Every “Fast & Furious” movie, ranked from worst to best
We rank them, a quarter-mile at a time.
The family is still going strong. The long-running Fast & Furious franchise kicked off in 2001 with the (comparatively simple) story of an LAPD officer going undercover with a crew of street racers suspected to be hijackers. Eleven films later, and the saga has taken all manner of globe-trotting twists and turns, tackling terrorism and even going into outer space. Through it all, fans have loyally followed Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) and fam to the tune of more than $7 billion at the box office, making it one of the most successful film franchises of all time.
From the highs of Fast Five to the Hobbs/Shaw spinoff to the direct-to-video short film directed by Diesel himself, we've ranked every entry in the Fast & Furious series from worst to best.
11. The Fate of the Furious (2017)
The eighth Furious, The Fate of the Furious, is unquestionably the biggest Furious. With a reported $250 million budget that could pay for two Fast Fives, everything onscreen suggests oversized decadence run amok. There are returning long-timers like Tyrese Gibson and Ludacris, and the always-delightful Kurt Russell now has Clint Eastwood's son Scott Eastwood as a handsome-goof sidekick, and one-time antagonist Jason Statham reappears with his own unexpected connections. That's not to mention new baddie Charlize Theron, a full-fledged Bond villain with a global plot that oddly/topically/inevitably involves the Russians.
There are great showcases for individual players — especially Statham, whose turn toward heroism is both an affront to Fast history (what about Han?) and the source of this movie's most delightful action set piece. And there's a neat idea in turning Dom against his beloved family — although Dom's unsurprisingly noble motivations alleviate the essential drama of that betrayal. No one onscreen even seems to consider that Dom has turned evil. And anyone hoping for a reprise of Fast Five's Vin Diesel vs. Dwayne Johnson antagonism will have to stick to the gossip pages; the film's two biggest stars barely appear onscreen together.
Director F. Gary Gray has the broadest comedic instincts of any Fast filmmaker. That serves him well with some characters — Hobbs' superstrength officially approaches Hulk levels in Fate, and he gets mileage from the bantering Rock-Statham bromance — but it leaves Theron and Diesel stranded in a bummer arc that's less dramatic than depressing. There was always going to be a comedown after the true-life emotionality that powered Furious 7 — and Fate was mostly seed-planting toward the ninth and 10th films. —Darren Franich
Related: How Jason Statham and a baby stole Fate of the Furious
10. Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (2019)
Since Dwayne Johnson joined the Fast & Furious franchise in 2011, a spinoff seemed inevitable, and it finally became a reality with Hobbs & Shaw, a ridiculous action movie that doesn't quite feel like a true Fast movie — except for featuring two characters who joined later in the franchise and having "Fast & Furious Presents" thrown in front of the title. Even the family themes seem a bit forced here, whereas that ethos flows so naturally in the main films (No one can quite repeatedly say "family" like Dominic Toretto). But Johnson and Statham's chemistry, Idris Elba chewing scenery in the best way, and Vanessa Kirby kicking ass make for a fun but forgettable ride that could have used both less extended cameos and dick jokes. Now let's just get the familia back together. —Derek Lawrence
Related: Dwayne Johnson, Jason Statham, and Idris Elba gear up for Fast & Furious spinoff Hobbs & Shaw
9. Fast & Furious (2009)
On a structural level, this is the single most important film in the franchise. You could call the fourth movie the pilot episode, setting the tone for the bigger-and-better movies that followed.
Original stars Vin Diesel and Paul Walker return, joining Tokyo Drift team Justin Lin and Chris Morgan. The first scene of Fast & Furious is a great demonstration of Lin's talents as an action filmmaker. But there's no way of getting around it: Fast 4 is also a total bummer. Killing off Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) sends Dom on a mission of Death Wish vengeance, which should feel melancholy but just feels mopey. (In Bond-movie terms, this is Quantum of Solace.) Also not helping matters: A running action motif where the main characters follow "directions," which plays out like an inadvertent advertisement for Waze. Fast 4 is awkward but essential for everything that came next. —D.F.
