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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

F9 Falls To Rotten Rating On Rotten Tomatoes - Screen Rant

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]F9 Falls To Rotten Rating On Rotten Tomatoes  Screen Rant The Link Lonk


June 29, 2021 at 08:52AM
https://screenrant.com/fast-furious-9-rotten-tomatoes-rating-falls-rotten/

F9 Falls To Rotten Rating On Rotten Tomatoes - Screen Rant

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Denver City Council Approves Aramark Meal Contract Despite Inmate Complaints Of ‘Rotten’ Food - CBS Denver

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DENVER (CBS4) – Denver City Council voted 9-2 on Monday night to approve a $9 million agreement between the city and Aramark, a private company that provides food services for jails and prisons. The two-year contract will begin on July 1 with the option for three additional one-year extensions.

(credit: CBS)

Last week, the Denver Sheriff Department defended its decision to hire Aramark after a report by the Denver Post highlighted inmate complaints about food quality in other counties. In a 2019 lawsuit, an Arapahoe County inmate claimed they were underfed by Aramark and in December, a Jefferson County inmate claimed they found metal shavings in a brownie.

In a statement to CBS4, Aramark said, “allegations included in inmate lawsuits do not accurately represent the work of our people or the quality of what we provide to those we serve.”

(credit: CBS)

Mississippi prisons ended their contract with Aramark in April. An attorney representing 230 inmates said food at the Mississippi State Penitentiary was often “spoiled, rotten, molded or uncooked” and that portion sizes were too small. In Michigan, Maggots were reportedly found twice in a prison’s food service area in 2014.

“Aramark serves over 400 correctional facilities around the country and we’ve heard about some serious problems in some of them,” said Councilman Kevin Flynn. “I don’t want to be one of those that has the complaints. I want to make sure we have a mechanism in place to terminate the contract in case there is a breach.”

Councilman Kevin Flynn (credit: CBS)

Flynn voted in favor of the resolution after an attorney confirmed the city could terminate the contract with Aramark if the company failed to meet the standards outlined in the agreement. Councilwomen Candi CdeBaca and Amanda Sawyer were the two no votes against the contract.

DSD says the contract with Aramark is needed because fewer low-security inmates are eligible to work in jail kitchens. The sheriff’s department says the decline is due to sentencing trends during the COVID-19 pandemic.

(credit: Denver Public Safety)

“Sheriff Diggins and Chief Line are confident that Aramark, a company that offers food services in 22 countries and about 400 domestic clients, will provide quality meals to the people in our custody and our staff,” stated the Denver Sheriff Department. “We have safeguards in place to ensure this occurs and look forward to a successful transition.”

Chief Vincent Line will oversee Aramark’s food service operations at the Denver jails. The company is required to comply with Denver Food Establishment Regulations and regular city health inspections. DSD inmates can also file complaints about food service through the department’s Grievance and Incident Review Team.

“It’s not uncommon for us to get complaints from those in our care about either the quantities, if they believe the quantities are too small, or perhaps they believe their meal was too cold,” said Chief Line during Monday night’s meeting.

Vincent Line, Chief of Operations at Denver Sheriff Department (credit: CBS)

The sheriff department says it has voluntary accreditations with the American Correctional Association and National Commission on Corrections Healthcare. According to documents, the department plans to hire Steritech to conduct a third-party food safety audit each year.

The Link Lonk


June 29, 2021 at 09:08AM
https://denver.cbslocal.com/2021/06/28/denver-city-council-aramark-meal-contract-approved-inmate-complaints/

Denver City Council Approves Aramark Meal Contract Despite Inmate Complaints Of ‘Rotten’ Food - CBS Denver

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Sunday, June 27, 2021

Friday The 13th: Ranking Every Movie According To Rotten Tomatoes - Screen Rant

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]Friday The 13th: Ranking Every Movie According To Rotten Tomatoes  Screen Rant The Link Lonk


June 28, 2021 at 01:30AM
https://screenrant.com/friday-the-13th-jason-best-worst-movies-rotten-tomatoes/

Friday The 13th: Ranking Every Movie According To Rotten Tomatoes - Screen Rant

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Rotten Tomatoes Top 20 Movies Release Date Trivia - BuzzFeed

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Flex your film muscle!

Rotten Tomatoes has a list featuring the top 100 movies of all time. These are the top 20. Can you match each film to the year it was released?

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The Link Lonk


June 27, 2021 at 02:46PM
https://www.buzzfeed.com/hannahdobro/top-20-movies-release-date-trivia

Rotten Tomatoes Top 20 Movies Release Date Trivia - BuzzFeed

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Saturday, June 26, 2021

'F9' is a 'wild ride' but far from the franchise's best showing - CNBC

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Michelle Rodriguez and Vin Diesel star in Universal's "F9."

