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2 Fast 2 Furious is a 2003 action film directed by John Singleton from a screenplay by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, from a story by Brandt, Haas, and Gary Scott Thompson. It is the sequel to The Fast and the Furious (2001), is the second installment in the Fast & Furious franchise, and stars Paul Walker as Brian O Conner alongside Tyrese Gibson and Eva Mendes. In the film, ex-LAPD officer Brian O Conner and his friend Roman Pearce (Gibson) go undercover for the U.S. Customs Service to apprehend a drug lord in exchange for the erasure of their criminal records.

A second Fast & Furious film was planned immediately after the theatrical release of its predecessor in 2001, and was confirmed with the returns of Walker and producer Neal H. Moritz. Vin Diesel and Rob Cohen, the co-star and director of the first film, were unable to return; Gibson and Singleton joined the cast in their absence in 2002. To canonically account for Diesel s departure, the short film The Turbo Charged Prelude for 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) was produced and released. Principal photography for 2 Fast 2 Furious commenced in September 2002 and lasted until that December, with filming locations including Miami and the surrounding areas in southern Florida.

2 Fast 2 Furious premiered at the Universal Amphitheatre on June 3, 2003, and was theatrically released worldwide by Universal Pictures on June 6. The film received negative reviews from critics, with criticism for its screenplay and lack of originality, but received some praise for its lighthearted tone. 2 Fast 2 Furious was a box office success, grossing over $236 million worldwide, making it the 17th highest-grossing film of 2003 and the then-highest grossing film in the franchise. The standalone sequel film, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, was released in 2006.

Plot

In Miami, Brian O Conner makes a living participating in illegal street races organized by his mechanic friend Tej Parker. After winning a race against drivers including Suki, the police show up and Brian is arrested. He is given a deal by his former boss FBI Agent Bilkins and U.S. Customs Agent Markham to go undercover and bring down Argentinian drug lord Carter Verone in exchange for clearing his criminal record. Brian agrees on the condition that he choose his partner.

Brian heads home to Barstow, California, where he enlists the help of Roman Pearce, a childhood friend who had served jail time and is under parole. Roman agrees, but only for the same deal Brian was offered. In Miami, Agent Monica Fuentes, undercover with Verone for a year, assists them into his organization. After acquiring confiscated vehicles and being hired by Verone as his drivers, the duo returns to a Customs/FBI hideout, where Roman confronts Markham over interference with the mission. Brian informs Bilkins and Markham that Verone plans to smuggle the money into his private jet and fly off.

To evade their GPS traces, Brian and Roman challenge a pair of muscle car drivers they raced earlier for pink slips. Despite engine and power output handicaps, Brian and Roman manage to win the race and the other two cars. Roman confronts Brian about his attraction to Monica and the constant threat of Verone s men, but they patch up their differences. At a nightclub, Brian and Roman witness Verone torturing MPD Detective Whitworth into giving his men a window of opportunity to make their getaway. The next morning, Monica warns them that they will be killed once the drop is made. Despite this, Markham refuses to call off the job, claiming that it is their one chance to catch Verone.

On the day of the mission, Brian and Roman begin transporting duffel bags of Verone s money with two of Verone s men—Enrique and Roberto—riding along to watch them. Before the 15-minute window is set, Whitworth, the detective in charge, decides to call in the police to move in for the arrest, resulting in a high-speed chase across the city. The duo leads the police to a warehouse, where a scramble by dozens of street racers organized by Tej disorients the police. Following the scramble, the police manage to pull over the wanted cars, only to find out that they were driven by Tej and Suki.

As Brian approaches the destination point in a Yenko Camaro, Enrique tells him to make a detour away from the airfield to the Tarpon Point Marina exit. Meanwhile, Roman gets rid of Roberto by using an improvised ejector seat in his Dodge Challenger powered by nitrous oxide. At the airfield, Customs Agents have Verone s plane and convoy surrounded, only to discover they have been duped into a decoy maneuver while Verone is at a boatyard miles away. Verone reveals he knew Monica was undercover, and gave her the wrong destination point and plans to use her as leverage. When Brian arrives at the marina, Enrique prepares to kill him; Roman appears and helps incapacitate Enrique. Verone escapes aboard his private yacht, but Brian and Roman drive the Yenko Camaro off a ramp, crashing on top of it. The duo apprehend Verone and save Monica.

As part of the deal, Markham clears Brian and Roman’s criminal record, and in return Roman turns over the second half of Verone s cash. The two agree to stay in Miami, and Brian suggests opening a garage—funded by a cut of Verone s cash Roman kept for themselves.

Cast

Main article: List of Fast & Furious characters

  • Paul Walker as Brian O Conner, a former Los Angeles cop who became a fugitive after letting Dominic Toretto escape in the previous film who has now settled in Miami. He drives a 1999 Nissan Skyline GTR R34 and a 2002 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VII.
  • Tyrese Gibson as Roman Pearce, Brian s childhood friend who is on house arrest after serving time in prison for which he still blames Brian. He drives a 2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GTS.
  • Eva Mendes as Monica Fuentes, a U.S. Customs agent working undercover as Carter Verone s aide and Brian s love interest.
  • Cole Hauser as Carter Verone, a ruthless Argentinian drug lord whose organization the Customs Service sent Monica and later Brian and Roman to infiltrate.
  • Chris Ludacris Bridges as Tej Parker, a race host and a friend of Brian s. He arranges high stakes street racing events in which Brian often races and wins.
  • James Remar as Agent Markham, a U.S. customs agent in charge of the operation against Verone and Monica s superior.
  • Devon Aoki as Suki, a friend of Brian, Tej, and Jimmy. She is the only named female racer in the movie, and her crew is made up entirely of women. She normally drives a hot pink custom Honda S2000.
  • Thom Barry as Agent Bilkins, who Brian first met during his undercover work in the first movie, who has come to Miami to oversee the situation. As before, he holds a grudging respect for O Conner s driving and street racing skills.
  • Edward Finlay as Agent Dunn, a U.S. Customs agent who is Markham s number two in the operation.
  • Mark Boone Junior as Detective Whitworth, a Miami detective who is forced by Verone to give Pearce and O Conner a window to deliver his package.
  • Mo Gallini as Enrique, Verone s bald henchman.
  • Roberto Sanchez as Roberto, Verone s henchman and Enrique s partner.
  • MC Jin as Jimmy, a mechanic who works for Tej and is a close friend of Brian.
  • Amaury Nolasco as Orange Julius, a street racer who drives an orange Mazda RX-7.
  • Michael Ealy as Slap Jack, a street racer who drives a gold Toyota Supra.
  • John Cenatiempo as Korpi, a street racer who drives a 1969 Chevrolet Camaro Yenko S/C.
  • Eric Etebari as Darden, Korpi s friend who drives a 1970 Dodge Challenger.

Producer Neal H. Moritz makes a cameo appearance as a police officer during a chase scene.

Production

Development

Because of the incredible response to The Fast and the Furious, we knew we had struck a chord with young audiences. I believe we had tapped into a culture—the very urban world of street racing. It really resonated with our fans, who continued to support the film when it hit the streets on DVD and video—I mean, it really just exploded again, allowing even more people a chance to take the ride. We knew they were ready for another film, but only if we delivered one with the same authenticity and edge as the first. Well, we ve done just that.

