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You may have heard that the latest installment in the popular FAST AND FURIOUS series of movies is currently breaking records in theaters. I suppose I contributed to that by seeing it myself on its first full day of release. Prior to going, I actually re-watched the previous installments, starting with 2001's THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS. I had seen that film before and had a vague recollection of the distinctive home used by Ted "It rubs the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again" Levine's character as a make-shift police HQ.
Toretto House - Echo Park
The Inside Story of the Real 'Fast & Furious' House - Yahoo Finance
The Inside Story of the Real 'Fast & Furious' House.
Posted: Mon, 30 Mar 2015 07:00:00 GMT [source]
Unlike most of the store’s residential neighbors, Bob’s Market doesn’t seem to suffer from the publicity. There are cases of model cars for sale, hats, and other merchandise. The plentiful bollards out front may not help their photos, but the parking spots prove more than a little practical at Bob’s. Those are loud, disruptive, and sometimes dangerous, a regular source of stress to locals for most of the last 20 years. In March of this year, officials put forward a plan to adjust the traffic flow at the intersection, with the goal of implementing the changes before the release of Fast X on May 19. In Furious 7, the property was blown up (on-screen); however, it was never damaged in real life and remains standing today.
In The Fast and the Furious franchise
Toretto's House,the Echo Park home of Dominic and his sister, Mia (Jordana Brewster) appears in several of the Fast and Furious movies. Both the interior and the exterior of the two-story structure were utilized in the films, most notably in the first installment. For the shoot, director Rob Cohen had the owner paint the 1906 dwelling white so that the gang’s bright cars would stand out against it.
Scene It Before: Toretto's House from Furious 7 - Los Angeles Magazine
Scene It Before: Toretto's House from Furious 7.
Posted: Thu, 16 Apr 2015 07:00:00 GMT [source]
Fast and Furious House
Not everyone knows this, but Diesel got his start directing little indie movies like Strays and the short Multi-Facial. He directed this 20-minute film, too, which approximates what a Fast & Furious TV show might look like. Los Bandoleros is a lo-fi effort shot with handheld cameras and set in the Dominican Republic, where Dom, Han, and others have to rob an oil tanker. It’s intended to explain what he was up to during the time frame of 2 Fast 2 Furious.

The house soon became a center of conflict when a runaway Jesse returned to Dominic with the car he owed Johnny Tran. When Jesse was killed in Lance and Johnny Tran's drive-by, Mia was the only person left at the house with Jesse's body. Now a dizzying array of yellow plastic bollards is strewn all over the space, and two newly manufactured roundabouts and several one-way street signs were also added. Instead of a giant canvas marked with tire tread, it’s now an obstacle course of bright plastic, a disorienting jumble of yellow in unpredictable patterns in the middle of the asphalt. At least until everyone gets the hang of it, and then it may become light work for the Drift King. Letty’s (Michelle Rodriguez) funeral in Fast & Furious is held at Sunnyside Cemetery in Long Beach.
The residence’s detached garage, where Dom keeps his 1970 Dodge Charger R/T, was demolished at some point after the filming of The Fast and the Furious and had to be rebuilt for Fast & Furious (2009). Though the Toretto's house meets its untimely demise in Furious 7 when it’s blown up by Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), in real life it is still standing and looks much the same as it did onscreen. The Fast and the Furious entered development in late 1998, its concept inspired by Li's Vibe article about illegal street racing. Principal photography began in July 2000 and finished that October, with filming locations primarily including Los Angeles and the surrounding area in southern California. “A lot of the bonding took place at that house,” Rob Cohen, the director of the original installment, The Fast and the Furious (2001), tells Yahoo Movies. Cohen says that the sequences shot there were among the first filmed.