Univeral

In a time when franchises reign supreme at the box office, Fast and Furious may have hit a speed bump.

The ninth installment in the series about strong family ties and high-octane car racing, Universal's "F9" has raised the bar on ridiculous action sequences and "soap opera drama," critics say.

The Fast and Furious saga has had its critical highs and lows since the first film was released two decades ago. The films center on Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) and his family and his chosen family. At first, the action films largely concerned illegal street racing and heists, but have grown to include high-stakes global missions that have turned the beloved scrappy racers into spies.

The physics-defying stunts that have become staples of the franchise are grounded by the rag-tag team of characters, which features a diverse collection of actors including Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Chris "​Ludacris" Bridges, Jordana Brewster, Nathalie Emmanuel and Sung Kang.

In the latest feature, Dom is living a quiet life off the grid with Letty (Rodriguez) and his son, when his crew is brought back together to stop a skilled assassin and driver, named Jakob (John Cena). This adversary turns out to be Dom's estranged brother.

As of publication Thursday, "F9" held a 62% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 114 reviews. As more reviews come in, that score could change. If it dips below 60%, the film will be considered "Rotten" on the site.

"The title doesn't lie," wrote Darren Franich in his review of the film for Entertainment Weekly. "'F9' isn't bad, and it's not good. It's just fnine."

The film, which debuts Friday domestically, was released internationally last month. It has already tallied more than $300 million in ticket sales, including more than $200 million in China.

Here's what critics had to say about "F9."

George Simpson, Express

"If you're turning up for a world-class script and character development, perhaps stay at home with Netflix," George Simpson wrote in his review of "F9" for Express. "But if you're up for some ridiculously entertaining action set pieces and you're willing to suspend belief, then grab the popcorn and get ready for another wild ride."

"F9" dials up the action, pushing Toretto's crew to the limits of physics with death-defying stunts. From speeding through a field of land mines to snagging a falling cable on a car to glide across a canyon like Tarzan, the latest Fast and Furious film is all about spectacle, critics say.

"What would be a 2 star film is saved by 4 star action, hence our 3 stars overall," Simpson wrote. "Fast and Furious 9's high-octane set pieces really are terrific fun and even led to spontaneous bursts of applause in our cinema audience."

Read the full review from Express.

John Cena and Charlize Theron star in Universal's "F9."

Universal

Darren Franich, Entertainment Weekly

While "F9" uses the "family" thread of the previous films to ground the story in some reality, the out-of-this-world storytelling leaves much to be desired for some critics.

"Something special drained out of this series when the heroes transformed from crusading car-heisters into world-saving explodo-spies," Franich wrote in his review. "Much of the' F9' story happens because Mr. Nobody tells various somebodies to do various somethings. I don't want my heroes to do things because a generic espionage manager tells them what to do. I want them to do things because they feel a passionate need to do those things..."

As the series has pushed the limits of its stunts, it's also pushed the limits of its narrative.

"Inventing a new sibling out of thin air is how soap operas fill time in season 27," Franich wrote.

Cena's physicality is enough to go one-on-one with Diesel, but the charm the actor has shown in other projects like "Blockers" and "Trainwreck" is notably absent, critic said.

The character's motivation, a contrived notion that he's trying to step out of his big brother's shadow, is "just goofy enough to be interesting," Franich said. But his villainy is weighed down by the return of Cipher (Charlize Theron) and the addition of money man Otto (Thue Ersted Rasmussen).

Read the full review from Entertainment Weekly.

Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle

"F9" could benefit greatly from its exclusive theatrical release. A number of critics, including San Francisco Chronicle's Mick LaSalle lauded the film for being "too enormous to be streamed."

"It's huge, it's stupid and it's wonderful," he wrote in his review. "It's a total blast and an invitation to put your mind into suspended animation for two giddy, ridiculous hours. If you're looking for a movie to escape into, you cannot do better than 'F9.'"

Yes, the action doesn't obey the laws of physics. But, that's just fine, says LaSalle.

"The imagination of the filmmakers is further unbound by their willingness to be outrageous," he wrote. "Early in the movie, Vin Diesel's Dominic Toretto drives off a cliff. So what? Anybody can drive off a cliff. But Diesel drives off a cliff and steers the car in midair. You can't find entertainment like this elsewhere."

Read the full review from the San Francisco Chronicle.

Still from Universal's "F9."