Related: Before she was Wonder Woman, she was Gisele: A tribute to Gal Gadot in Fast & Furious
8.5 Los Bandoleros (2009)
Diesel wrote and directed this 20-minute prologue for the fourth film. What could've been a just-for-fans Easter egg is actually a charming, weirdly abstract short. The movie starts with Puerto Rican singer-songwriter Tego Calderon talking about corporations holding back the electric car, right before he escapes prison to hang out in a bar with Dominic Toretto. Letty shows up, and Dom takes her to the beach. It's very film school-y — diegetic music, ambient conversation, long shots of young lovers driving — but it's also a curiously sincere alternate-universe Fast movie. (Call it Slow & Mildly Bemused.) I dunno, don't you wish Jeremy Renner could make a 20-minute short film about Hawkeye? —D.F.
Related: Los Bandoleros, the Fast and Furious film you haven't seen
8. The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)
In which Justin Lin and Chris Morgan turn a pile of spare parts into a 10-second car. The over-delivering starts early in the third Fast film when Lucas Black's Sean Boswell (the oldest-looking high school student in movie history) races Zachery Bryan's (the oldest brother from Home Improvement!) football jock, Clay, through a construction site. It's a playful sight gag that's also a genuinely exciting car chase —an essential preview of the unique Arnold-Schwarzenegger–meets–Buster-Keaton mixture of muscle-car wild action and geometric precision that Lin brought to his films.
Once the film moves to Japan, Tokyo Drift positively soaks in the atmosphere. Of all the Fast films, this is the one that feels closest in spirit to genuine car culture — and the best parts of the film are practically anthropological. (Drifting really does look cool.) All that atmosphere helps cover some of the film's problems — namely, the almost complete lack of compelling personalities. I say "almost" because Tokyo Drift lucked out with Sung Kang. His world-weary Han would appear in all the future films until Furious 7, but this is his showcase — his Bandoleros, if you will — and he gives the film a genuine heart.
The final action scene hasn't aged well (whoa, cameraphones!) but Tokyo Drift is Fast & Furious reduced to its bare essentials, lean and mean. (In X-Men terms, it's The Wolverine.) —D.F.
Related: Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9
7. Fast X (2023)
You can hardly blame Diesel and his fellow producers for wanting to expand upon the lore of Fast Five — which places significantly higher on this list. The franchise celebrates its 10th film in the main saga by doubling down on damn near everything we've come to appreciate about Fast & Furious: frenetically paced car crashes, star power, and far-fetched plot twists.
This installment's shiny new feature is Jason Momoa as Dante Reyes, son of the drug lord Hernan Reyes (Joaquim de Almeida) whom Dom and his crew killed in Fast Five. Seeking revenge for his family, Dante orchestrates a convoluted plan that involves intercepting the Agency, framing the crew as terrorists, and kidnapping Dom's son. Your enjoyment will surely depend on your feelings about Momoa's flamboyant over-the-top performance, which would fit right in in a '90s Batman movie.
To watch Fast X is to realize how far we've come from the franchise's humble beginnings, whipping through its globe-spanning plot to the detriment of more meaningful character moments. It also struggles to balance its increasingly bloated cast: In addition to Momoa, the film adds Brie Larson and Rita Moreno, joining Charlize Theron and Helen Mirren as four Oscar-winning actresses in the franchise. Fast X likely won't convert any new fans to the saga, but there's something to be said for knowing exactly what the audience wants, best exemplified in the pulse-pounding fun of the Rome-set bomb set piece. —Kevin Jacobsen
Related: Fast X director breaks down all those cliffhangers
6. F9 (2021)
There are so many movies within F9 that it probably should get multiple spots on this list. All at the same time, it's somehow a prequel, sequel, reboot, an attempt at redemption, the first installment of a franchise-ending trilogy, and Fast's Godfather Part II. It's hard to imagine that anyone other than returning Fast maestro Justin Lin could get as close to pulling it all off as F9 does. If released as originally planned in May 2020, it would have been seen as a nice return to form after Fate and Hobbs & Shaw, but its year-plus delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic turned it into Hollywood's hope for salvation and a reminder of why we love going to the movies.
