Editorial Reviews:
Description
¡De los realizadores de Rapido y furioso y A todo gas 2 llega la entrega de mas alto octanaje de la exitosa serie de peliculas inspiradas en la velocidad! Hallado culpable de participar en carreras ilegales, Sean Boswell (Lucas Black) intenta comenzar una nueva vida al otro lado del mundo, pero su obsesion por las carreras lo hara enfrentarse al bajo mundo japones. Para sobrevivir, tendra que dominar el "drifing" (derrape) - un estilo nuevo de carreras en donde los autos modificados patinan a traves de peligrosas curvas, desafiando la gravedad y la muerto para obtener la maxima emocion en la pista. Con aun mas alucinantes escenas peligrosas y escalofriantes secuencias de carrera, Rapido y furioso: reto Tokio te coloca en el asiento del piloto. "Ponte el cinturon y experimenta esta fulminante e intense aventura," - Pete Hammond, MAXIM
Amazon.com
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift has all the elements that spelled success for its predecessors: Speed, sex, and minimal dialogue. The plot doesn't need explication; it's a nonsensical series of confrontations and standoffs that serve to get us from one race to another. Tokyo Drift can most accurately be described as a visual poem about screeching tires, crunching fiberglass, and sleek female skin, set to a killer soundtrack of Japanese pop and hip-hop. The actors are only needed for tight close-ups of narrowed eyes or sweaty hands tightly gripping gearshifts, though Sung Kang, Better Luck Tomorrow, stands out as a vaguely philosophical hoodlum with deadpan charisma. The curved bodies of the cars and the luscious flesh of the women are both shot with a fetishistic hunger. The "drift" style of racing--in which the cars are allowed to slide in order to take sharp turns at high speeds--grabs your eyes; there's a strange, spectral beauty to rows of cars sliding sideways down a mountain road at night. Also starring Lucas Black (Friday Night Lights) as our wheel-happy hero; Bow Wow (Roll Bounce) as the scam-artist comic relief; and martial arts legend Sonny Chiba (Kill Bill) as a yakuza big shot. --Bret Fetzer