—Producer Neal H. Moritz, on greenlighting the project sequel.

Plans to make a sequel came about after the box office success of The Fast and the Furious, which grossed over $200 million worldwide. John Singleton had seen the first film and was awed by it, saying: When I saw The Fast and the Furious, I was like, Damn, why didn t I think of that? Growing up in South Central L.A., we had street races all the time. Singleton s rave reaction of the film as well as the culture of street racing in general influenced his decision to direct the sequel. The director also claimed that the concept of street racing could be something young audiences can relate to.

The screenplay was written by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, along with Gary Scott Thompson (the co-writer from the first film). There were two film treatments submitted early on, one of which did not involve Vin Diesel s character in the event the actor would not return for the sequel. Singleton credited Top Gun as a major influence for the film, particularly with regard to the action sequences.

Pre-production

Vin Diesel was offered $25 million to return in the sequel as Dominic Toretto. However, he refused after reading the screenplay as he felt that its potential was inferior compared to that of its predecessor; rather, he chose to appear in The Chronicles of Riddick. According to Variety magazine in 2015 he was less taken with what the screenwriters had in mind for the film, They didn t take a Francis Ford Coppola approach to it. They approached it like they did sequels in the 80s and 90s, when they would drum up a new story unrelated for the most part, and slap the same name on it. However, Diesel reflected on his decision in a July 2014 report from Uproxx, saying: I would ve said, Don t walk away from it just because the script sucked in 2 Fast 2 Furious because there s an obligation to the audience to fight, no matter what, to make that film as good as possible. … I might have had a little bit more patience or belief in the long-term of it.

Paul Walker, who had just finished Timeline at the time, reprised his role in the second picture as Brian O Conner. Tyrese Gibson, then known mononymously as Tyrese, also became a part of the cast having previously acted in Singleton s Baby Boy, which was the singer s feature film acting debut; he portrayed Roman Pearce. Ja Rule, another prominent rap artist who appeared in The Fast and the Furious, was originally tapped for the role of Tej Parker. Ja Rule was offered $500,000 for the role, which was more than what he had been paid to appear in The Fast and the Furious, $15,000. According to Singleton, Ja got too big for himself. He turned it down. He turned down a half a million dollars. … He was acting like he was too big to be in the sequel. He wouldn t return calls. The director then hired Chris Ludacris Bridges as a substitute. Bridges would later rise to prominence for appearing in the film and star in later films such as Crash and Hustle & Flow. Additional cast also included Cole Hauser as key villain Carter Verone, who appeared in Singleton s Higher Learning; Eva Mendes as undercover agent Monica Fuentes; and Devon Aoki as Suki, the sole female driver in the film.

Filming

Principal photography began in the fall of 2002, and Matthew F. Leonetti served as the director of photography. Filming was done mostly in various parts of South Florida such as Miami Beach, Seven Mile Bridge, and Homestead Air Reserve Base. Hauser s character s mansion was shot in Coral Gables, in a house owned by Sylvester Stallone.

A car enthusiast himself, Walker drove a Nissan Skyline GT-R model R34 borrowed from the film s Technical Advisor, Craig Lieberman, in the film s opening scenes. Aoki did not have a driver s license or any driving experience prior to the film s production, and took driving lessons during filming; she drove a pink 2001 Honda S2000 AP1 in the film. Gibson drove a convertible Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder, while Michael Ealy drove a Toyota Supra Turbo MkIV model JZA80 that had been used by Walker in The Fast and the Furious.

Music

The musical score was composed by David Arnold. The soundtrack was released on May 27, 2003 on Def Jam Recordings, the same record label that Ludacris was signed to.

Release

Box office

2 Fast 2 Furious earned $52.1 million in its U.S. opening in 3,408 theaters, ranking first for the weekend, taking the number #1 spot off of Finding Nemo. It went on to score the fourth-highest June opening weekend, behind Batman Forever, Scooby Doo and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. In its 133 days in release, the film reached a peak release of 3,418 theaters in the U.S. and earned $127.2 million in domestically. The film had the 15th largest US gross of 2003 and the 16th largest worldwide gross of 2003; combined with the international gross of $109.2 million, the film earned $236.4 million worldwide.

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, 2 Fast 2 Furious has an approval rating of 36% based on 160 reviews and an average rating of 4.75/10. The site s critical consensus reads: Beautiful people and beautiful cars in a movie that won t tax the brain cells. On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 38 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating generally unfavorable reviews . Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A− on scale of A+ to F.

Todd McCarthy of Variety magazine wrote: While this John Singleton-directed sequel provides a breezy enough joyride, it lacks the unassuming freshness and appealing neighborhood feel of the economy-priced original. Scott Tobias of The A.V. Club wrote: Singleton abandons the underground racing subculture that gave the first film its allure, relying instead on lazy thriller plotting that s only a bag of donuts and a freeze-frame away from the average TV cop show. USA Today s Mike Clark gave film 2 out of 4, and wrote The movie is all about racing, and character be damned, though the still dazed-looking Walker and Tyrese finally get a little rapport going after a worn-out story s very rocky start. He concludes Lack of pretension helps the viewer get over the fact that this is just another retread. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 out of 4 and said, It doesn t have a brain in its head, but it s made with skill and style and, boy, it is fast and furious. In 2018, Derek Lawrence of the Entertainment Weekly called it the forgotten Fast and Furious gem and praised the chemistry between Walker and Gibson and John Singleton s direction. In 2019, Bilge Eberi of Vulture also praised the movie especially Singleton’s direction.

Accolades

Award Category Nominee Result
MTV Movie Award Breakthrough Male Ludacris Nominated
Golden Raspberry Awards Worst Remake or Sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated
Worst Excuse for an Actual Movie (All Concept/No Content) 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated
Teen Choice Awards Choice Breakout Movie Actor Michael Ealy Nominated
Choice Movie Chemistry Paul Walker Won
Choice Movie Fight/Action Sequence Paul Walker vs. Tyrese Gibson Won
Choice Summer Movie 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated

2 Fast 2 Furious is a 2003 action film directed by John Singleton from a screenplay by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, from a story by Brandt, Haas, and Gary Scott Thompson. It is the sequel to The Fast and the Furious (2001), is the second installment in the Fast & Furious franchise, and stars Paul Walker as Brian O Conner alongside Tyrese Gibson and Eva Mendes. In the film, ex-LAPD officer Brian O Conner and his friend Roman Pearce (Gibson) go undercover for the U.S. Customs Service to apprehend a drug lord in exchange for the erasure of their criminal records.

A second Fast & Furious film was planned immediately after the theatrical release of its predecessor in 2001, and was confirmed with the returns of Walker and producer Neal H. Moritz. Vin Diesel and Rob Cohen, the co-star and director of the first film, were unable to return; Gibson and Singleton joined the cast in their absence in 2002. To canonically account for Diesel s departure, the short film The Turbo Charged Prelude for 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) was produced and released. Principal photography for 2 Fast 2 Furious commenced in September 2002 and lasted until that December, with filming locations including Miami and the surrounding areas in southern Florida.