Wishing to locate his plot in Los Angeles, he chose the Echo Park neighborhood because of its hilly streets. Toretto’s house is 722 East Kensington Road, and ‘Toretto’s market and diner’, where O'Conner insinuates himself into the community, is the nearby friendly local grocery store Bob’s Market, 1234 Bellevue Avenue at Kensington Road. Echo Park is also the neighbourhood of Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler, and you might have spotted Bob’s Market alongside the Dodge Challenger as he waits for police messages.
All day long, it seems people are gawking at or posing in front of the house. They’re mostly young, teenagers or 20-somethings, and they come from all over the world. This house is on their list of things to see in L.A., right up there with the beach and Beverly Hills. Perhaps because it’s so closely intertwined with Vin Diesel’s beloved Toretto.
"One Last Ride" Road Split - Templin Highway
So, here is how many “Fast and Furious” movies there are, including the original series and spin offs, as well as the correct order to watch. From the main franchise and spin-offs to short films and a television show, the "Fast and Furious" has enough content to keep anyone occupied. This film introduces Jason Momoa as the latest villain to terrorize Dom and his team — delivering on explosions, dramatic pauses whenever lines about “family” are spoken, and even a neutron bomb. It’s out in theaters now, so don’t expect it to stream anywhere for at least a few months.

Brian foregoes his arrest of Dom and gives chase to Tran and Lance, with Dom getting into his father's 1970 Charger R/T to pursue Tran and avenge Jesse. During the chase, Dom runs Lance off the road and Brian kills Tran. Brian then pursues Dom, and the two agree to a quarter-mile race over a railroad crossing. The race narrowly ends in a draw, but Dom is t-boned by a passing truck. Instead of arresting him, Brian hands over the keys to his Supra, reminding Dom he was owed a ten-second car. Brian brings a modified 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse RS to a car meet, hoping to find a lead on the heist crew.
The film's success spawned a franchise, and it was followed by the sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious in 2003. In The Fast and the Furious, Sgt. Tanner (Ted Levine) says of the circular abode, “You know, Eddie Fisher built this house for Elizabeth Taylor in the ‘50s.” That anecdote is actually untrue, though. Back in 2000, the real-life owners of Toretto’s house didn’t see this coming. “We never thought this would be a series of films,” says Marianne, a painter and art teacher originally from Mexico, who asked only to be identified by her first name, because privacy is already a struggle. Marianne and her husband, Damian, bought the four-bedroom, 100-year-old house about 16 years ago with a friend.
The "Fast and Furious" release from 2021 sees Toretto and family coming together to foil a world-shattering plot headed by Cipher and Toretto's estranged younger brother Jakob (John Cena). There are other movies in the series, including a "Hobbs and Shaw" spin off, its planned sequel and a planned, untitled, woman-led spin-off. I say "was" because this story doesn't have the happiest of endings. Conservancy had tried to save the home, it was demolished and the promontory leveled so that a new home could be built.
When Mia tells him that it is not going to be that simple, Brian tells her that he has time. Later, Brian arrives to arrest Dom, but the latter demands he leave in order to save Jesse from the danger he's in from Tran's gang. Jesse arrives pleading for help, but is gunned down by Tran and Lance on motorcycles.
But a mysterious woman named Cipher (Charlize Theron) ends this, forcing Toretto to betray his family and join her. Spy Racers is better than any Fast & Furious cartoon should be, given that we’re talking about a live-action franchise that lives and dies on how cool its street races and impossible stunts look. It’s understandable why Tokyo Drift got the short shrift for years — it sometimes feels more like a spin-off than a sequel, due to its stars’ absence and faraway setting — but it also dramatically expanded the series’ ambitions. This film took the franchise international, winkingly self-referential (Vin Diesel’s pre-Marvel, very Marvel-esque stinger; “Han Seoul-Oh”), and flashier and more boldly self-assured than ever before in the hands of director Justin Lin. In a city that has been so thoroughly captured on film over the past 100 years or so, it’s easier to find a place that hasn’t appeared in a movie or TV show than one that has.
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