Universal

Owen Gleiberman, Variety

A sequence in which two members of Toretto's team get slung into space in a make-shift car rocket may be a bit too absurd for some moviegoers.

"We're thinking: Is this when the Fast and Furious series jumps the shark?" Owen Gleiberman wrote in his review of "F9" for Variety.

"Not so fast. At that moment, there's no doubt that the movie walks right up to the shark, takes a good hard look at it, maybe even climbs aboard it, but doesn't totally, fatally jump it," he said. "For one thing, there's way too much going on apart from that borderline ludicrous space-camp interlude. But I'm not sure if that's the kind of close call 'F9' wanted to be remembered for."

The Fast and Furious saga has certainly come a long way from its humble street racing roots. But has it gone too far?

"Sometimes, when you least expect it, a successful franchise will essentially morph into a different series," Gleiberman wrote. "Over time, the 'Mission: Impossible' films became Bond films. The 'Fast and Furious' films have become 'Mission: Impossible' films."

"But 'F9' isn't constructed around an exciting mission," he added. "It's built around Vin Diesel and John Cena playing out the angst from the Toretto brothers' past. The family plot 'works' (even as you're aware of how thinly written Cena's character is), but it's not enough of an anchor; it's more like an excuse. This series didn't need more 'heart.' It needed everyone onscreen to get up to speed."

Read the full review from Variety.

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal is the distributor of "F9" and owns Rotten Tomatoes.

The Link Lonk


June 24, 2021 at 10:18PM
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/24/f9-is-a-wild-ride-but-far-from-the-franchises-best-showing.html

'F9' is a 'wild ride' but far from the franchise's best showing - CNBC

https://news.google.com/search?q=rotten&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Friday, June 25, 2021

Movies Leaving Netflix at the End of June 2021 - Rotten Tomatoes

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Back to the Future, which has had an on-again off-again relationship with Netflix, is set once more to off as the trilogy exits the streaming service at the end of June 2021. Other notable films flying the coop include paradigm-shifting Bonnie and Clyde, gangland classic Scarface, and nostalgic favorite The Land Before Time.

And we’d be remiss to not mention some major shows leaving Netflix soon: Original Twilight Zone will be slipping beyond the fifth dimension, along with David Lynch’s towering, enigmatic Twin Peaks, which has been on the service since 2011. Fill up on all the pie and coffee while you can, folks.

Read on to get the full list of movies leaving Netflix at the end of June 2021.


Leaving 6/30

Thumbnail: Universal


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The Link Lonk


June 26, 2021 at 03:20AM
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/article/movies-leaving-netflix-at-the-end-of-june-2021/

Movies Leaving Netflix at the End of June 2021 - Rotten Tomatoes

https://news.google.com/search?q=rotten&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Everything We Know About Halloween Kills - Rotten Tomatoes

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If you really thought Michael Myers burned to death in Laurie Strode’s rat-trap basement bunker at the end of Halloween (2018), all we can say is we envy you in what is clearly your first slasher franchise experience. Not to stomp all over your new snow, but the Man in the William Shatner Mask is very much coming back again, along with ultimate Final Woman (c’mon, you’re not calling the incomparable Jamie Lee Curtis a “girl”) in Halloween Kills

With our full first glimpse at Part Two – Part 2 Vol. 2? Part 2B? – in the form of a just-released full trailer, this franchise has gotten extremely messy with its timelines and continuity. To help, we have gathered up everything we know so far about Haddonfield’s favorite son and his refusal to retire gracefully.


This Is the Middle Chapter of a New – and Likely Final – Trilogy

Right from the start, director David Gordon Green (Our Brand is Crisis, Pineapple Express) and writer Danny McBride (yes, that Danny McBride) planned their return to the Halloween franchise as a trilogy. In fact, they intended to shoot all three back-to-back-to-back but decided to pause in between: First to gauge the response to Halloween (2018) and make sure fans and new audiences were down with their franchise-course-correcting efforts, and second, because, reportedly, Halloween Kills was a really intense shoot. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, actress Andi Matichak (who plays Laurie Strode’s granddaughter, Allyson) explains, “They thought about doing them back to back. But Halloween Kills was just so ambitious. It was such an intense shooting schedule that it would have been a bit much to try to do them at the same time.” The final installment, bluntly titled Halloween Ends, is slated for a 2022 release.