2 Fast 2 Furious premiered at the Universal Amphitheatre on June 3, 2003, and was theatrically released worldwide by Universal Pictures on June 6. The film received negative reviews from critics, with criticism for its screenplay and lack of originality, but received some praise for its lighthearted tone. 2 Fast 2 Furious was a box office success, grossing over $236 million worldwide, making it the 17th highest-grossing film of 2003 and the then-highest grossing film in the franchise. The standalone sequel film, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, was released in 2006.

Plot

In Miami, Brian O Conner makes a living participating in illegal street races organized by his mechanic friend Tej Parker. After winning a race against drivers including Suki, the police show up and Brian is arrested. He is given a deal by his former boss FBI Agent Bilkins and U.S. Customs Agent Markham to go undercover and bring down Argentinian drug lord Carter Verone in exchange for clearing his criminal record. Brian agrees on the condition that he choose his partner.

Brian heads home to Barstow, California, where he enlists the help of Roman Pearce, a childhood friend who had served jail time and is under parole. Roman agrees, but only for the same deal Brian was offered. In Miami, Agent Monica Fuentes, undercover with Verone for a year, assists them into his organization. After acquiring confiscated vehicles and being hired by Verone as his drivers, the duo returns to a Customs/FBI hideout, where Roman confronts Markham over interference with the mission. Brian informs Bilkins and Markham that Verone plans to smuggle the money into his private jet and fly off.

To evade their GPS traces, Brian and Roman challenge a pair of muscle car drivers they raced earlier for pink slips. Despite engine and power output handicaps, Brian and Roman manage to win the race and the other two cars. Roman confronts Brian about his attraction to Monica and the constant threat of Verone s men, but they patch up their differences. At a nightclub, Brian and Roman witness Verone torturing MPD Detective Whitworth into giving his men a window of opportunity to make their getaway. The next morning, Monica warns them that they will be killed once the drop is made. Despite this, Markham refuses to call off the job, claiming that it is their one chance to catch Verone.

On the day of the mission, Brian and Roman begin transporting duffel bags of Verone s money with two of Verone s men—Enrique and Roberto—riding along to watch them. Before the 15-minute window is set, Whitworth, the detective in charge, decides to call in the police to move in for the arrest, resulting in a high-speed chase across the city. The duo leads the police to a warehouse, where a scramble by dozens of street racers organized by Tej disorients the police. Following the scramble, the police manage to pull over the wanted cars, only to find out that they were driven by Tej and Suki.

As Brian approaches the destination point in a Yenko Camaro, Enrique tells him to make a detour away from the airfield to the Tarpon Point Marina exit. Meanwhile, Roman gets rid of Roberto by using an improvised ejector seat in his Dodge Challenger powered by nitrous oxide. At the airfield, Customs Agents have Verone s plane and convoy surrounded, only to discover they have been duped into a decoy maneuver while Verone is at a boatyard miles away. Verone reveals he knew Monica was undercover, and gave her the wrong destination point and plans to use her as leverage. When Brian arrives at the marina, Enrique prepares to kill him; Roman appears and helps incapacitate Enrique. Verone escapes aboard his private yacht, but Brian and Roman drive the Yenko Camaro off a ramp, crashing on top of it. The duo apprehend Verone and save Monica.

As part of the deal, Markham clears Brian and Roman’s criminal record, and in return Roman turns over the second half of Verone s cash. The two agree to stay in Miami, and Brian suggests opening a garage—funded by a cut of Verone s cash Roman kept for themselves.

Cast

Main article: List of Fast & Furious characters

  • Paul Walker as Brian O Conner, a former Los Angeles cop who became a fugitive after letting Dominic Toretto escape in the previous film who has now settled in Miami. He drives a 1999 Nissan Skyline GTR R34 and a 2002 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VII.
  • Tyrese Gibson as Roman Pearce, Brian s childhood friend who is on house arrest after serving time in prison for which he still blames Brian. He drives a 2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GTS.
  • Eva Mendes as Monica Fuentes, a U.S. Customs agent working undercover as Carter Verone s aide and Brian s love interest.
  • Cole Hauser as Carter Verone, a ruthless Argentinian drug lord whose organization the Customs Service sent Monica and later Brian and Roman to infiltrate.
  • Chris Ludacris Bridges as Tej Parker, a race host and a friend of Brian s. He arranges high stakes street racing events in which Brian often races and wins.
  • James Remar as Agent Markham, a U.S. customs agent in charge of the operation against Verone and Monica s superior.
  • Devon Aoki as Suki, a friend of Brian, Tej, and Jimmy. She is the only named female racer in the movie, and her crew is made up entirely of women. She normally drives a hot pink custom Honda S2000.
  • Thom Barry as Agent Bilkins, who Brian first met during his undercover work in the first movie, who has come to Miami to oversee the situation. As before, he holds a grudging respect for O Conner s driving and street racing skills.
  • Edward Finlay as Agent Dunn, a U.S. Customs agent who is Markham s number two in the operation.
  • Mark Boone Junior as Detective Whitworth, a Miami detective who is forced by Verone to give Pearce and O Conner a window to deliver his package.
  • Mo Gallini as Enrique, Verone s bald henchman.
  • Roberto Sanchez as Roberto, Verone s henchman and Enrique s partner.
  • MC Jin as Jimmy, a mechanic who works for Tej and is a close friend of Brian.
  • Amaury Nolasco as Orange Julius, a street racer who drives an orange Mazda RX-7.
  • Michael Ealy as Slap Jack, a street racer who drives a gold Toyota Supra.
  • John Cenatiempo as Korpi, a street racer who drives a 1969 Chevrolet Camaro Yenko S/C.
  • Eric Etebari as Darden, Korpi s friend who drives a 1970 Dodge Challenger.

Producer Neal H. Moritz makes a cameo appearance as a police officer during a chase scene.

Production

Development

Because of the incredible response to The Fast and the Furious, we knew we had struck a chord with young audiences. I believe we had tapped into a culture—the very urban world of street racing. It really resonated with our fans, who continued to support the film when it hit the streets on DVD and video—I mean, it really just exploded again, allowing even more people a chance to take the ride. We knew they were ready for another film, but only if we delivered one with the same authenticity and edge as the first. Well, we ve done just that.

—Producer Neal H. Moritz, on greenlighting the project sequel.

Plans to make a sequel came about after the box office success of The Fast and the Furious, which grossed over $200 million worldwide. John Singleton had seen the first film and was awed by it, saying: When I saw The Fast and the Furious, I was like, Damn, why didn t I think of that? Growing up in South Central L.A., we had street races all the time. Singleton s rave reaction of the film as well as the culture of street racing in general influenced his decision to direct the sequel. The director also claimed that the concept of street racing could be something young audiences can relate to.

The screenplay was written by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, along with Gary Scott Thompson (the co-writer from the first film). There were two film treatments submitted early on, one of which did not involve Vin Diesel s character in the event the actor would not return for the sequel. Singleton credited Top Gun as a major influence for the film, particularly with regard to the action sequences.

