The film picks up where the previous installment, F9, left off, with Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) and his crew dealing with the aftermath of their confrontation with Cipher (Charlize Theron). This time around, the team faces a new threat in the form of Dante (Jason Momoa), the son of Hernan Reyes (Javier Bardem), a notorious drug lord who was killed by Dom in a previous film. Dante seeks revenge against Dom and his crew, and he's willing to do whatever it takes to get it.
Here is why you need to spend your Friday night with Dom Toretto: Fast X
Leterrier, known for the Transporter films and Now You See Me , grounds the chaos with slightly more spatial coherence than some predecessors, but the laws of physics remain firmly optional. The film picks up where the previous installment,
The Fast & Furious franchise began as a modest love letter to illegal street racing, a celluloid cousin to magazines like Import Tuner . Yet over two decades, it has undergone one of the most radical metamorphoses in cinematic history, evolving from petty crime dramas into globe-trotting, superhero-adjacent heist films. The tenth mainline installment, Fast X , directed by Louis Leterrier, represents the logical—and perhaps fatal—conclusion of this evolution. While the film delivers the over-the-top stunts and cameo-laden nostalgia that fans expect, it ultimately collapses under the weight of its own mythology and excess. Fast X serves not as a thrilling chapter but as a glaring symptom of a franchise suffering from severe narrative exhaustion, where spectacle has cannibalized story, and universe-building has replaced coherent filmmaking. Here is why you need to spend your
With a reported $340 million production cost, it is among the most expensive films ever made, featuring complex practical stunts and extensive global location shooting, including Rome.
Tone and pacing