The Intention Is to Establish a Definitive “Story”

Halloween Kills - Laurie Strode

(Photo by © Universal)

Perhaps no horror franchise is messier than Halloween. You’ve got reboots, remakes, disowned sequels, and warring continuity all jumbled together into a hodgepodge of indecipherable nonsense. There’s the original 1978 Halloween, then the straight sequel Halloween II (which added the “huh?” element of Laurie being Michael’s sister), and then things get really nutty. Halloween III: Season of the Witch takes a hard left turn by having nothing at all to do with Michael Myers or Laurie Strode. (It’s a standalone story about a sinister corporation making killer Halloween masks.) The franchise then spiraled into increasingly silly and more generic cash-ins like Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (which added the “huh?” of Laurie having a daughter named Jamie out of nowhere); Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (said daughter shares a psychic link with Michael? Because, sure, why not?); Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (Um, Michael was “created” by a Druid cult?); then Halloween H20 (which sees Curtis return as Laurie because this movie pretends that Halloween 4, 5, and 6 didn’t happen – the first but not last instance of selective memory); and then Halloween: Resurrection (also known as the one where Michael fights Busta Rhymes). Exhausted? We’re not even done.

After all this, Rob Zombie decided to do a complete reboot with Halloween (2007) that starts from scratch with new actors, and then he followed it up in 2009 with a second Halloween II. And finally, in 2018, Green and McBride gave us their own Halloween, which is actually a third try at Halloween II, since it’s meant to be a direct sequel to the original 1978 Halloween and ignores everything that came after it. Whew. It’s a lot, but streamlining and focusing the main storyline is exactly what this franchise needs – especially since it looks like the events of Halloween, Halloween Kills, and Halloween Ends will all take place in a relatively short period of time.


There Is No Time for Downtime

Halloween Kills - Fire

(Photo by © Universal)

As you can see at the start of the trailer, Halloween Kills implies the movie – like the 1981 Halloween II – will pick up immediately after Halloween. Very immediately. We see Laurie, her daughter Karen (Judy Greer) and Allyson literally still in the back of the pick-up truck where we last saw them at the close of the first movie. It seems like the intention here is to keep the story tight and quick – all three movies may take place over the course of a few hours or days when all is said and done.

The Gang’s (Almost) All Here…

Although it’s a shame the late Donald Pleasence won’t be able to join in as indomitable Myers hunter Dr. Loomis, Halloween Kills is taking a page from Cobra Kai and bringing back all of the familiar faces (or at least character names) that it can. Actress Nancy Stephens will reprise her role as Marion Chambers, a nurse and colleague of Dr. Loomis who appears in the original Halloween (and the original Halloween II and is actually killed off in the opening of now-retconned Halloween H20) – which seems especially appropriate given that the trailer suggests Halloween Kills could heavily reference the original Halloween II with some hospital-based horror. Kyle Richards (of Real Housewives of Beverly Hills fame) will return as Lindsey, one of the two kids Laurie babysat in the original 1978 film, and Charles Cyphers, who played Haddonfield sheriff Leigh Brackett (whose daughter Annie was one of the original film’s victims), will also be back. A grown-up Lonnie, who is name-checked in the 2018 movie, will actually show up too. And finally, the character of Tommy Doyle (the other kid Laurie babysat in 1978) will be back as well… for the second time.


…But Some Will Have New Faces

Yes, Tommy actually returned once before, in 1995’s Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, where he was played by none other than Paul Rudd (Ant-Man). Read that again: Yes, it’s 100% true. Although it would be absolutely show-stopping if Rudd reprised his role in Halloween Kills, it’s just not happening. But Tommy will be played in Halloween Kills by another cult icon: Anthony Michael Hall.


Halloween Kills Is About Haddonfield

Halloween Kills - Stairs

(Photo by © Universal)

The 2018 Halloween dealt primarily with Laurie’s trauma, and how it shaped her life and turned her into a paranoid, bunker-dwelling alcoholic. But there is more than nostalgia behind bringing back so many old characters – Laurie wasn’t the only one traumatized by Halloween night, 1978. The trailer shows glimpses of the town’s collective angst, and the movie was filmed under the working title “MOB RULES.” This installment is about all of Michael’s victims facing unstoppable evil once again and confronting their own traumas and scars – from the nurse who treated Michael in the sanitarium to the sheriff who couldn’t protect his own daughter, much less the town. It may be The Town of Haddonfield vs. Michael Myers.


The Collective Anger Will Be Intentionally Timely

In a recent interview, Curtis explained more about the “mob rule” theme behind Halloween Kills and how it was influenced by the politics of the past four years. She says the movie will deal with “what happens when trauma infects an entire community, and we’re seeing it everywhere, with the Black Lives Matter movement. We’re seeing it in action, and Halloween Kills, weirdly enough, dovetails onto that.” Speaking with NME, director Green added, “it’s one thing to be afraid of the Bogey Man, to have someone who might be in the closet, under the bed, creeping around your house, but what we wanted to explore next was confusion, misinformation, and paranoia. What happens when fear goes viral? You can’t stick your head under the covers anymore.”