Pre-production

Vin Diesel was offered $25 million to return in the sequel as Dominic Toretto. However, he refused after reading the screenplay as he felt that its potential was inferior compared to that of its predecessor; rather, he chose to appear in The Chronicles of Riddick. According to Variety magazine in 2015 he was less taken with what the screenwriters had in mind for the film, They didn t take a Francis Ford Coppola approach to it. They approached it like they did sequels in the 80s and 90s, when they would drum up a new story unrelated for the most part, and slap the same name on it. However, Diesel reflected on his decision in a July 2014 report from Uproxx, saying: I would ve said, Don t walk away from it just because the script sucked in 2 Fast 2 Furious because there s an obligation to the audience to fight, no matter what, to make that film as good as possible. … I might have had a little bit more patience or belief in the long-term of it.

Paul Walker, who had just finished Timeline at the time, reprised his role in the second picture as Brian O Conner. Tyrese Gibson, then known mononymously as Tyrese, also became a part of the cast having previously acted in Singleton s Baby Boy, which was the singer s feature film acting debut; he portrayed Roman Pearce. Ja Rule, another prominent rap artist who appeared in The Fast and the Furious, was originally tapped for the role of Tej Parker. Ja Rule was offered $500,000 for the role, which was more than what he had been paid to appear in The Fast and the Furious, $15,000. According to Singleton, Ja got too big for himself. He turned it down. He turned down a half a million dollars. … He was acting like he was too big to be in the sequel. He wouldn t return calls. The director then hired Chris Ludacris Bridges as a substitute. Bridges would later rise to prominence for appearing in the film and star in later films such as Crash and Hustle & Flow. Additional cast also included Cole Hauser as key villain Carter Verone, who appeared in Singleton s Higher Learning; Eva Mendes as undercover agent Monica Fuentes; and Devon Aoki as Suki, the sole female driver in the film.

Filming

Principal photography began in the fall of 2002, and Matthew F. Leonetti served as the director of photography. Filming was done mostly in various parts of South Florida such as Miami Beach, Seven Mile Bridge, and Homestead Air Reserve Base. Hauser s character s mansion was shot in Coral Gables, in a house owned by Sylvester Stallone.

A car enthusiast himself, Walker drove a Nissan Skyline GT-R model R34 borrowed from the film s Technical Advisor, Craig Lieberman, in the film s opening scenes. Aoki did not have a driver s license or any driving experience prior to the film s production, and took driving lessons during filming; she drove a pink 2001 Honda S2000 AP1 in the film. Gibson drove a convertible Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder, while Michael Ealy drove a Toyota Supra Turbo MkIV model JZA80 that had been used by Walker in The Fast and the Furious.

Music

The musical score was composed by David Arnold. The soundtrack was released on May 27, 2003 on Def Jam Recordings, the same record label that Ludacris was signed to.

Release

Box office

2 Fast 2 Furious earned $52.1 million in its U.S. opening in 3,408 theaters, ranking first for the weekend, taking the number #1 spot off of Finding Nemo. It went on to score the fourth-highest June opening weekend, behind Batman Forever, Scooby Doo and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. In its 133 days in release, the film reached a peak release of 3,418 theaters in the U.S. and earned $127.2 million in domestically. The film had the 15th largest US gross of 2003 and the 16th largest worldwide gross of 2003; combined with the international gross of $109.2 million, the film earned $236.4 million worldwide.

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, 2 Fast 2 Furious has an approval rating of 36% based on 160 reviews and an average rating of 4.75/10. The site s critical consensus reads: Beautiful people and beautiful cars in a movie that won t tax the brain cells. On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 38 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating generally unfavorable reviews . Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A− on scale of A+ to F.

Todd McCarthy of Variety magazine wrote: While this John Singleton-directed sequel provides a breezy enough joyride, it lacks the unassuming freshness and appealing neighborhood feel of the economy-priced original. Scott Tobias of The A.V. Club wrote: Singleton abandons the underground racing subculture that gave the first film its allure, relying instead on lazy thriller plotting that s only a bag of donuts and a freeze-frame away from the average TV cop show. USA Today s Mike Clark gave film 2 out of 4, and wrote The movie is all about racing, and character be damned, though the still dazed-looking Walker and Tyrese finally get a little rapport going after a worn-out story s very rocky start. He concludes Lack of pretension helps the viewer get over the fact that this is just another retread. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 out of 4 and said, It doesn t have a brain in its head, but it s made with skill and style and, boy, it is fast and furious. In 2018, Derek Lawrence of the Entertainment Weekly called it the forgotten Fast and Furious gem and praised the chemistry between Walker and Gibson and John Singleton s direction. In 2019, Bilge Eberi of Vulture also praised the movie especially Singleton’s direction.

Accolades

Award Category Nominee Result
MTV Movie Award Breakthrough Male Ludacris Nominated
Golden Raspberry Awards Worst Remake or Sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated
Worst Excuse for an Actual Movie (All Concept/No Content) 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated
Teen Choice Awards Choice Breakout Movie Actor Michael Ealy Nominated
Choice Movie Chemistry Paul Walker Won
Choice Movie Fight/Action Sequence Paul Walker vs. Tyrese Gibson Won
Choice Summer Movie 2 Fast 2 Furious Nominated

