6/7/2007

Tokyo Drift

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)

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Behind the Scenes ofthe Latest Installation fromThe Fast and the FuriousMovie Series
 

We've all seen it under the special features menu of almost every DVD; the behind the scenes reel--an especially boring part of the DVD that is only highlighted by bloopers, if anything. But the feeling is quite different when you are behind the scenes firsthand. The view is electrifying and the moment is surreal.

Six city blocks of downtown Los Angeles were closed down during the one night Universal invited us to the set of the latest installment of The Fast and The Furious series, entitled The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift. They transformed the usually quiet and dark downtown into a light-filled replica of a Japanese city, complete with beaming vending machines and Japanese street signs. On this particular night, they were shooting a scene where a famous American drifter, Rhys Millen, is blowing rubber around another drift car with precision drifting circles."Wow, that's perfect!" says one of the producers, followed by the sound of clapping from the cast and crew. It was the first take of many, trying to capture the perfect angle and sound of the drifting car. This moment was just a minute part of the movie making process that took the cast and crew from Japan to Southern California.

 


Justin Lin, director of the all-Asian American film Better Luck Tomorrow, headed the movie. He also hand picked all the cars chosen for the film, which he said was crucial to make the film as authentic as possible. Lin wanted to make sure that the movie doesn't sell out like the others and will appeal to both newbies and hardcore drifting fans alike.

It seems this third installment will be much better than the first two. There won't be any big actors stealing the scenes (Paul Walker and Vin Diesel), rather, straight-out drifting will be the only focus.

 

 

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Every car lover has to have watched The Fast and the Furious and it’s sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious. I previously posted about the upcoming third installment in the series, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. Let’s have a look at some of the the cars that will be used in the production.

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Mazda RX7 with Veilside Bodykit

In total, Tokyo Drift used over 200 cars for the movie, and they came from all around the world. There are 11 Nissan 350z cars alone, and these were brought in from Japan because they required right-hand drive vehicles for the movie. Three of them were used for crash scenes. Most of the cars were second hand, as they needed some out of production cars like Toyota Chasers, Mazda RX7s and old Nissan Silvias. From the Mitsubishi stables came 10 units of Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX cars. Volkswagen also provided some cars - four Volkswagen Golf R32s and a few Volkswagen Touran MPVs.

 

Most of the drifting cars had to be upgraded to drift properly, like the Nisssn 350Z which had to be upped to 475hp through the use of turbocharging. LSD differentials were also fitted. The Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX four wheel drive cars had to have their gearboxes locked to rear wheel drive to allow for the crazy drifting action you’ll see in the movie.

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East meets West: Nissan’s venerable RB26DETT in a Ford Mustang

small_67_mustang.jpgThe hero car is a 1967 Ford Mustang fastback - 6 of these were used. Part of the storyline involved the hero transplanting the venerable RB26DETT twin turbo straight-6 from the Nissan Skyline GT-R into a Mustang, so one of the 6 Mustangs had this under the hood. They took months to transplant it. The rest used V8 engines. Catch the The Fast and the Furious: TokyoDrift in cinemas on 15th June 2006 in Malaysia. Check out the movie trailer here. Oh BTW, the budget for the cars for movie? USD$7 million. Just for the cars!

 

 

 

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6/7/2007

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: Chappatsu

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: Chappatsu 350Z
Time for tea?
 
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift has finally hit theaters, and we're pretty sure that most of you have some sort of extreme opinion of the film. Love it or hate it, we're sure that all of you cringed every time one of the feature cars got destroyed. No car made it through the movie unscathed: the Viper was totaled, the Monte Carlo was shredded to bits, the VeilSide RX-7 was blown to pieces and DK's 350Z fell off a cliff. Though the vehicle of a minor character, the gold 350Z you see here also met an unfortunate demise; the car you see here was destroyed in a head on crash incurred while racing through the streets of downtown Los Angeles... uh... we mean downtown Tokyo.

The Universal people call this gold Z the "tea hair" 350Z. For those not in the know, "tea hair" (or chappatsu as it's called in Japanese) is slang for the lightened/reddish-brown hair that many young Japanese have. We can go on about how dyed hair is strictly forbidden in Japanese schools and that this chappatsu hair is a way around that rule, but we won't. What we will comment on is the fact that the driver of this tea hair Z is blonder than Jessica Simpson. Not only that, the driver of this Z is also supposed to be in high school, but he looks older than we do -- and we're nearing 30! 

    
Creepy old student or not, at least this "tea hair" guy has a decently cool 350Z. It doesn't have a whole lot of mechanical upgrades -- heck, it doesn't have any mechanical upgrades; the modifications to this Z are all cosmetic. Since this Z is just a movie car, we won't knock it for "just" having cosmetic upgrades. Besides, the upgrades this car did receive are nothing less than JDM-tight.

The "big" upgrade to this car is the Top Secret G-Force widebody kit. Don't worry, we won't make any puns about the name, but yes, "Top Secret" is the name of the aero kit manufacturer. Anyway, the kit on this car is dubbed the "long nose" kit, as it extends the Z's front end by quite a bit. The nose isn't the only part of the car that is bigger; this Top Secret kit bumps the fenders out by 2 inches on each side. Not wanting to be left out of the plus-sizing fun, the rear bumper gets knocked out a couple of inches as well.