Only COVID-19 Could Stop Michael Myers

Halloween Kills has been in the can for a while now. It was originally due to come out in October 2020 but was held back due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the mass closure of theaters.


The Other Big Man Is Back, Too

Halloween Kills

(Photo by © Universal)

One of the reasons fans were excited about the 2018 Halloween wasn’t just because it meant a proper return for Laurie Strode/ Jamie Lee Curtis (can you believe they tried to kill her off – via an off-screen car accident, no less – in Halloween 4? Put some respect on her name), there was another monumental reunion to celebrate. For the first time since the disastrous Halloween III, John Carpenter agreed to lend his name to a Halloween project not only as a producer but also to retool and revamp his classic score alongside his son (with The Fog actress Adrienne Barbeau) Cody Carpenter and Daniel Davies (son of The Kinks’ Dave Davies). The trio will be back for Halloween Kills (and Halloween Ends).


It’s Going to Be Very Bloody… Even Carpenter Was Shocked

When asked by MovieWeb about Halloween Kills, new writer Scott Teems – who came on to collaborate with Green and McBride on the sequels – called it “like the first one on steroids, I guess. It really is the bigger, badder, meaner version of the first one.” If that’s enough to make horror hounds howl, even Carpenter himself was taken aback by the new film’s bloodlust. Speaking to IndieWire, Carpenter mentions seeing an early cut of the movie and describes it as “fun, intense, and brutal, a slasher movie times one hundred, big time. It’s huge. I’ve never seen anything like this. The kill count!” When a Master of Horror is that impressed, you know you’re onto something…


Halloween Kills opens in theaters on October 15, 2021.

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The Link Lonk


June 26, 2021 at 04:40AM
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/article/everything-we-know-about-halloween-kills/

Everything We Know About Halloween Kills - Rotten Tomatoes

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9 Ways to Craft the Perfect Fast and Furious Movie - Rotten Tomatoes

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With F9 racing into theaters this week, we have a lot of Tomatometer-related questions about the franchise at large. Are Fast and Furious movies better when “family” is mentioned? What about when Dwayne Johnson glistens like the blockbuster god he is? Do audiences enjoy quarter-mile races that take two minutes to finish? Is there a correlation between critical reception and Vin Diesel telling Kurt Russell, “No, I don’t want to drink your delicious Belgian ale. Give me a bucket of Corona instead?”

The franchise’s arguably greatest strength has been its ability to evolve since its debut in 2001. It began with a bit of street racing in The Fast and the Furious, then took a detour to Japan to learn how to Tokyo Drift, upped the ante (and the number of stamps in its passport) from Fast Five to The Fate of the Furious, spun itself off in Hobbs and Shaw, and now, judging from the F9 trailer, it appears the gang is ready to explore the final frontier. It’s been a wild ride, and it’s neat to see a non-superhero franchise hold its own in the age of Batman, Wonder Woman, and the Avengers.

Of course, the next best thing to watching a Fast and Furious movie is researching and writing about them, and with F9′s imminent release in mind, we decided to look back fondly and bring you some funky Tomatometer stats worthy of the fantastically ridiculous franchise. We rewatched all nine films in the series so far (which was awesome), took notes, and used incredibly detailed articles from Bloomberg, Insure the Gap, and Movies, Films and Flix to come up with nine data points that will almost certainly ensure a Fast and Furious installment will be a success.

With all that in mind, sit back and strap on your seat belt as we present nine completely arbitrary — and incredibly scientific — Tomatometer facts to help craft the perfect Fast and Furious movie.


1. MENTION “FAMILY” AT LEAST FIVE TIMES

  • Fast Movies That Mention Family Five or More Times: 72.6% Tomatometer Average / $933 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies That Mention Family Fewer Than Five Times: 38.5% Tomatometer Average / $240 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

Fast Five, Fast & Furious 6, Furious 7, The Fate of the Furious, and Hobbs & Shaw featured the word “family” being uttered a whopping 41 times. Whether it’s Dominic Toretto’s now-iconic line — “I don’t have friends, I got family” — in Furious 7 or his “Salud mi familia” in Fast Five, these five films go heavy on the “family” rhetoric, and audiences and critics responded with love. While the definition of the word has gotten looser throughout the franchise (Elena’s pointless death in The Fate of the Furious still stings), it seems like the family will keep growing, as Hobbs & Shaw introduced literal family members and F9 brings the The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift crew back into the fold, which will create new dynamics and relationships in the inevitable sequels to come.