Year 2003
ReleaseDate 2003-06-06
RuntimeMins 107
RuntimeStr 1h 47min
Plot Former cop Brian O’Conner is called upon to bust a dangerous criminal and he recruits the help of a former childhood friend and street racer who has a chance to redeem himself.
Awards Awards, 4 wins & 13 nominations
Directors John Singleton
Writers Gary Scott Thompson, Michael Brandt, Derek Haas
Stars Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Cole Hauser
Produced by Michael Fottrell,Heather Lieberman,Lee R. Mayes,Neal H. Moritz
Music by David Arnold
Cinematography by Matthew F. Leonetti
Film Editing by Bruce Cannon,Dallas Puett
Casting By Kimberly Hardin
Production Design by Keith Brian Burns
Art Direction by Liz Carney,Lawrence A. Hubbs
Set Decoration by Jon Danniells,Rick Simpson
Costume Design by Sanja Milkovic Hays
Makeup Department Carla Antonino,Leo Corey Castellano,Hallie D Amore,Selena Evans-Miller,Donna Battersby Greene,Lee Grimes,Erin Koplow,Pauletta O. Lewis,Bill McCoy,Linda Melazzo,Rod Ortega,Carol Rasheed,Carol Raskin,Mark Wittenberg
Production Management Matthew Binns,David Marder,Terry Miller,Lisa Rodgers,Ron Lynch
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Ty Arnold,Diane Calhoun,Christian Clarke,Frank Davis,Bruce Franklin,Terry Leonard,Brian Moon,Karen Radzikowski,Jason Roberts,Michael Waxman,Cheeba White,Hans Berggren,Melanie Grefe,Larry Zience
Art Department Chris Alicia Jr.,Hugh Conlon,James P. Crapser,Robert Crowley,Liba Daniels,Warren Drummond,Stephen P. Durante,Gerard V. Engrassia,Stephen I. Erdberg,Michael J. Flynn,James Harris,Jeremy Koenig,Kevin Long,Alexa Marino,Brian McGee,Arturo Mendez,Michael Metzel,Jean-Francois Mignault,John Pantesco,Kenneth Sayers,Philip Schneider,Fred Schwendel,Nicholas Scott,Roger Sherman,Dan Wilkerson,Xelinda Yancy,Diana Anctil,Kon Iliov,Rob Prior
Sound Department Walter Anderson,Bobbi Banks,Scott Blynder,Bob Bowman,Chris Carpenter,Scott Clements,Edmond J. Coblentz Jr.,Dean Drabin,Nerses Gezalyan,Hector C. Gika,Greg Hedgepath,Michael Hertlein,Kenneth L. Johnson,Michael Kamper,Randy Kelley,Rick Kline,Andy Koyama,Greg LaPlante,Bill Meadows,Marc Meyer,James Moriana,Mark Ormandy,Tom Ozanich,Alan Rankin,Philip Rogers,Derek Sample,Scott Sanders,Ann Scibelli,Douglas Shamburger,Roland N. Thai,Nancy Truman,Mark Weber,Jeffrey Wilhoit,Ben Wilkins,Peter Zinda,Charles Deenen,Jeff Glueck
Special Effects by Chris Adams,Craig Tex Barnett,Jon Bethke,Wayne Burnes,Christian Byrd,Howard Cross,Peter Damien,Al Di Sarro,Ken Gorrell,Bob Graham,Kevin Harris,Mark Hawker,Richard Lee Jones,Steve Kelley,Michael Kirchmeier,Kevin R. Lester,Mike Paris,Richard E. Perry,Mike Reedy,Norman G. Sadler,Ken Speed,Laura Tiz,Durk Tyndall,Russell Tyrrell,Tim Walkey,Niki Yoblonski
Visual Effects by Chris Allen,Johnny Alves,Chris Anderson,Carol Ashley,Matt Ashton,Erika Bach,Louise Baker,Christopher Batty,Thad Beier,Daniel Birnbaum,Jonathan Block,Constance Bracewell,Richard Britton,John Cassella,Daniel Chuba,Aliza Corson Chameides,Thomas Dadras,Tom Daws,Chris Dawson,Michael Degtjarewsky,Valerie Delahaye,Kent Demaine,Antoine Deschamps,Jamie Dixon,Crystal Dowd,Syd Dutton,Michelle Eisenreich,Derek Fisher,Chris Flynn,Collin Fowler,Amy Garback,Lynn M. Gephart,Gilbert Gonzales,Jericho Green,Sharon Smith Holley,Justin Jones,Patrick Kavanaugh,Patrick Keenan,Ntana Bantu Key,Michael Kory,Ryan Lastimosa,Gregory D. Liegey,Kevin Lin,Paul Luna,Joe Mangione,Rebecca Marie,Fumi Mashimo,Mamie McCall,Kelvin McIlwain,Diana Miao,Suzanne Mitus-Uribe,Paolo Moscatelli,Marc Nanjo,Josh Novak,Gregory Oehler,Julie Orosz,Zai Ortiz,Patrick Phillips,Kyle Robinson,Michelle Rothburgh,Dixiana Rubio,Mark Russell,Chris Ryan,Craig Shumard,Tom Slovick,Bill Taylor,Alexander Vegh,Jason Wardle,Mike Wassel,Kyle Yamamoto,PeiPei Alena Yuan,Paul Maurice,Mike Navarro,Thanh Nguyen,Rodrigo Teixeira,Bryan Thombs
Stunts Bobby Aldridge,Stanton Barrett,Billy Bates,Chick Bernhard,Michael Bernstein,Grady Allen Bishop,Butch Brickell,Bob Brown,Troy Brown,Tony Brubaker,Brian Burrows,Hal Burton,Kenny Calman,Eric Chambers,R.J. Chambers,Amy Tomberlin Cheek,James Cheek,Stacy Courtney,David D. Darling,Dennis Deveaugh,Alex Edlin,Annie Ellis,Jeannie Epper,Charlie Estepp,Debbie Evans,Frank Ferrara,Bill Flaherty,Denise Gallo,Teri Garland,Henry Gilbert,Al Guthery,Clifford Happy,Thomas Robinson Harper,Freddie Hice,Mark Hicks,Steve Holladay,Paul Homza,Dorsey Jacks,Kevin L. Jackson,Joop Katana,Dave Kramer,Rick LeFevour,Oakley Lehman,Malosi Leonard,Matt Leonard,Terry Leonard,David S. Lomax,Artie Malesci,Ed McDermott II,Bob Minor,Keith Nicol,Courtney Paige Kramer,James Pratt,J.C. Robaina,Kerry Rossall,George A. Sack Jr.,Kurtis Sanders,John D. Sarviss,William Scharpf,John-Clay Scott,Ivor Sheir,Lincoln Simonds,Joe Stone,Bobby Talbert,Charles A. Tamburro,John Tamburro,Tommy Mack Turvey,Jeremiah Vaughn,Ted White,Glenn R. Wilder,Jim Wilkey,Jerry Willis,Scott Workman,Chris Zaragoza,Don Abbatiello,Tom Akos,Alexis Bahr,Tom Bahr,Matt Baker,Kevin Ball,Tim Bell,Jodi Lyn Brockton,Troy Brown,John Cenatiempo,Scott Dale,Mitchell Dean,Corey Michael Eubanks,John Evanko,Steve Filmore,Reece Fleetwood,Ronald Fox,Cristy Fuentefria,Roland Fullajtar,J. Armin Garza II,Jef Gums,Steve Gums,Thomas Robinson Harper,Greg Harris,Mark Hicks,Rich Hopkins,Shanna Jacobs,Oakley Lehman,Sli Lewis,David S. Lomax,Sammy Maloof,Richard Marrero,Keifus Mathews,Tina Mckissick,Johnny Michaels,J. Brian Miles,Rich Minga,Eric Miranda,Janine Mitchell,Anna Mercedes Morris,Rana Morrison,Rado Nenov,Cord Newman,Phi-Long Nguyen,Mario Ortiz,Kiana Politis,Scotty Richards,Chaz Roberson,Troy Robinson,Benjamin Rowe,Roberto Sanz Sanchez,John D. Sarviss,Felipe Savahge,John-Clay Scott,Luis J. Silva,Erik Solky,Bobby Talbert,Charles A. Tamburro,John Tamburro,Dave Tommasi,Durk Tyndall,Tim Walkey,Todd Warren,Chrissy Weathersby Ball,Glenn R. Wilder,Kyle Woods,Scott Workman,Mary Adeline Wright,John Zimmerman
