Illegal street racing has been roaring through the US for decades, and while it's most associated with California and the hugely successful Fast and the Furious film franchise, head-to-head drag ...
Tokyo Drift flopping at the box office led to the franchise focusing more on action, rather than cars and street racing.
Fast & Furious is no stranger to some high-stakes action sequences, but some have been so over-the-top and ambitious that ...
2001's "The Fast and the Furious" was a film featuring an LAPD officer (Paul Walker) who went undercover into the world of illegal street racing to join the ranks with a well-established racer ...
Here’s how it works. Over the course of the past 24 years, the Fast & Furious franchise has gone from one about street-racing and boosting DVD players to a massive action brand known for its ...
While we don't hear nearly as much about the scourge of Japanese tuner cars as when The Fast and the Furious first hit theaters over a decade ago, illegal street racing is still bubbling under the ...
The Suffolk County Legislature on Tuesday passed a bill toughening its stance on illegal street racing by allowing ... spectators following a rash of "Fast & Furious" style takeovers.
Television and pop music promote a relatively color-blind vision of America, writes Wesley Morris at The Boston Globe — just witness the racial melange that is The Black-Eyed Peas. The movie ...
It was a tense and kind of hilarious moment, and I'm happy internet reactions like this exist: ...
The original 2001 movie The Fast and the Furious starred Paul Walker as Brian O'Conner, a Los Angeles cop who goes undercover in the street racing world to investigate a gang of hijackers led by ...