2. INCLUDE A LONG, DESTRUCTIVE FINALE

  • Fast Movies with 10+ Minute Finales and Over $10 Million in Damage: 72.6% Tomatometer Average / $987 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies with Shorter Finales and Less Than $10 Million in Damage: 38% Tomatometer Average / $240 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

You can’t have Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Dwayne Johnson, Charlize Theron, John Cena, Kurt Russell, and Jason Statham in your films and not blow up a lot of stuff. Nowadays, the Fast films have progressed from their humble DVD player-stealing days to destroying nuclear submarines (at least $3.5 billion of damage), terracotta warriors (priceless), cargo airplanes ($60 – $150 million), and super soldiers ($250 million). What helped the Fast franchise get to the next destructive level? The answer is Fast Five, and the key scene is when Brian and Dom careened around Rio de Janeiro with a gigantic bank vault, destroyed everything in their path. It’s an all-timer set piece that let the world know the franchise would be stepping it up a notch in the action department.

That said, we had to give the yacht destruction in 2 Fast 2 Furious some love, even though it remains relatively low-stakes. It’s an audacious stunt that ends with Roman and Brian (Paul Walker)  too injured to get out of the car after the jump (that would never happen nowadays), and they are saved when Monica Fuentes (Eva Mendes) knocks out villain Carter Verone (Cole Hauser). We think it’s time to bring back Eva and Carter.


3. MAKE SURE SOMEONE DRINKS CORONA, ESPECIALLY AT A BARBECUE

Fast & Furious 6

(Photo by ©Universal Pictures)

  • Fast Movies in which Characters Drink Corona: 58.25% Tomatometer Average / $718 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies in which No Characters Drink Corona: 56.8% Tomatometer Average / $604 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

Want to know something interesting? Dom and his family only drink Corona when they are in California. In The Fast and the Furious, Fast & Furious, Fast & Furious 6, and Furious 7, we are treated to scenes of beer-guzzling in Cali; Dom and Vince (Matt Schulze) in particular both drink like maniacs.

But what is the ideal place to drink Corona? In both The Fast and the Furious and Fast & Furious 6, it takes place during a barbecue, and the two movies have a 61.5% Tomatometer average. In Fast & Furious, the Corona consumption takes place in a club and during a takeout dinner, and in Furious 7, Dom is handed a bucket of Corona (it’s wonderful), and they have a 55% Tomatometer average. So, drinking Corona is generally good for the series, but drinking Corona during a barbecue is ideal.


4. FEATURE A QUARTER-MILE RACE…

  • Fast Movies with a Quarter-Mile Race: 70.6% Tomatometer Average / $784 million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies without a Quarter-Mile Race: 50.8% Tomatometer Average / $590 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

The Fast and the Furious, Fast Five, and Furious 7 are the only films in the franchise that feature the epic quarter-mile races. Based on Dom’s speech in the first film when he says “I live my life a quarter-mile at a time,” you’d think there would be more of them. However, they are all quite memorable as the first film features the glorious quarter-mile race that takes two minutes to complete and the final race when Dom flips his Charger and takes off with Brian’s car. It’s also fun to watch Dom, Brian, Roman and Han race on the surprisingly empty Rio de Janeiro streets in Fast Five (Brian gets his revenge!). The idea of bringing back past memories plays an important part In Furious 7, when Dom attempts to spark Letty’s memories by taking her to Race Wars, which was introduced in the first film. (It doesn’t work, and she knocks a dude out). These races give the characters a moment to relax a bit and remember the simpler times they spent racing on the streets of Los Angeles before they started battling murderous mercenaries around the world.


5. …BUT MAKE SURE IT’S THE ONLY RACE IN THE MOVIE

  • Fast Movies That Dedicate At Least 5% of Their Screen Time to Racing: 38% Tomatometer Average / $240 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies That Dedicate Less Than 5% of Their Screen Time to Racing: 72.6% Tomatometer Average / $987 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

Remember when the Fast and Furious movies used to feature actual racing? The Fast and the Furious was bookended by races, and 2 Fast 2 Furious featured an opening racea job interview race, and a race to get Brian and Roman some new cars. The finale of Tokyo Drift was the longest race in the franchise. However, all of these films are Rotten, and they didn’t make the money of Furious 7 or The Fate of the Furious, so the franchise has pivoted to feature more gun mayhem and outrageous stunts and less racing and car culture. It makes sense; we’d probably get bored of watching Dom race around Los Angeles in sleeveless tees for 20 years, sipping on Coronas and calling everyone “buster.”


