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Home Vin Diesel

Retitling Every Fast & Furious Movie Sequel So They Make Sense

sport news by sport news
April 1, 2024
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Retitling Every Fast & Furious Movie Sequel So They Make Sense
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Fast & Furious is a blockbuster franchise, yet its titles could’ve sent a better message about what the movies were about. The saga spreads over 11 movies, a spin-off, two short films, and a television series, with more to come in the future. Although it has a combined gross of over $7 billion globally, the Fast & Furious franchise doesn’t follow any consistent structure or format for its titles. The titling of every Fast & Furious movie has become so nonsensical and confusing that the franchise has become the source of various jokes pertaining to franchise titling.

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After The Fast and the Furious, the franchise incorporated numbers for the sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious, added a subtitle for the third installment The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, and then went basic with Fast & Furious for the fourth entry. Almost all subsequent installments have included numbers, but they’ve done so by spelling them out, including the numerical form, and even adding in Roman numerals, all while dropping “Fast” or “Furious” (or both) from the titles. Albeit confusing to follow at times, the Fast & Furious movie titles could have followed a more traditional and cohesive approach as the franchise grew.

The Fast And The Furious’ Title Was A Good Decision

Released in 2001 as a standalone

The first film, based on the article “Racer X” by Ken Li, has a great title that sets up the franchise. It sets the scene, and the “fast” clearly states its focus on car races and car culture. It made literal sense even when taking a look at its main characters, Vin Diesel’s Dominic Toretto and Paul Walker’s Brian O’Connor. It could be argued that Dom proved he was “fast,” which made Brian “furious.” However, the title wasn’t the first option, as the film had many possible titles. The Fast and the Furious has a 69-year-old story tied to its name, which was the title of a 1954 movie.

2 Fast 2 Furious’ Title Should Be Fast & Furious: Miami Reunion

2 Fast 2 Furious was no longer set in Los Angeles

Brian and Roman pose in front of two cars in 2 Fast 2 Furious

In 2003, Fast & Furious returned with its first sequel, 2 Fast 2 Furious. Vin Diesel didn’t reprise his role in the second installment because he didn’t think the film needed a sequel. The studio disagreed and brought back Walker’s Brian O’Connor, introducing Tyrese Gibson’s Roman Pierce and more characters as they took a case in Miami, Florida. The original title, 2 Fast 2 Furious, played with the idea that it was the second part of the saga, but it would’ve been clearer to simply name it Fast & Furious: Miami Reunion, playing to the film’s main location and the reunion between Brian and Roman.

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Should Be Fast & Furious: Tokyo Drift

The first option was too long

DK squares up to Sean in The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

The third movie in the franchise moves to a different continent, and its action takes place in Tokyo. The film dropped the original cast, introducing some of its future characters. The original title, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, reflects that, and it’s one of the most accurate titles of the franchise, highlighting the idea that it was a spinoff. However, keeping the definite article made it too visually complex. Instead, it should’ve gone for the option Fast & Furious: Tokyo Drift, which kept the basic premise while making its title cleaner and easier.

Fast & Furious’ Title Should Be: Fast & Furious: High-Speed Revenge

The most confusing title of the franchise

Letty hangs from the hood of Dom's car in Fast & Furious 4

In 2009, three years after the release of Tokyo Drift, the original team reunited. The original title, Fast & Furious, is pure chaos, as it is just a cleaner version of the first movie’s name and the exact shorthand for the franchise at large. Dropping the two definite articles from the first film and turning its “and” into the “&” symbol are not bold ideas for the title and do little to convey what the movie is actually about. For a better format, its title should’ve been Fast & Furious: High-Speed Revenge, since Dom does everything in his power to make the person who killed Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) pay.

Fast Five Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: The First Heist

The film acknowledged order again, but it was no longer furious

Vin Diesel and Dwayne Johnson come face to face in Fast Five.

For the fifth film, released in 2011, the Fast Five title continued to show inconsistencies compared to its previous films. While the audience could’ve expected them to continue the Fast & Furious format somehow, the Fast saga surprised again, acknowledging its order in the franchise with the title Fast Five. Given that Universal Pictures decided to depart from the car racing theme from the previous films, Fast Five is a transition film into a heist action series. The best way to convey that would’ve been if it had been titled Fast & Furious: The First Heist.

Fast & Furious 6 Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: Faster In Europe

The Fast saga switches continents

Mia and Brian try to get off the plane in Fast & Furious 6

The sixth film confused things further with the title Fast & Furious 6. Director Justin Lin wanted it to be a companion title for Fast Five, and finally make some sense of them. His version even made it in the film, but the studio wanted it to be Fast & Furious 6 for marketing purposes, continuing the inconsistencies further. The best title for the sixth film in the Fast saga would’ve been Fast & Furious: Faster in Europe, as the crew switches to yet another continent for a new case, and it features scenes in Spain, the UK, and Russia.

Furious 7 Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: One Last Ride

The original title dropped Fast

  • Brian (Paul Walker) from Furious 7 Looking in His Car at Dom Toretto (Vin Diesel)
  • Brian O'Conner in Furious 7
  • Vin Diesel smiling and Iggy Azalea looking sideways in Furious 7
  • Roman, Letty, Brian, and Tej looking at something off-camera in Furious 7
  • Dom looks on from a beach in Furious 7Furious 7 continues the weird title format. The ampersand is gone again, and figures make a comeback, continuing like Fast & Furious 6, but dropping the “Fast” in favor of the “Furious.” It doesn’t have any consistency with the previous three titles. The best option would’ve been Fast & Furious: One Last Ride. The film makes several references to that throughout the movie, and it’s all because Paul Walker passed away during Furious 7‘s development. The movie acknowledges that by retiring Walker’s character, Brian O’Conner, and giving him “one last ride” with the original crew.

    The Fate of the Furious Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: Family No More

    The eighth film had its try at a pun

    Cipher about to kiss Dom

    The eighth installment of the series, The Fate of the Furious dropped figures once more in favor of a pun in the word “fate,” which sounds like “F eight.” In the film, Dominic turns against his team, working with cyberterrorist Cipher (Charlize Theron), forcing his friends to trace him down and stop him. Since Dominic’s trademark is his love for his family and friends​​​​​​, the title for the eighth film should’ve been Fast & Furious: Family No More, highlighting Dom’s shift against his friends.

    F9 Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: No Limits

    Custom image of Vin Diesel as Dom juxtaposed with a Pontiac Fiero in space in F9.

    The second-to-last film didn’t even try when it came to finding a creative title. Getting completely off track, the 2021 film went with F9. John Cena is introduced as Jakob, Dom’s brother, and Dom’s team works against him for the majority of the film, with the stakes even higher in the ninth installment. Since the Fast saga is famous for its gravity-defying car scenes, F9 takes it even further with a car in space and a Mustang that jumps off a cliff inside a flying helicopter. Because of that, Fast & Furious: No Limits is a fitting title, showing there’s nothing Dom’s team can’t fight, whether it’s real family or gravity.

    Fast X Should’ve Been Fast & Furious: Family Divided

    Fast X was originally the last film in the saga

    Since F9 dropped all logic, Fast X’s title excluded figures again, going for “X” instead of the number. It missed the opportunity to make another pun with Fast10 Your Seatbelt, which was a popular suggestion. Its title should’ve reflected Dominic and his friends’ last journey. A fitting title would’ve been Fast & Furious: The Last Mission, but it ultimately would not have worked with more confirmed Fast & Furious movies upcoming. As a result, Fast & Furious: Family Divided could have been a good option, playing into the fact that Dominic Toretto and his Fast & Furious family/team are split up to deal with Dante.

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