X | Fast

The action sequences, the franchise’s raison d’être, are a mixed bag. On one hand, Leterrier stages a genuinely spectacular set-piece involving a massive rolling bomb in Rome, blending practical crashes with digital mayhem to create palpable chaos. The final confrontation at a dam in Portugal, where Dom drives a sports car down the face of a collapsing concrete wall, is a moment of pure, absurdist genius that only this series could pull off. On the other hand, the CGI is often distractingly weightless, particularly in a car-vs-helicopter chase that recalls the series’ peak ( Furious 7 ) without matching its visceral impact. The film’s most significant problem is pacing: it oscillates between frenetic action and clunky, sentimental dialogue where characters whisper the word “family” as if it were a sacred incantation. These moments, intended to provide emotional heft, now feel like a parody of the franchise’s own tropes.

The film’s primary strength lies in its villain, Dante Reyes (Jason Momoa), a flamboyant, scene-chewing antagonist who injects much-needed chaotic energy into a series that had grown stale with stoic rivals. Momoa’s performance is a revelation: a blend of sadistic cruelty, androgynous flair, and petulant humor that feels entirely fresh for the franchise. Unlike previous villains who sought power or revenge with grim seriousness, Dante is motivated by a deeply personal, operatic grief over his father’s death in Fast Five . He dismantles Dom Toretto’s (Diesel) life not with a superweapon, but with psychological warfare and elaborate, Joker-esque traps. Momoa’s joyful sadism—laughing as he detonates bombs and tenderly caressing a bracelet made of his victims’ crucifix necklaces—provides a necessary counterweight to Diesel’s trademark stoicism. He reminds the audience that while the Toretto crew fights for family, Dante fights for the sheer theatrical pleasure of it. Fast X

The Fast & Furious franchise, once a grounded saga about street racing and DVD piracy, has long since abandoned the tarmac for the stratosphere. By its tenth main installment, Fast X , the series has fully embraced its identity as a live-action cartoon where physics is a suggestion and family is a superpower. Directed by Louis Leterrier, Fast X is a film of dueling impulses: a sincere attempt to honor the franchise’s emotional core (the late Paul Walker’s legacy and Vin Diesel’s crusade for “family”) and a breathless, often absurd escalation of action that defies logic. The result is a sprawling, overstuffed blockbuster that is both exhausting and intermittently thrilling—a perfect representation of a franchise grappling with the law of diminishing returns. On the other hand, the CGI is often