Furious 7 (DVD REVIEW)
Furious
7
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Paul
Walker’s Swan Song Released on DVD
The
late Paul Walker (1973-2013) was best known for playing Brian
O’Conner, a charismatic lead character of the Fast and Furious
franchise. During a break in the filming of this seventh installment,
he perished in a fiery crash away from the set while being driven in
a Porsche by his friend and financial advisor, Roger Rodas.
Putting
the production on hiatus, director James Wan (The Conjuring)
consulted with Walker’s family before deciding to complete the
project. After revising the script, he resumed shooting, using Paul’s
younger brothers, Caleb and Cody, as body doubles.
Between
the delays and complications flowing from the overhaul, the picture’s
budget ballooned to over a quarter-billion dollars. Nevertheless, the
rewrite was undeniably well-worth all the effort, since Furious 7 is
easily the best offering from the series by far, for it’s the first
to convincingly combine sincere sentiment with its trademark swagger
and spectacular action sequences.
Yes,
it’s remains mostly a muscle car demolition derby featuring an
array of sensational stunts, destroying 230 automobiles along the
way. But it’s also a touching tribute to the much-beloved Paul
Walker, poignant homage carefully crafted to ensure there won’t be
a dry eye in the house when the closing credits roll.
At
the point of departure, we’re reintroduced to Deckard Shaw (Jason
Statham), a trained assassin hell-bent on avenging the death of his
brother, the diabolical villain who met his demise during the climax
of the previous episode. Deckard’s already killed Han (Sung Kang),
so gang leader Dom (Vin Diesel) encourages his wife (Michelle
Rodriguez) and the rest of his ragtag crew of mercenaries to regroup
in order to avoid the risk of getting picked off one-by-one, since
there’s strength in numbers.
However,
coaxing brother-in-law Brian out of retirement isn’t easy, now that
he’s settled down in suburbia and has already started a family with
Mia (Jordana Brewster). By contrast, unencumbered playboys Roman
(Tyrese) and Tej (Ludacris) are game for another round of bombastic
vehicular warfare, especially given the addition to the team of a
cute computer hacker (Nathalie Emmanuel) whose affections they can
compete for.
After
a bit of obligatory flirting and jive talk by the brothers, it’s
not long before the plot plunges the mercenaries headlong into a
familiar concatenation of fisticuffs and gravity-defying car chases
punctuated by macho exclamations like “I’m back bitches!” and
“Time to unleash the beast!” Yet, such simplistic non-sequiturs
are effectively counterbalanced by tender exchanges with Brian
(“You’ll always be my brother!”) during a denoument where he
makes it clear that this dangerous adventure will definitely be his
last.
A captivating combination
of camaraderie and cartoon physics tempered by just enough nostalgia
to tug at your heartstrings.
Excellent
(4
stars)
Rated
PG-13 for
pervasive violence and mayhem, suggestive content and brief profanity
Running
time: 138 minutes
Distributor:
Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Blu-ray/DVD
Combo Pack Extras: Extended edition; deleted scenes; The Cars of
Furious; Flying Cars; Tower Jumps; Inside the Fight; Talking Fast;
“See You Again” official music video; Back to the Starting Line;
Race Wars; Snatch and grab; Making of Fast & Furious Supercharged
Ride.
To
see a trailer for Furious 7, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yISKeT6sDOg
To order
a copy of the Furious 7 Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack, visit:
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