Camera and Electrical Department Thomas M. Allen,Ben Bardin,Kurt Beckler,Tim Black,Luciano Blotta,Pat Blymyer,Tim Bourque,Frank Buono,David S. Campbell,Jonathan Dugas,Shiloh Eck,Greg Faysash,Andrew Fisher,Chris Fisher,Pat Fitzpatrick,Ryan French,Todd Fullerton,Peter Geraghty,Sean P. Gilbert,Ron Goodman,Scotty Goudreau,Anthony Gregori,Barry Gross,Marvin Haven,David Howard,Andrew Paul Howell,Kevin Jackson,Jarquin,Camilo Jarquin,Jeb Johenning,Michael L. Larson,Marvin Lee,William Lopez,Joe Mast,Michael E. Matteson,Bill McConnell Jr.,Mike McGowan,Dauv McNeely,Sean Meyer,Anthony Mollicone,John S. Moyer,David H. Neale,Jack Nealy,David Norris,Raymond Orraca,Ken Palladino,Jeffrey W. Petersen,Thomas P. Powell,Brian Pruitt,Humberto Recio,Patrick Redmond,Mitch Reeves,Gary Ryan,Mark Santoni,Gary Schillp,Michael J. Schwartz,Bob Scott,Bruce Sharp,Michael St. Hilaire,Scott Stuart,Jeff Togno,Shawn Torge,Fred Valentine,Jason C. Villella,Michael J. Walsh,Billy Wells,Joel Wheatley,Sean R. Wilson,John Wruck,David Yellin,Anthony Zibelli,Jon Bowen,Stephen Ciffone,April Ruane Crowley,Larry Markart,Mike McGowan,T. Michael McLean,Leopoldo Tamargo
Animation Department Robert Lurye,PeiPei Alena Yuan
Casting Department Leah Daniels Butler,Jonathan Cruz,Barbara Harris,Billy Murphy,Thom Reed,Mike Risco,Winsome Sinclair,Lori Wyman
Costume and Wardrobe Department Yaa Boaa Aning,Camille Argus,Valerie Fusaro,Lorenzo Hearns Jr.,Heather Holmes,E. Melanie Moore,Lawrence Quon,Jimmy Star,Irena Stepic,Catherine Peña
Editorial Department Justin Bourret,Gary Burritt,Elizabeth Dean,Michael Eaves,Scott Janush,Maggie Ostroff,David Raymond,Jeff Smithwick,Kostas Theodosiou
Location Management Brian Bentham,Shawn Boyachek,Melissa Marie Davis,Rita Duffey,Elizabeth Elwell,Joanne Gelberg-Justiz,Gus Holzer,Aaron B. Koontz,Arleen Loo,Genna Mazor,David Modia,Rana Morrison,Andrew S. Patterson,Lyndale V. Pettus,Jennifer Radzikowski,Susanne Ragnarsson,Frederick G. Schroeder,Sherrill Smith,Sam Tedesco,Kirsten Vetter,Sandra Woodward,Sergio Gonzalez,Dave Knight
Music Department Spring Aspers,Bob Bornstein,Tom Boyd,Jordan Corngold,Debbi Datz-Pyle,Bruce Dukov,Michael Farrow,Robert Fernandez,The Hollywood Studio Symphony,The Hollywood Symphony Orchestra,Carlton Kaller,Stephanie Murray,Rob Playford,Paul Stewart,Melodee Sutton,James Thatcher,Paul Wertheimer,Shie Rozow
Script and Continuity Department Alicia Accardo,Trisha Burton
Transportation Department Brian Allen,Brian Bailey,John Feinblatt,Duke Foster,Kevin Hudis,Joyce M. Lark,Craig Lietzke,Douglas Miller,Ted Moser,Cyril O Neil,Marty Osborne,Ron Parsell,William Powell,Michael Ralph Price,Lisa Robertson,Shaun Ryan,Louis Sanchez,Gus Sardina,Rick S. Sulier,Jeremiah Vaughn,Chad Wadsworth,Roshawn Wilson,Jeff Woodward,David Neil Enfinger,Dana Swartout,Jay E. Vigil
Additional Crew Josué D. Aguilar,Oscar Aguirre,Paul Aldanée,Wendy Altman-Cohen,Jeff L. Anderson,Lillian Awa,Tom Bahr,Jonas Barnes,Jackie Bazan,Jeannie Belgrave,Bradford Berling,Norene Bini,Anthony Bodden,Russell Brown,Christian Byrd,Jamaica Carter,Sonja Christoph,Chris Corrado,Steve Dale,Larry Donahue,Janette Evans,Jane Everett,Gino Falla,Lisa Jean Felski,Cristy Fuentefria,Roland Fullajtar,Chris Furia,Lisa Furia,Denise Gallo,Tara Grieco,Logan Hard,Cobette Harper,Marc W. Havener,Esteban Hernandez,Carla Hoade,Pierre Hoffmann,Erica P. Ignacio-Beck,Duane Johnson,Marlon Johnson,Nadine Johnson,Wayne Johnson,James Joyner,Russell E. Katzman,Elayne Keratsis,Adam Klitzner,Ryan Krayser,Christian Labarta,Craig Lieberman,Stephanie Lundy,Eduardo Lytton,Todd A. Marks,Lisa L. Martin,Jaime Martinez,Dauv McNeely,Betsy Megel,Allison A. Millican,Rana Morrison,Robert B. Morrison,Greg Nye,Kenneth Pratt,Gabriel Quintero,Kevin D. Reagan,William Michael Redman,Will Robbins,Lou Roth,Dixiana Rubio,Shupai Rwizi Sr.,Tammy Sandler,Dana Schneider,George Schoendorfer,Emily Samantha Sherman,Ivor Shier,Bob Smitty Smith,Drew Smith,Rory D. Smith,Todd Spears,Charline St. Charles,Scott T. Sudduth,Jason Tamez,Chad Tingle,Laura Tiz,Karen Turner,Nadine Tuttle,Matthew Vitel,Leon P. Watkins,Simi Wein,Pamela Lyn Weiss,Paul Wilson-Young,Mary Adeline Wright,Dfernando Zaremba,Anthony Zibelli,Jim Bacon,Christopher De Stefano,Rafael Jenes,Andy Martinez Jr.,Rana Morrison,George A. Parker,Heather Short
Thanks Wayne Johnson
Genres Action, Adventure, Crime
Companies Universal Pictures, Original Film, Mikona Productions GmbH & Co. KG
Countries USA, Germany
Languages English, Spanish
ContentRating PG-13
ImDbRating 5.9
ImDbRatingVotes 273364
MetacriticRating 38
Keywords undercover agent,racing,miami florida,sequel,motor vehicle