6. DON’T KILL OFF A MAJOR PROTAGONIST

  • Fast Movies That Feature a Major Character Death: 55.6% Tomatometer Average / $563 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies That Don’t Feature a Major Character Death: 61.6% Tomatometer Average / $837 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

Death (and coming back to life) is a constant theme in the Fast franchise. Whether it’s Jessie (Chad Lindberg) getting killed in The Fast and the Furious, Vince getting shot in Fast Five, or Gisele sacrificing herself for Han in Fast & Furious 6, the majority of the Fast movies have no problem getting rid of characters.There are some lucky ones, like Letty and Han, who were presumably killed but have come back into the fold because of pressure from fans (#justiceforhan), and Rodriguez, who was brought back by Diesel so she could have a show-stopping fight against Gina Carano in Fast & Furious 6.

One side benefit of Han’s return in F9 — other than, you know, having Han back — is that it could help Fast fans to make peace with Jason Statham’s Deckard Shaw. It stung to watch Shaw become a franchise regular, and a hero at that, when we all thought he had killed Han. Now, with some “yada yada-ing,” we don’t have to feel quite as bad because he technically didn’t kill a fan favorite.

The major blemish in the death count is Elena (Elsa Pataky), whose death in The Fate of the Furious was supposed to establish the villainy of Cypher (Charlize Theron). However, it seemed more like a choice of convenience, considering she was the mother of Dom’s baby and Letty was back in the picture. It’s a bad look, and the aftermath was never treated with any significance.

*Quick note – Technically, Han is “killed” in Tokyo Drift and Furious 7. However, we are only counting his death scene in Tokyo Drift.


7. INCLUDE A MEMBER OF THE SHAW FAMILY

Jason Statham

(Photo by ©Universal Studios)

  • Fast Movies with a Shaw: 71.5% Tomatometer Average / $1.075 Billion Dollar Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies without a Shaw: 46.2% Tomatometer Average / $318 Million Dollar Worldwide Box Office Average

While many immediately think of Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), it’s worth noting that Luke Evans was the first Shaw to appear on screen. His Fast & Furious 6 character Owen Shaw pushed the crew to their limits with his tanks and doppelgangers, and he set the stage for a new type of Fast villain. It’s also wild to think back and remember that Deckard Shaw entered the franchise by killing Han at the end of Fast & Furious 6, and then slaughtering cops in Furious 7 so he could visit his brother Owen in the hospital. Statham is so charismatic that audiences are apparently willing to overlook all of that, so Shaw somehow got pardoned for all of the murders and he was accepted into the gang. Since then, The Fate of the Furious has introduced us to Queenie (Helen Mirren), the Shaw family matriarch, and Hobbs and Shaw introduced us to Hattie (Vanessa Kirby), sister to Owen and Deckard. There’s now another family in the Fast world, and over time, they’ll likely be folded into the main family, for better or worse.


8. HIRE VIN DIESEL AND DWAYNE JOHNSON TO STAR TOGETHER

  • Fast Movies with Both Vin Diesel and Dwayne Johnson: 74%  Tomatometer Average / $1.043 Billion Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies with Only Vin Diesel: 41% Tomatometer Average / $283 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies with Only Dwayne Johnson: 68% Tomatometer Score / $760 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

After a much publicized riff between Diesel and Johnson, the two have reportedly squashed their feud, and to quote singer Jack Johnson, they’ve realized “We’re Better Together.” Whether it’s their Godzilla-esque brawl in Fast Five or their team-up in Fast and Furious 6, audiences like seeing the two burly men alongside each other on screen. Hopefully, in future installments, we’ll be safe from The Fate of the Furious dramatics when the two technically appeared in scenes together but never shot any of them with the other present, and everyone sensed it, as it was clear they were kept apart on purpose.

Fast Five, Fast & Furious 6, and Furious 7 are the three best-reviewed films of the franchise, and you get to see the two of them actually share screen time. Hobbs & Shaw notwithstanding, let’s hope that Fast 10 Your Seatbelts (please be the title) reunites the two A-listers for some A+ quality time.


