The Best and Worst Car Chases in the 'Fast and the Furious' Series

With a trailer that boasts such crazy stunts as cars parachuting out of a plane and Vin Diesel flying a luxury sports car between skyscrapers, it’s clear that Furious 7 is gunning for the title of franchise-best car chases. But new director James Wan has some stiff competition. Here are our picks for the seven best —and three worst — examples of vehicular mayhem that have appeared in the series to date.

THE BEST

The Truck Hijack

As Seen In: The Fast and the Furious

The Set-Up: In order to clear his pal Jesse’s debt to gang leader Johnny Tran, Dom and his crew stage a daylight truck hijacking that undercover cop Brian can’t resist getting mixed up in.

Best Moment: Brian leaps from his speeding car to the side of the speeding truck to rescue a trapped Vince.

Fun Fact: Director Rob Cohen approached the sequence, which almost costs Dom and his crew their lives, as a kind of Buddhist rite. “This is karma,” he remarks on the DVD commentary track. “I am a student of Buddhism and believe this is the truth of life. There is a debt to be paid for one’s actions and this is the debt for these anti-heroes in the picture.”

Sean’s Drag Race

As Seen In: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

The Backstory: Facing down a jock at his Arizona high school, gearhead Sean agrees to race through a construction site for the ultimate prize: the bully’s hot girlfriend.

Best Moment: Sean pilots his muscle car through the façade of a house and leaps out the other side.

Fun Fact: The sequence was shot on an actual construction site owned by the Victorville, CA-based Frontier Homes, whose owner was a big Fast and the Furious fan. But construction didn’t stop while the cameras were rolling. “They were literally on the other street building the houses,” director Justin Lin says on the DVD commentary track.

Downtown Drift

As Seen In: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

The Backstory: After Han is confronted by his business partner DK about the fact that he’s skimming off the top of their profits, he hops in his car to escape, but ends up meeting his maker.

Best Moment: The crowd of pedestrians in Shibuya parting as the cars drift by.

Fun Fact: Because they weren’t allowed to shoot the majority of the chase on Tokyo’s streets, Lin and his crew had to recreate the city on several blocks of L.A.’s famed Wilshire Boulevard. As he remarks on the DVD commentary track: “It was tough getting all the businesses to let us put up signs and redesign everything, and we had it for a couple weeks. But it all felt seamless. There was always compliments when we showed the movie to people who lived in Tokyo, and they couldn’t tell what was L.A. and what was Tokyo.”

The Train Heist

As Seen In: Fast Five

The Backstory: Joining their old comrade Vince in Rio, Brian and Mia agree to aid him in a train robbery. Dom shows up just in time to discover that they’re being used as pawns in a scheme orchestrated by a drug kingpin Hernan Reyes.

Best Moment: A truck rams into a train car and catches on fire as Brian dangles from the side.

Fun Fact: This entire sequence is one of the costliest in the franchise’s history, starting off at a base price of $25 million and rising from there. “What you have to do is you have to basically buy out a live track,” Lin reveals on the DVD commentary track. “Then we had to go and buy our own train because we had to wreck it.”

The Safe Chase

As Seen In: Fast Five

The Backstory: Eager to appropriate Reyes’ ill-gotten funds for their own pay day, the Fast crew busts into a police station and makes off with a cash-stuffed safe, dragging it through the streets of Rio.

Best Moment: Dom pulls the safe forward while Brian pushes it in reverse before doing a 180 and driving alongside his partner.

Fun Fact: The young boy who is briefly glimpsed watching the cars speed by from a bus is Lin’s 2-year-old son. He wasn’t the most natural of performers, though. “We’d have the stunt guys tow the vault and he wouldn’t look at it! We were finally able to get his attention on take 3 and he did it perfectly.”

The Tank Battle

As Seen In: Fast & Furious 6

The Backstory: Dom’s crew clashes with terrorist Owen Shaw on a highway in Spain, with Shaw piloting a full-sized tank.

Best Moment: Dom leaps through the air — and across a plunging gap — to rescue Letty.

Fun Fact: According to Lin’s DVD commentary track, this sixth installment was going to be a two-part extravaganza with the first installment entitled The Fast and the second The Furious. In that version, the highway chase would have been the final scene of The Fast, sending the audience out on a high note while they waited to return a couple months later to see The Furious.

The Runway Chase

As Seen In: Fast & Furious 6

The Backstory: Shaw is in the midst of fleeing the country armed with a computer chip when Dom shows up and puts a stop to his airborne escape plan.

Best Moment: Dom drives his car through the nose of a burning plane.

Fun Fact: On the commentary track, Lin says that he originally had the idea for this sequence after Fast & Furious, and it took him four years to bring it to life. At one point, it was going to be the end to Fast Five, but the director decided he didn’t have the resources until the next chapter.


THE WORST

Brian’s Race

As Seen In: 2 Fast 2 Furious

The Backstory: Having fled L.A. for Miami, fugitive Brian (a.k.a. Bullet) makes his living by racing against fools with names like Orange Julius and Slap Jack.

Why It’s Lame: Director John Singleton relies too heavily on greenscreen and non-practical effects to create the illusion of speed. Instead, it all kind of looks like the characters and cars are sitting still on a soundstage.

The Relay Race

As Seen In: 2 Fast 2 Furious

The Backstory: Roman and Brian challenge a pair of muscle drivers to a race in order to pick up additional cars that will come in handy in the climax.

Why It’s Lame: Singleton remarks on the DVD commentary track that he was inspired by video games like Gran Turismo and you can tell, because the use of CGI throughout this sequence is distractingly obvious.

The Tunnel Chase 

As Seen In: Fast & Furious

The Backstory: Dom and Brian pursue drug lord Braga and his henchmen through an underground tunnel that crosses the Mexico-U.S. border.

Why It’s Lame: A dark tunnel is just a really boring place to stage a car chase, especially compared to the exotic backdrops glimpsed in the other movies. It doesn’t help that the vehicular mayhem is as repetitive as the underground scenery.