Year 2003
ReleaseDate 2003-06-06
RuntimeMins 107
RuntimeStr 1h 47min
Plot Former cop Brian O’Conner is called upon to bust a dangerous criminal and he recruits the help of a former childhood friend and street racer who has a chance to redeem himself.
Awards Awards, 4 wins & 13 nominations
Directors John Singleton
Writers Gary Scott Thompson, Michael Brandt, Derek Haas
Stars Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Cole Hauser
Produced by Michael Fottrell,Heather Lieberman,Lee R. Mayes,Neal H. Moritz
Music by David Arnold
Cinematography by Matthew F. Leonetti
Film Editing by Bruce Cannon,Dallas Puett
Casting By Kimberly Hardin
Production Design by Keith Brian Burns
Art Direction by Liz Carney,Lawrence A. Hubbs
Set Decoration by Jon Danniells,Rick Simpson
Costume Design by Sanja Milkovic Hays
Makeup Department Carla Antonino,Leo Corey Castellano,Hallie D Amore,Selena Evans-Miller,Donna Battersby Greene,Lee Grimes,Erin Koplow,Pauletta O. Lewis,Bill McCoy,Linda Melazzo,Rod Ortega,Carol Rasheed,Carol Raskin,Mark Wittenberg
Production Management Matthew Binns,David Marder,Terry Miller,Lisa Rodgers,Ron Lynch
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Ty Arnold,Diane Calhoun,Christian Clarke,Frank Davis,Bruce Franklin,Terry Leonard,Brian Moon,Karen Radzikowski,Jason Roberts,Michael Waxman,Cheeba White,Hans Berggren,Melanie Grefe,Larry Zience
Art Department Chris Alicia Jr.,Hugh Conlon,James P. Crapser,Robert Crowley,Liba Daniels,Warren Drummond,Stephen P. Durante,Gerard V. Engrassia,Stephen I. Erdberg,Michael J. Flynn,James Harris,Jeremy Koenig,Kevin Long,Alexa Marino,Brian McGee,Arturo Mendez,Michael Metzel,Jean-Francois Mignault,John Pantesco,Kenneth Sayers,Philip Schneider,Fred Schwendel,Nicholas Scott,Roger Sherman,Dan Wilkerson,Xelinda Yancy,Diana Anctil,Kon Iliov,Rob Prior
Sound Department Walter Anderson,Bobbi Banks,Scott Blynder,Bob Bowman,Chris Carpenter,Scott Clements,Edmond J. Coblentz Jr.,Dean Drabin,Nerses Gezalyan,Hector C. Gika,Greg Hedgepath,Michael Hertlein,Kenneth L. Johnson,Michael Kamper,Randy Kelley,Rick Kline,Andy Koyama,Greg LaPlante,Bill Meadows,Marc Meyer,James Moriana,Mark Ormandy,Tom Ozanich,Alan Rankin,Philip Rogers,Derek Sample,Scott Sanders,Ann Scibelli,Douglas Shamburger,Roland N. Thai,Nancy Truman,Mark Weber,Jeffrey Wilhoit,Ben Wilkins,Peter Zinda,Charles Deenen,Jeff Glueck
Special Effects by Chris Adams,Craig Tex Barnett,Jon Bethke,Wayne Burnes,Christian Byrd,Howard Cross,Peter Damien,Al Di Sarro,Ken Gorrell,Bob Graham,Kevin Harris,Mark Hawker,Richard Lee Jones,Steve Kelley,Michael Kirchmeier,Kevin R. Lester,Mike Paris,Richard E. Perry,Mike Reedy,Norman G. Sadler,Ken Speed,Laura Tiz,Durk Tyndall,Russell Tyrrell,Tim Walkey,Niki Yoblonski
Visual Effects by Chris Allen,Johnny Alves,Chris Anderson,Carol Ashley,Matt Ashton,Erika Bach,Louise Baker,Christopher Batty,Thad Beier,Daniel Birnbaum,Jonathan Block,Constance Bracewell,Richard Britton,John Cassella,Daniel Chuba,Aliza Corson Chameides,Thomas Dadras,Tom Daws,Chris Dawson,Michael Degtjarewsky,Valerie Delahaye,Kent Demaine,Antoine Deschamps,Jamie Dixon,Crystal Dowd,Syd Dutton,Michelle Eisenreich,Derek Fisher,Chris Flynn,Collin Fowler,Amy Garback,Lynn M. Gephart,Gilbert Gonzales,Jericho Green,Sharon Smith Holley,Justin Jones,Patrick Kavanaugh,Patrick Keenan,Ntana Bantu Key,Michael Kory,Ryan Lastimosa,Gregory D. Liegey,Kevin Lin,Paul Luna,Joe Mangione,Rebecca Marie,Fumi Mashimo,Mamie McCall,Kelvin McIlwain,Diana Miao,Suzanne Mitus-Uribe,Paolo Moscatelli,Marc Nanjo,Josh Novak,Gregory Oehler,Julie Orosz,Zai Ortiz,Patrick Phillips,Kyle Robinson,Michelle Rothburgh,Dixiana Rubio,Mark Russell,Chris Ryan,Craig Shumard,Tom Slovick,Bill Taylor,Alexander Vegh,Jason Wardle,Mike Wassel,Kyle Yamamoto,PeiPei Alena Yuan,Paul Maurice,Mike Navarro,Thanh Nguyen,Rodrigo Teixeira,Bryan Thombs
Stunts Bobby Aldridge,Stanton Barrett,Billy Bates,Chick Bernhard,Michael Bernstein,Grady Allen Bishop,Butch Brickell,Bob Brown,Troy Brown,Tony Brubaker,Brian Burrows,Hal Burton,Kenny Calman,Eric Chambers,R.J. Chambers,Amy Tomberlin Cheek,James Cheek,Stacy Courtney,David D. Darling,Dennis Deveaugh,Alex Edlin,Annie Ellis,Jeannie Epper,Charlie Estepp,Debbie Evans,Frank Ferrara,Bill Flaherty,Denise Gallo,Teri Garland,Henry Gilbert,Al Guthery,Clifford Happy,Thomas Robinson Harper,Freddie Hice,Mark Hicks,Steve Holladay,Paul Homza,Dorsey Jacks,Kevin L. Jackson,Joop Katana,Dave Kramer,Rick LeFevour,Oakley Lehman,Malosi Leonard,Matt Leonard,Terry Leonard,David S. Lomax,Artie Malesci,Ed McDermott II,Bob Minor,Keith Nicol,Courtney Paige Kramer,James Pratt,J.C. Robaina,Kerry Rossall,George A. Sack Jr.,Kurtis Sanders,John D. Sarviss,William Scharpf,John-Clay Scott,Ivor Sheir,Lincoln Simonds,Joe Stone,Bobby Talbert,Charles A. Tamburro,John Tamburro,Tommy Mack Turvey,Jeremiah Vaughn,Ted White,Glenn R. Wilder,Jim Wilkey,Jerry Willis,Scott Workman,Chris Zaragoza,Don Abbatiello,Tom Akos,Alexis Bahr,Tom Bahr,Matt Baker,Kevin Ball,Tim Bell,Jodi Lyn Brockton,Troy Brown,John Cenatiempo,Scott Dale,Mitchell Dean,Corey Michael Eubanks,John Evanko,Steve Filmore,Reece Fleetwood,Ronald Fox,Cristy Fuentefria,Roland Fullajtar,J. Armin Garza II,Jef Gums,Steve Gums,Thomas Robinson Harper,Greg Harris,Mark Hicks,Rich Hopkins,Shanna Jacobs,Oakley Lehman,Sli Lewis,David S. Lomax,Sammy Maloof,Richard Marrero,Keifus Mathews,Tina Mckissick,Johnny Michaels,J. Brian Miles,Rich Minga,Eric Miranda,Janine Mitchell,Anna Mercedes Morris,Rana Morrison,Rado Nenov,Cord Newman,Phi-Long Nguyen,Mario Ortiz,Kiana Politis,Scotty Richards,Chaz Roberson,Troy Robinson,Benjamin Rowe,Roberto Sanz Sanchez,John D. Sarviss,Felipe Savahge,John-Clay Scott,Luis J. Silva,Erik Solky,Bobby Talbert,Charles A. Tamburro,John Tamburro,Dave Tommasi,Durk Tyndall,Tim Walkey,Todd Warren,Chrissy Weathersby Ball,Glenn R. Wilder,Kyle Woods,Scott Workman,Mary Adeline Wright,John Zimmerman
