The villain, Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), is a snarling, bone-crushing Terminator. He’s not deep, but he’s a perfect foil for Vin Diesel’s stoic Dom. The fight choreography—especially the brutal hallway brawl between Statham and Dwayne Johnson—is crisp and impactful. The chemistry among the core family (Ludacris, Tyrese, Michelle Rodriguez) remains charming, providing comic relief that balances the film’s heavier emotional beats.

Also, the film’s treatment of women, while improved slightly, still mostly relegates them to support or fight props. And let’s be honest: no car can survive a fall from a cargo plane with a parachute, land on a mountain road, and keep driving. But by this point, you’ve accepted the franchise’s “family-powered” physics.

The final five minutes are devastating. Without spoiling, the montage intercutting Dom and Brian driving side by side, with “See You Again” by Wiz Khalifa playing, is a masterclass in cinematic farewell. It’s not earned by the plot alone—it’s earned by the 14 years of shared history. When Dom says, “It’s never goodbye,” you’d have to be made of stone not to tear up.