2 Fast 2 Furious appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. For the most part, the movie looked great, but a few inconsistencies occurred.
Overall sharpness appeared positive, with nice accuracy and delineation. Occasional wider shots came across as a bit on the soft side, but the majority of the flick seemed accurate and precise.
I saw no signs of moiré effects or jaggies, and print flaws remained minor, as I noticed a few small blemishes but nothing more. Grain felt natural, so I suspected no problematic noise reduction.
2 Fast went with a bright neon palette that popped off the screen. The colors were vibrant and dynamic and looked terrific, especially because the disc’s HDR added range and impact.
Blacks seemed deep and dense, while low-light shots displayed nice clarity and smoothness. HDR contributed clarity to whites and contrast. Nothing truly problematic emerged here, but between some softness and print flaws, this felt like a “B” transfer.
Downconverted to DTS-HD MA 7.1, the movie’s DTS X soundtrack dazzled, as it used the speakers to create a fantastic sense of the action. As expected, the driving scenes used the channels in an engrossing manner during which vehicles zoomed around the room in a lively, involving way.
General atmosphere seemed satisfying and realistic as well, and music boasted good stereo presence. Still, the action scenes became the most significant, and they made this a stunning soundscape.
Audio quality also pleased, with effects that appeared full and accurate. Low-end response was deep and firm, and dialogue sounded concise and distinctive.
Music showed appropriate range and impact as well. The soundtrack worked very well and earned an easy “A”.
How did the 4K UHD compare to the Blu-ray version? The DTS X audio brought a bit more involvement, though the BD’s 5.1 sounded so good that it lacked much room for improvement.
As for visuals, the 4K looked better defined and offered stronger colors, blacks and contrast. It also lost the edge haloes from the Blu-ray. Even with some minor drawbacks, the 4K became a clear upgrade.
One extra appears on the 4K disc itself: an audio commentary from director John Singleton. He provides a running, screen-specific look at story/characters, sets and locations, stunts, cars and action, cast and performances, and related domains.
Singleton delivers a competent commentary. He gets into a good array of subjects, but he occasionally tends to simply narrate the movie. This means we learn a decent amount about 2 Fast but this doesn’t become a great chat.
The included Blu-ray copy brings many materials. A staple of Universal Blu-rays, U-Control breaks into three categories. “Animated Anecdotes” acts as a text commentary that looks at cast/crew as well as aspects of the production. We get a decent mix of facts but the track feels mostly forgettable.
With “Tech Specs”, we see occasional pop-ups. These offer basics about the cars used in the movie. Like “Anecdotes”, the “Specs” seem passable but not memorable.
Finally, “Picture-in-Picture” mixes shots from the set with comments from Singleton, producer Neal Moritz, technical advisor Craig Lieberman, visual effects supervisor Michael Wassel, and actors Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Eva Mendes, Cole Hauser, Devon Aoki, and Chris “Ludacris” Bridges.
“PiP” examines the sequel and its story/characters, Singleton’s impact on the film, cars, stunts and action, cast and performances and locations. These include occasional nuggets of information but the clips are too brief and fluffy to add much.
Deleted Scenes fill a total of six minutes, six seconds. These give us a little more character exposition, and that side of things makes them better than average. The film leaves its roles less than defined, so extra information helps.
The scenes come with introductions from Singleton and editor Bruce Cannon. They deliver short notes that usually don’t tell us much.
We also find two minutes, 43 seconds of Outtakes. These offer basic bloopers and they fail to turn into anything memorable.
A short meant to span the first two movies, a Prelude goes for six minutes, 12 seconds. It offers Walker in an oddly dialogue-free experience that shows Brian’s activities between films. It’s not especially valuable but I guess it gives us a passable update.
A slew of featurettes appear, and these launch with Fast Females. It takes up seven minutes, 54 seconds and offers notes from Singleton, Mendes, Aoki, Walker, professional race car driver Verena Mai, The Fast and the Furious director Rob Cohen, Tokyo Drift>/Fast and Fuurious director Justin Lin, and actors Jordana Brewster, Michelle Rodriguez, and Nathalie Kelley.
“Fast” offers a look at the female characters in the franchise’s first four movies. It delivers almost no substance, as it serves to do little more than tell us how awesome the actresses are.
Next comes the 13-minute, 23-second Hollywood Impact. It features Cohen, critic Leonard Maltin, stunt coordinator/2nd unit director Terry J. Leonard, Time columnist Joel Stein, and Petersen Automotive Museum Information and Marketing Manager Chris Brown.
“Impact” looks at the use of cars in movies across the years – with an unsurprising focus on properties owned by Universal. Despite that self-promotional air, “Impact” gives us a decent view of the topic.
With Inside 2 Fast 2 Furious, we find a 10-minute, two-second piece with Walker, Gibson, Mendes, Aoki, Singleton, Bridges, Moritzand Mendes. “Inside” examines cast, characters and performances, sets and locations, cars and action. It’s a dull promotional piece.
After this, we get Actor Driving School, a three-part program that lasts a total of six minutes, 38 seconds. It shows us the training involved for Gibson, Walker and Aoki via comments from those actors as well as Singleton, Moritz, and stunt coordinator Artie Malesci. We see a little of the lessons, but this mostly turns into another package of breathless hyperbole.
Tricking Out a Hot Import runs three minutes, 21 seconds and involves Lieberman. He discusses aspects of the movie’s cars in this passable – but again over the top – program.
With that we go to the five-minute, 28-second Supercharged Stunts. It includes info from Singleton, Wassel, and special effects supervisor Al Desario.
As expected, we get info about the movie’s action scenes. Though brief, this becomes one of the disc’s more useful programs.
Making Music occupies four minutes, 59 seconds and features Bridges, Singleton, Mendes and Walker. “Music” takes us behind the scenes of the music video for “Act the Fool”. It’s forgettable.
Up next we get Actor Spotlights (6:58) and Car Spotlights (9:15). The former bring us short looks at Walker, Gibson and Aoki, while the latter examine the Spyder, Evo VII and S2000.
Across these, we hear from Gibson, Singleton, Walker, Aoki, Moritz, Bridges, Mendes, and Lieberman. The actor pieces are a waste of time, but the car clips offer some interesting tidbits.
Finally, Furious Afterburners breaks into two segments; “The Derby Scene Extension” (2:21) and “Verone, Whitworth and Monica at the House” (1:02). These simply show scenes from the movie, a fact that makes “Afterburners” completely pointless.
While I can’t claim I thought much of the first film in the franchise, 2 Fast 2 Furious seems even less compelling. The movie boasts no sense of energy or drama, so it ends up as a dull, one-dimensional affair. The 4K UHD brings us erratic but largely good visuals along with excellent audio and decent supplements. 2 Fast becomes a forgettable sequel.
To rate this film, visit the original review of 2 FAST 2 FURIOUS