Camera and Electrical Department Thomas M. Allen,Ben Bardin,Kurt Beckler,Tim Black,Luciano Blotta,Pat Blymyer,Tim Bourque,Frank Buono,David S. Campbell,Jonathan Dugas,Shiloh Eck,Greg Faysash,Andrew Fisher,Chris Fisher,Pat Fitzpatrick,Ryan French,Todd Fullerton,Peter Geraghty,Sean P. Gilbert,Ron Goodman,Scotty Goudreau,Anthony Gregori,Barry Gross,Marvin Haven,David Howard,Andrew Paul Howell,Kevin Jackson,Jarquin,Camilo Jarquin,Jeb Johenning,Michael L. Larson,Marvin Lee,William Lopez,Joe Mast,Michael E. Matteson,Bill McConnell Jr.,Mike McGowan,Dauv McNeely,Sean Meyer,Anthony Mollicone,John S. Moyer,David H. Neale,Jack Nealy,David Norris,Raymond Orraca,Ken Palladino,Jeffrey W. Petersen,Thomas P. Powell,Brian Pruitt,Humberto Recio,Patrick Redmond,Mitch Reeves,Gary Ryan,Mark Santoni,Gary Schillp,Michael J. Schwartz,Bob Scott,Bruce Sharp,Michael St. Hilaire,Scott Stuart,Jeff Togno,Shawn Torge,Fred Valentine,Jason C. Villella,Michael J. Walsh,Billy Wells,Joel Wheatley,Sean R. Wilson,John Wruck,David Yellin,Anthony Zibelli,Jon Bowen,Stephen Ciffone,April Ruane Crowley,Larry Markart,Mike McGowan,T. Michael McLean,Leopoldo Tamargo
Animation Department Robert Lurye,PeiPei Alena Yuan
Casting Department Leah Daniels Butler,Jonathan Cruz,Barbara Harris,Billy Murphy,Thom Reed,Mike Risco,Winsome Sinclair,Lori Wyman
Costume and Wardrobe Department Yaa Boaa Aning,Camille Argus,Valerie Fusaro,Lorenzo Hearns Jr.,Heather Holmes,E. Melanie Moore,Lawrence Quon,Jimmy Star,Irena Stepic,Catherine Peña
Editorial Department Justin Bourret,Gary Burritt,Elizabeth Dean,Michael Eaves,Scott Janush,Maggie Ostroff,David Raymond,Jeff Smithwick,Kostas Theodosiou
Location Management Brian Bentham,Shawn Boyachek,Melissa Marie Davis,Rita Duffey,Elizabeth Elwell,Joanne Gelberg-Justiz,Gus Holzer,Aaron B. Koontz,Arleen Loo,Genna Mazor,David Modia,Rana Morrison,Andrew S. Patterson,Lyndale V. Pettus,Jennifer Radzikowski,Susanne Ragnarsson,Frederick G. Schroeder,Sherrill Smith,Sam Tedesco,Kirsten Vetter,Sandra Woodward,Sergio Gonzalez,Dave Knight
Music Department Spring Aspers,Bob Bornstein,Tom Boyd,Jordan Corngold,Debbi Datz-Pyle,Bruce Dukov,Michael Farrow,Robert Fernandez,The Hollywood Studio Symphony,The Hollywood Symphony Orchestra,Carlton Kaller,Stephanie Murray,Rob Playford,Paul Stewart,Melodee Sutton,James Thatcher,Paul Wertheimer,Shie Rozow
Script and Continuity Department Alicia Accardo,Trisha Burton
Transportation Department Brian Allen,Brian Bailey,John Feinblatt,Duke Foster,Kevin Hudis,Joyce M. Lark,Craig Lietzke,Douglas Miller,Ted Moser,Cyril O Neil,Marty Osborne,Ron Parsell,William Powell,Michael Ralph Price,Lisa Robertson,Shaun Ryan,Louis Sanchez,Gus Sardina,Rick S. Sulier,Jeremiah Vaughn,Chad Wadsworth,Roshawn Wilson,Jeff Woodward,David Neil Enfinger,Dana Swartout,Jay E. Vigil
Additional Crew Josué D. Aguilar,Oscar Aguirre,Paul Aldanée,Wendy Altman-Cohen,Jeff L. Anderson,Lillian Awa,Tom Bahr,Jonas Barnes,Jackie Bazan,Jeannie Belgrave,Bradford Berling,Norene Bini,Anthony Bodden,Russell Brown,Christian Byrd,Jamaica Carter,Sonja Christoph,Chris Corrado,Steve Dale,Larry Donahue,Janette Evans,Jane Everett,Gino Falla,Lisa Jean Felski,Cristy Fuentefria,Roland Fullajtar,Chris Furia,Lisa Furia,Denise Gallo,Tara Grieco,Logan Hard,Cobette Harper,Marc W. Havener,Esteban Hernandez,Carla Hoade,Pierre Hoffmann,Erica P. Ignacio-Beck,Duane Johnson,Marlon Johnson,Nadine Johnson,Wayne Johnson,James Joyner,Russell E. Katzman,Elayne Keratsis,Adam Klitzner,Ryan Krayser,Christian Labarta,Craig Lieberman,Stephanie Lundy,Eduardo Lytton,Todd A. Marks,Lisa L. Martin,Jaime Martinez,Dauv McNeely,Betsy Megel,Allison A. Millican,Rana Morrison,Robert B. Morrison,Greg Nye,Kenneth Pratt,Gabriel Quintero,Kevin D. Reagan,William Michael Redman,Will Robbins,Lou Roth,Dixiana Rubio,Shupai Rwizi Sr.,Tammy Sandler,Dana Schneider,George Schoendorfer,Emily Samantha Sherman,Ivor Shier,Bob Smitty Smith,Drew Smith,Rory D. Smith,Todd Spears,Charline St. Charles,Scott T. Sudduth,Jason Tamez,Chad Tingle,Laura Tiz,Karen Turner,Nadine Tuttle,Matthew Vitel,Leon P. Watkins,Simi Wein,Pamela Lyn Weiss,Paul Wilson-Young,Mary Adeline Wright,Dfernando Zaremba,Anthony Zibelli,Jim Bacon,Christopher De Stefano,Rafael Jenes,Andy Martinez Jr.,Rana Morrison,George A. Parker,Heather Short
Thanks Wayne Johnson
Genres Action, Adventure, Crime
Companies Universal Pictures, Original Film, Mikona Productions GmbH & Co. KG
Countries USA, Germany
Languages English, Spanish
ContentRating PG-13
ImDbRating 5.9
ImDbRatingVotes 273364
MetacriticRating 38
Keywords undercover agent,racing,miami florida,sequel,motor vehicle