That lime-green Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VII from 2 Fast 2 Furious? Yeah, the one Paul Walker’s character tore up the ...
What started out as a movie about cars and family has rapidly became a franchise with over-the-top car stunts, with all types of vehicles driving backward, driving in space, and surviving massive ...
Dom Torretto drives this suped up 1971 Plymouth GTX in The Fate of the Furious during the time when he has apparently gone rogue and betrayed his family. We see it in New York City, where his friends ...
The Fast & Furious franchise is one of the most popular car-based movie series of all time. Despite starting as a movie about street racing, the franchise has turned more into a platform to launch ...
The "Fast & Furious" series has no shortage of unique vehicles. But some are more grounded in reality than others. The series started with souped-up cars that, often through the power of NOS, reached ...
Many car enthusiasts grew up watching the Fast and Furious. While the later films have pretty much abandoned any semblance of the street racing scene the originals set their roots in, we still watch ...
Give Greg Anderson $7 million and he'll win a couple of (maybe three) NHRA Pro Stock championships. Send that same $7 million to Jack Roush, and you're somewhere near halfway to being able to paint ...
The Fast & Furious franchise is truly one of the great artistic works of our time. No one is disputing that. You don’t get dialogue like that off the back of a Cracker Jack box. But as riveting and ...
Give Greg Anderson $7 million and he'll win a couple of (maybe three) NHRA Pro Stock championships. Send that same $7 million to Jack Roush, and you're somewhere near halfway to being able to paint ...