that the script dictated. And I—YES I DID—I did, have a bit of a tear in my left eye as I watched the heart felt tribute to Paul Walker at the very end of the show.
The
F&F series has been a pretty successful franchise except for this one
misstep. I hope they continue it . . . hopefully, with a director that knows how
to film an action scene. But if they decide to stick with Wan on the next one, and he does a really good job . . . I'll send him a pizza.
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