Watching with an audience, you'll cheer when Han returns, you'll gasp when they go full Fast–meets–Indiana Jones, you'll yell "oh, s---" during the mid-credits scene, and you'll laugh with amazement when you realize they really went to outer space. And, further proof that there are five movies in one here is the fact that we're just mentioning that John Cena joins as Dom's long-lost superspy brother, Jakob Toretto. Family, am I right? —D.L.
Related: 2 Brothers 2 Furious: How Vin Diesel and John Cena are redefining Fast family in F9
5. Fast & Furious 6 (2013)
Let's be clear. Justin Lin's Fast swan song features one of the single greatest moments in movie history: Letty flying off the tank to certain death, and Dominic Toretto crashing his car so he can fly into her. (Don't worry; there's a car to break their fall.) And the sixth Fast movie also has one of the best action scenes ever: The final race down the never-ending runway. Any director who makes an action movie should study the plane scene: How it pays off every subplot, cutting between a massive cast and steadily building the thrills until the final crash.
Good stuff? Absolutely. So it doesn't really matter that Fast & Furious 6 is less a movie than a victory lap, a job-well-done chance for the Fast Five team to do the same again, but more. It's great to see Rodriguez back in the franchise, but the amnesia plotline keeps her locked away from the drama. Likewise, it was a weird decision to banish Brian for an Act 2 Fast 4 epilogue. (In Harry Potter terms, this one's Goblet of Fire: A mess of subplots alongside standout showcase scenes.)
In conversation, Lin and Morgan have both described this movie as essentially the second half of the previous film, which actually does explain why the first half drags while the final climax rocks. (If you're keeping track, that also means the fifth and sixth movies comprise a single movie titled Fast Five Furious 6.) —D.F.
Related: Sung Kang on embracing 'rare' journey of Han, 'Hollywood story' return in F9
4. 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003)
Controversial opinion: 2 Fast 2 Furious is not bad. Even more controversial opinion: 2 Fast 2 Furious is pretty okay. Most controversial opinion of all: The spirit of 2 Fast 2 Furious makes the later films even better. One-off director John Singleton doesn't seem to have any interest in making an action movie; instead, he turns the second film into a parody of the first one. Every drag-racer is color-coded in neon clothes to match their neon cars, Ludacris is the big-haired King of Miami, and Tyrese Gibson rips his shirt off so you can admire his glistening physique while he punches in a window, and never has there been a more hilarious unconvincing Argentine drug lord than Cole Hauser's Carter Verone. CARTER VERONE! —D.F.
(Editor's note: EW's Derek Lawrence thinks it's much better than "not bad," hence this passionate defense of its greatness and this ranking.)
Related: Ludacris reflects on last-minute 2 Fast 2 Furious audition, initially playing himself 'to a degree'
3. Furious 7 (2015)
If The Fast and the Furious is the band's debut album, then Furious 7 is the double-sided concept album mixtape with guest stars and interludes and sometimes Taiko drums just for the hell of it. (Fast 1 is to Furious 7 as Meet the Beatles is to The White Album.) From the very first scene — an extended introduction to new villain Jason Statham, walking through the ruins of a hospital he practically destroyed — the newest film announces itself as a complete hyperbolizing of everything that has come before.
Everything that can be done gets done twice. Statham has a hand-to-hand fight with the Rock and a hand-to-hand fight with Diesel. Cars fly out of a plane and fly off a cliff, through a building, and another building. In the wrong hands, this could get enervating — too much too-muchness, like the Transformers films. But director James Wan brings a light touch, scattering little moments inside the big scenes. Like the moment when two cars fly off a cliff, and while they fall through the air, birds chirp in the background.
