San Francisco Chronicle by C.W. Nevius
The result? Well, as expected, director John Singleton ("Boyz N the Hood") did not make a movie as good as "FF1." This is way better.
Germany, United States · 2003
1h 48m
Director John Singleton
Starring Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Eva Mendes, Ludacris
Genre Action, Crime, Thriller
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It's a major double-cross when former police officer Brian O'Conner teams up with his ex-con buddy Roman Pearce to transport a shipment of "dirty" money for shady Miami-based import-export dealer Carter Verone. But the guys are actually working with undercover agent Monica Fuentes to bring Verone down.
San Francisco Chronicle by C.W. Nevius
The result? Well, as expected, director John Singleton ("Boyz N the Hood") did not make a movie as good as "FF1." This is way better.
Baltimore Sun by Chris Kaltenbach
So what do we have here? Lots of cars going very fast.
This shaggy-dog sequel is ultimately satisfying for the most low-tech of reasons: The competitive bond between the two central characters.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
This movie only takes a few minutes to crash and burn, but more than an hour and a half to realize it.
Portland Oregonian by Kim Morgan
The best thing about 2 Fast 2 Furious is Tyrese (terrific in Singleton's "Baby Boy"), whose charisma, looks and charm supply the picture with much-needed spark. It's too bad he's stuck in this spotty video game.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Liam Lacey
A movie with a confident sense of its own worthlessness, it speeds by in a flurry of candy-coloured cars, bare midriffs, screaming engines and a pulsing rap soundtrack.
Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum
2F2F, under the cut-to-the-chase direction of John Singleton, strips the package known as the Mindless Summer Movie down to its barest components of wheels, skin, and a pulsing soundtrack.
A lark for anyone who's willing to check their brains at the concession stand for 100 minutes.
Los Angeles Times by Manohla Dargis
My hand trembles slightly as I type these words, but the truth is that while watching 2 Fast 2 Furious, the follow-up to the pleasurably cheap-thrills sleeper "The Fast and the Furious," I realized just how much I miss Vin Diesel.
Singleton abandons the underground racing subculture that gave the first film its allure, relying instead on lazy thriller plotting that's only a bag of donuts and a freeze-frame away from the average TV cop show.
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