New ‘Fast and Furious’ is shameless fun, never dull

By Colin Covert
McClatchy-Tribune

As adolescent male power fantasies go, “Fast Five” has an undeniable trashy charm.

Things blow up right and left, muscle cars are pulverized, sexpots vamp and brawny men wallop the tar out of one another.

Yet there are pauses between adrenaline-packed driving sequences, shoot-outs and explosions for three romance subplots in “Fast Five.” Two subplots involve babies.

Here’s a summer popcorn flick strong enough for a man and gentle enough for a woman.

The story, such as it is, begins with an exhilarating escape from a prison-bound police bus that rivals the spectacular train wreck opening of “The Fugitive.”

Cut to Rio de Janiero, where road-racing bandits Vin Diesel, Paul Walker and Jordana Brewster join in a train robbery.

That robbery ends with them wrongly accused of killing several DEA agents – thus, introducing the conflict of the movie.

With vengeful FBI agent Dwayne Johnson now on their tail, they plan a $100 million caper that will allow their team to move to countries with no extradition and no speed limits.

Like a grease monkey “Ocean’s Thirteen,” the film reassembles the cast of earlier installments. Chris “Ludacris” Bridges, Tyrese Gibson and Sung Kang return to the franchise in “Fast Five”.

The film is handsomely and atmospherically shot in gritty hillside slums and backstreet garages. This is not the popular and exotic bikinis-and-palm-trees tourist guidebook Rio.

The story makes only one excursion to the city’s beaches, and it’s a treat.

A leggy member of Diesel’s crew does a Girl from Ipanima act in order to obtain a crook’s handprint needed to open a high-tech safe.

Her hands-on approach is more fun than lifting his fingerprints off a doorknob, so you give the pandering scene a pass.

It’s a bigger stretch to ignore the fact that the crooks level half of Rio street racing with the policia in the finale.

The staggeringly destructive sequence stops just short of toppling the Christ of the Andes from his mountainous perch.

With performances that are adequate at best and stunts that defy the laws of physics, “Fast Five” flouts every rule of good filmmaking but one – it’s never dull.

Thankfully, director Justin Lin, who filmed the previous two installments of the “Fast” quintet, makes the proceedings noisy, chaotic, shameless fun.

His extravagantly budgeted stunt scenes are so crisp and thrilling that you’re willing to forfeit sharp storytelling and interesting characters.

You can’t have everything.