There's a proud incoherence to Furious 7. None of these movies' plots make sense, but Furious 7 clearly bears the marks of the midstream loss of Paul Walker. To counterbalance his death, the film shuffles through A-plot goals and B-plot arcs in an explicit attempt to keep things moving; Kurt Russell turns an extended cameo into a scene-stealing showcase, popping up every 20 minutes or so. (Nominal villain Djimon Hounsou is shot like Darth Vader, but most of his role is screaming from the front seat of a helicopter.)
This is the franchise's take-it-to-11 moment — complete with a telenovela-worthy Dom and Letty arc — but it's also the first film that seems aware that these films can't really go over the top. (In Evil Dead terms, this is Evil Dead 2.) And for all the awkwardness, the film is also a sincere tribute to its fallen lead actor — with a four-hank coda unimaginable in any other action-movie context. —D.F.
2. The Fast and the Furious (2001)
The first movie should look so modest in comparison. Everyone is young and normal-sized. There are only a few big action scenes, none of which involve tanks or planes or bank vaults. Later films put whole cities at risk; the scariest part of The Fast and the Furious is the possibility that Brian O'Conner might ruin his friendship with Dominic Toretto.
But Fast 1 runs on huge emotions and sky-high ambitions. Walker plays the role of a nice-guy outsider protagonist, which means everyone else gets to have fun. Vin Diesel becomes Vin Diesel, playing ex-con Toretto as a broody car-Christ. The first big racing scene is mythmaking at its finest, complete with a Ja Rule cameo and Diesel's "You never had me!" monologue. Rick Yune's Johnny Tran is the second-best Fast villain — and if you retroactively think the Rock's a good guy in Fast Five, he's the best full stop.
Director Rob Cohen doesn't have Lin's verve for action scenes, and Fast 1 is a clear victim of age-so-poorly bad CGI. But Cohen was smart enough to let dynamic young performers like Diesel and Michelle Rodriguez pretty much play the version of themselves they'd be playing forever. So, although the later movies are wilder and crazier and bigger, they're also all chasing the franchise's Big Moment: Vin Diesel, in the shadows of a garage, explaining that he lives his life a quarter-mile, et cetera. —D.F.
Related: 'F---, let's go do it': An oral history of The Fast and the Furious
1. Fast Five (2011)
The legend. The killer app. The film that retroactively argued that four essentially unrelated movies were all world-building toward a final act. Fast Five is one of the best pure entertainments of the decade, with at least three hall-of-fame action scenes: the train heist, the Rock-Diesel showdown, and the final bank vault robbery. Hell, there are great action scenes within those action scenes: The train heist leads into the cliff dive, while the final scene double-climaxes with Dom transforming the bank vault into an anti-police-car cudgel.
As Luke Hobbs, Dwayne Johnson is the kind of genuine-equal antagonist most films never bother with. (Which makes it even more goofy-profound when he agrees to partner up with Dom at the end.) And where the next couple of Fast movies keep sending the cast to further-flung locations, Five benefits from a single strong setting: Rio de Janeiro, imagined herein as a metropolis of sweaty favelas and malevolent dictator-drug lords. In his finest outing, Lin brings a mix of beefcake camp and street-level grittiness to the proceedings: When the Rock chases Diesel across the rooftops, it's like watching Bourne Ultimatum remade by Vince McMahon.
But there's a core generosity of spirit to Fast Five, which speaks to the weird wonder of the franchise as a whole. Star-producer Diesel has never looked bigger or more messianic — "THIS IS BRAZIL!" — but Fast Five is democratic enough to find room for the stars of non-Diesel outings 2 Fast and Tokyo Drift. Although it's easy to forget now, Fast Five was partially conceived as a potential conclusion to the franchise — who knew it'd run forever? And so, the final sequence of the movie is one of the most ebullient conclusions of the franchise era: Don Omar's "Danza Kuduro" rides the characters off into eternity. They finished their last job; now they can rest. Until the next last job. —D.F.
Related: Ten years later, Fast Five is still the rock of the franchise
Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly.