Résumés(1)

Dom, Brian et toute leur équipe, après le casse de Rio, ayant fait tomber un empire en empochant 100 millions de dollars, se sont dispersés aux quatre coins du globe. Mais l’incapacité de rentrer chez eux, et l’obligation de vivre en cavale permanente, laissent à leur vie le goût amer de l’inaccomplissement. Pendant ce temps Hobbs traque aux quatre coins du monde un groupe de chauffeurs mercenaires aux talents redoutables, dont le meneur, Shaw est secondé d’une de main de fer par l’amour que Dom croyait avoir perdu pour toujours : Letty. La seule façon d’arrêter leurs agissements est de les détrôner en surpassant leur réputation. Hobbs demande donc à Dom de rassembler son équipe de choc à Londres. En retour ? Ils seront tous graciés et pourront retourner auprès des leurs, afin de vivre une vie normale. (Universal International FR)

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Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (14)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Si tous les numéros six étaient de cette trempe, le niveau de qualité générale dans le septième art s’en trouverait nettement supérieur ! Pour moi, dès le premier Fast and Furious, l'atout principal est le plaisir tiré de scènes d’action bien entraînantes, une chose qui manque au 21e siècle par contraste avec la force de frappe qui caractérisait les années 90. Ce n’est pas un joyau cinématographique, mais personnellement, j’ai aimé tous les films de la franchise et je ne serais pas du tout contre une autre salve de vingt suites ! Le numéro cinq plaçait la barre très haut, mais sincèrement, j’ai beaucoup aimé ce sixième opus. Je ne me suis pas ennuyé une seule minute et plusieurs passages m’ont fait rire, dans certains cas parce qu’ils étaient too much, mais peu importe. Diesel, Walker, Johnson, Rodriguez et compagnie forment une bande attachante. Je me réjouis du septième avec Jason Statham. Honneur à la mémoire de Walker. ()

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Le scénario mécanique et écrit à la va-vite est plus proche de Die Hard : Belle journée pour mourir que de Fast & Furious 5. Réunion, action, réunion, réunion, action, réunion, action, et c’est reparti pour un tour. Les réunions ne sont pas si marrantes qu’elles se voudraient et l’action est grotesque d’exagération et, pour la franchise d’action la plus populaire du moment, manque de clarté. En plus, ce sixième volet ne se déroule pas dans un environnement exotique charmant comme le cinquième et des digressions inutiles dans l’intrigue le font tirer en longueur et perdre de son dynamisme (la visite à la prison, la course avec Diesel et Rodriguez), et tous les moments forts ont déjà été montrés dans les bandes-annonces. ()

Annonces

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais ... and the bubble burst. NOS² testosterone³ in an absolutely unnecessarily over CGIed action scene which is more like gameplay footage than a regular movie. For Lin, this is a sad return to a never-ending series of routine movies that don’t know when to stop. However much number five was surprising (and deserved) winner of the action premier league, number six is on the brink of relegation to the second league of yawnably familiar rubbish. ()

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Due to the trajectory of the franchise and its concept of a team of criminals as a family, placing the high-octane action in a melodramatic context was probably inevitable. Melodramatic conventions are the reason why the film ends on the second attempt, why it has problems with rhythm and why the characters conform to psychological formulas at the level of three-year-olds. The film’s family theme prevents it from getting out of first gear, as every big action scene is followed by blather about important values, which is only a substitute for a more sophisticated plot. The only one who manages to reflect the obvious melodrama is the main villain, who, of all the film’s characters, is the most capable of rational thought. In the context of a film driven by illogic and sentiment, he represents an anomaly that must be eliminated. ___ The film’s obvious objective and the approximate way of achieving it are introduced shortly after the nostalgic opening credits (which logically and primarily accentuate the “team” level of the previous films), and only after it is achieved does the dully straightforward narrative formula undergo a slight modification: Toretto’s crew comes up with a way to get Shaw. But Shaw is smarter and avoids capture; as he does so, several expensive cars explode and a few anonymous civilians die. So Toretto’s crew comes up with another plan, during the execution of which more expensive cars explode and more anonymous civilians die. Instead of the gradual development of motifs and well-thought-out provision of information, the cards are rashly laid out on the table and the crew rushes pell-mell toward their objective (not even the two small “female” story surprises, one cheap, the other stupid, manage to in any way alter the course of events). The film is even more narratively “disintegrated” than Fast Five, but it doesn’t allow us to watch it undisturbed in a relaxing “standby” mode –  enjoyment of the attractions is disrupted by the frequent dialogue, which is always serious about everything. A crucial problem of the film consists in the action scenes themselves, as they are fragmented by numerous unnecessary cuts and peppered with obvious digital tricks (the only car chase in Jack Reacher is directed far more clearly than any given chase in this film). __ Whereas the women in the film are dangerous, treacherous, defenceless, recovering from amnesia or just there to look good, the men were assigned the roles of invaluable protectors, capable lovers and excellent drivers. Fast & Furious 6 is just one big guyish pose, a film that too obviously displays its confidence in itself and the values that it promotes: if you have enough money, physical strength or weapons (or, ideally, a combination thereof), you can afford to go up against practically anyone. But you mustn’t put your family in danger. The relativisation of the villain and protagonist roles by means of self-reflexively pointing out the similarities between the teams facing each other (and whose members will fight each other more or less according to how Roman pairs them off) is ultimately just another false gesture with which Lin tries to conceal the fact that this time he bet more on big muscles, empty slogans and bombastic rhetoric than this 130-minute genre flick can bear. I don’t deny that it’s still a pleasure, but it’s much more of the guilty variety after Fast Five, whose testosterone-fuelled bombast was still generally acceptable. 70% () (moins) (plus)

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Lin has hit his limits, given that situations involving the characters and their emotional interactions elude him, taking his own feet from under him and in the final decision-making, he is unable to offer more than self-sacrificing glances and theatrical gestures. That’s assuming he doesn't fire off any major action bombs, but rather a still technically brilliant arrangement that has since last time abandoned any semblance of reality and ventured into the sci-fi genre (without a major highlight, moreover). This necessarily means a rough and painful fall that's ultimately hampered by the cast where everyone has parked themselves into their roles in a way that feels like they were just born for them. ()

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