9. MAKE SURE DWAYNE JOHNSON IS NICE AND SWEATY FOR AT LEAST 70% OF HIS SCREEN TIME

Dwayne Johnson in Fast Five

(Photo by ©Universal Pictures)

  • Fast Movies with a Sweaty Dwayne Johnson: 72.6%Tomatometer Average / $933 Million Worldwide Box Office Average
  • Fast Movies with a Not-So-Sweaty Dwayne Johnson: 68.5% Tomatometer Average / $775 Million Worldwide Box Office Average

When Dwayne Johnson made his first appearance in Fast Five, he looked like he had just climbed out of a vat of water, glycerine, and the goo from Alien. The perpetually glistening super agent, who apparently sweat about 4 ¼ cups of water in Fast Five, quickly became a fan favorite, and he has continued his perspiring streak in all of the sequels. Kudos to Bloomberg for finding a way to quantify it all; we are jealous and impressed that you figured out he was “wet” in 90.3% of Fast Five and 73.4% of The Fate of the Furious. Based on the evidence, audiences are big fans of sweaty, oiled-up Dwayne Johnson.


And there you have it: the nine ingredients you need to craft the perfect Fast and Furious movie. What are your favorite moments in the franchise? Let us know in the comments.

F9 opens in theaters on June 25, 2021.


On an Apple device? Follow Rotten Tomatoes on Apple News.

The Link Lonk


June 25, 2021 at 09:43AM
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/article/9-ways-to-craft-the-perfect-fast-and-furious-movie/

9 Ways to Craft the Perfect Fast and Furious Movie - Rotten Tomatoes

https://news.google.com/search?q=rotten&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

New on Netflix in July 2021 - Rotten Tomatoes

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Summer’s here and people across the world are getting vaccinated and getting out of the house, but Netflix wants to give you some reasons to stay home with its July lineup of movies and series.

Those reasons start with some of our highlights below: the Fear Street film trilogy (based on R.L. Stine’s horror book series), season 2 of series creator Mindy Kaling’s teen comedy Never Have I Ever, star-studded action film Gunpowder Milkshake, part 1 of Kevin Smith’s animated Masters of the Universe: Revelation show, and the second season of teen drama Outer Banks.

Be sure not to miss the premiere of bizarre dating show Sexy Beasts, in which dating hopefuls wear costumes to get to know each other before making physical judgements; the final season of Atypical; an animated series adaptation of video game franchise Resident Evil; romantic comedy Resort to Love, starring Christina Milian and Jay Pharoah; season 2 of sketch comedy series I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, and a whole lot more.














* NETFLIX ORIGINALS

Coming Soon

Feels Like Ishq*

Available 7/1

Young Royals*
Bureau of Magical Things


Available 7/2


Available 7/3


Available 7/4

We The People*


Available 7/5

You Are My Spring*


Available 7/6


Available 7/7

Brick Mansions
Cat People*
The Mire: ’97*
The War Next-door*
Major Grom: Plague Doctor*
This Little Love of Mine



Available 7/8

Elize Matsunaga: Once Upon a Crime*


Available 7/9

The Cook of Castamar*
How I Became a Superhero*
Last Summer*
Lee Su-geun: The Sense Coach*


Available 7/10


Available 7/13

Ridley Jones*


Available 7/14

A Classic Horror Story*
The Guide to the Perfect Family*
Heist*
My Unorthodox Life*
Private Network: Who Killed Manuel Buendía?*


Available 7/15

A Perfect Fit*
Emicida: AmarElo – Live in São Paulo*
My Amanda*


Available 7/16

Deep*
Johnny Test*


Available 7/17


Available 7/20



Available 7/21

Chernobyl 1986*
One on One with Kirk Cameron*
Too Hot to Handle: Brazil*


Available 7/22

Still Working 9 to 5
Words Bubble Up Like Soda Pop*


Available 7/23

Bankrolled*
Blood Red Sky*
Kingdom: Ashin of the North*


Available 7/24


Available 7/26


Available 7/27


Available 7/28

Bartkowiak*
The Snitch Cartel: Origins*
Tattoo Redo*
Too Hot to Handle: Brazil (new episodes)


Christina Milian and Sinqua Walls in Resort to Love

(Photo by David Bloomer/ Netflix)


Available 7/29


Available 7/30

Centaurworld*
Myth & Mogul: John DeLorean*


Available 7/31



Leaving 7/5


Leaving 7/7


Leaving 7/14


Leaving 7/15


Leaving 7/19

Love Sick: The Series: Season 1


Leaving 7/22


Leaving 7/28


Leaving 7/30


Leaving 7/31

King Arthur
Little Baby Bum: Nursery Rhyme Friends: S1


On an Apple device? Follow Rotten Tomatoes on Apple News.


Thumbnail images: Netflix

The Link Lonk


June 25, 2021 at 10:06AM
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/article/new-on-netflix-in-july-2021/

New on Netflix in July 2021 - Rotten Tomatoes

https://news.google.com/search?q=rotten&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

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