This G-Force kit is accented by a Top Secret FRP hood and a Top Secret carbon fiber wing. We were going to try to tie in the movie car's gold color with the "official" gold color of Top Secret's tuning cars, but we can't think of a clever way of doing so. It's Monday, our brains aren't working... Anyway, the two-tone gold color on this Fast and Furious car is accented by some tribal-style gold graphics that add some "flash" for those times this car passes by the movie cameras.

Speaking of "flash", one can't have a gold movie car sitting on stock rims, so the Nissan-equipped rollers were ditched in favor of some fat-lipped bronze Volk GT-Cs. Small rims have no place on a movie car, so the Volks on this tea-hair Z are sized 18x9-inches in the front and 18x10-inches in the back. Of course, these Volks are wrapped in Toyo's T1R Proxes tires, sized 255/35ZR18 in the front and 275/35 ZR18 'round the back.


Though it isn't seen much in the movie, this gold Z has a pretty bitchin' interior. The stock seats were tossed out and some color-matched Recaro fixed-back buckets were put in their place. Our press release from Universal says that this car has some Takata harnesses, but we sure don't see any racing harnesses in this car. That said, Takata makes the stock seatbelts for many Japanese vehicles, so perhaps the stock belts in this Z were made by everyone's favorite JDM belt maker.


Yeah, we know there's a NOS bottle sitting in the back package tray of this Z, but we doubt it's even hooked up. We're guessing it's just there for show... but as it's in the pictures we have here, we figured we should at least mention it. So... uh... there's the blue NOS bottle. Neat.

Though lacking in mechanical and chassis upgrades, we still think this 350Z is pretty cool. We're sure that a lot of you out there in readerland think it's cool, too. We're all about delivering coolness, so we've got tons of shots of this car waiting for you on our Media Page. Hurry up and get clicking!

 

 

 

 

 

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6/7/2007

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: VeilSide R

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: VeilSide RX-7
The real JDM machine.

 

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2/7/2007

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: Chappatsu

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Car of the Day: Han's S15
This Silvia is like the Mona Lisa?

 The Nissan Silvia you see here is one of the "less pretty" cars of The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. In the movie, Bow Wow compares this car to the Mona Lisa. That is because Bow Wow (or the writers) is crazy. Blue and orange, while opposites on the color wheel (and therefore complimentary colors), just don't look good together -- especially on a car. However, this is a Fast and Furious car we're talking about, so we can't be surprised to see a car in this movie that just isn't cool.

Well... this car is a S15, so it can't be all bad. Let's get a closer look at it...


This role this Silvia plays in The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift is a bit odd, as it's an important car to the film, yet it gets trashed almost immediately. In the movie, this car is owned by the film's mentor-like character "Han". Yes, he just has one name, which makes him that much more of an enigma -- just like Prince. Anyway, Han lets the main guy -- Sean Boswell -- use this S15 in his first race against the Drift King. As we all know, Sean uses the RB-powered Mustang in his "big" race against DK, so we can comfortably say that Sean doesn't drive this car that well. In fact, Sean trashes this Nissan. This trashing of "the Mona Lisa" thoroughly upset Bow Wow... but we're sure he got over it.


As this car doesn't get a lot of screen time, the car builders at Universal really didn't spend too much time working on it. Its interior is gutted out, leaving a lone Recaro seat and a Takata harness for the driver. The rest of the interior was gutted, and custom-fabricated sheet metal was used to cover up the doors, rear package tray and more. You know, the odd shapes of factory-stamped metal just don't look good on film...

Though the shell of this S15 is the unfortunate recipient of an orange and blue paint job, it does have a few things going on for it on the outside. The coolest thing about this Silvia is the near stock-looking C-West DRFT aero kit. Other exterior touches include Modern Image graphics, a C-West-supplied GT wing and a set of Ganador mirrors. Of course the wheels get a visual upgrade in the form of some 19-inch Volk GT-7 rims wrapped in Toyo Proxes TR1 tires.


There's really not a whole lot to talk about as far as the engine is concerned. Don't let the picture fool you, we really doubt that Universal would spring for an Autch-tuned engine for a car that gets trashed. Hell, it looks like Universal didn't even spring for an S15 with the 250 horsepower SR20DET motor -- this looks to be the 165 horsepower naturally-aspirated SR20DE. This N/A SR20 looks as if it has a couple of mods, notably a tubular exhaust manifold and a N1-style exhaust, but those probably only add an additional 10 ponies at best. Still, it's not like this engine needs to be all buff because, as we already said, this car gets trashed. Besides, let's just say that, in the movie, this car's engine comes back to play a major role. What kind of role is that? Go see the movie and find out for yourself.

Before you head out to the movie theatre, be sure to check out our Media Page for more pics of this S15!

 

 

 

     

 



                    Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 

                                    

                                   Mazda RX8

                                   

                               Nissan Fairlady

                                   

                                   Nissan Silvia 

                                      

                                  Ford Mustang

                                  

 

 

 

              

 

 

 

 

             

 

 

 

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