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Note: Devon is only mentioned in passing.
Cool is the fuel Can Tyrese's sly, sexy presence rev up 'Fast
and Furious 2'?
Calender Live on LA Times.com, December 10, 2002
Photographer: Eli Reed
Article by: Patrick
Goldstein
Article Source: http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/goldstein/cl-et-gold10dec10.story
THE BIG PICTURE
MIAMI -- "Did you know the guy who invented the hokey-pokey died
the other day?" asks Tyrese, a suspiciously grave look on his handsome
face. It's late in the day here on the set of "The Fast and the
Furious 2," but as director John Singleton prepares to shoot a scene
with Tyrese and co-star Paul Walker, it's clear that the hip-hop
crooner-turned-actor is just warming up.
"It was really sad at the funeral," he continues. "They were trying
to get him into the casket and his right foot was in, but his left
foot was out. And then his left arm was in, but his right arm was
out." Tyrese begins to do a little soft-shoe as he breaks into song.
"And you do the hokey-pokey."
"It's 4:15 and Tyrese is awake," first assistant director Bruce
Franklin dryly announces. Singleton chimes in: " 'Rese is on set.
Let's roll!"
It was pretty much at this moment that I felt Universal Pictures
could stop worrying about the most pivotal question facing the makers
of the sequel to "The Fast and the Furious": Was the studio crazy
when it told Vin Diesel to take a hike when he asked for $20 million
to reprise his streetwise tough-guy role from the original film?
After all, it was Diesel, Walker's original co-star, who catapulted
to stardom last year in the low-budget, high-velocity street-racing
movie that was the surprise hit of 2001, making $145 million in
its theatrical run and selling 7 million copies of its video when
it hit stores in January.
Diesel may be more of a household name now, but Tyrese, who made
his film debut last year in Singleton's "Baby Boy," has just as
much rippling muscle, more tattoos (nine at last count), a wealth
of under-25 fans from his MTV VJ stints and silky hip-hop records,
and judging from the crowds of girls who materialize wherever he
goes, plenty of sex appeal.
On the set, Tyrese, who's 23, and Walker, who's 29, have enough
chemistry to launch a small rocket. Before shooting a scene one
day, Tyrese impishly mimics Walker's surfer-dude twang, perfectly
enunciating every syllable -- "Oh, hello, what's up there, brother"
-- with Walker coolly responding in his best gang-banger patois:
"Hey, cuz, wass up?"
In the film, where the actors play old friends who use their street-racing
skills to go undercover and bust a Miami drug kingpin, Tyrese has
added his own style of improvised humor. In a scene in which the
two both want to drive the same hot car, Tyrese tells Walker: "Don't
even think about taking the convertible. It might loosen your mousse."
As Singleton explains: "I have a lot for respect for Vin, but Vin
is like Vin. Tyrese is like a kid from the street. He brings a real
flavor and humor to everything. He's as funny as Eddie Murphy ever
was, but mostly, he's just cool."
Also starring ...
For all that Diesel, Walker and the souped-up cars brought to
the party, the real star of "The Fast and the Furious" was its ineffable
sense of cool. "Let's face it, before they saw the movie, kids didn't
know who Vin or Paul was," says "F&F2" producer Neal Moritz, who
produced the original, as well as such youth-culture hits as "XXX,"
"Cruel Intentions" and "I Know What You Did Last Summer." "They
liked the cars and the lifestyle. The movie did $40 million on its
opening weekend for one reason -- it looked cool."
But as anyone who makes products for fickle teenagers knows, cool
is a slippery commodity that melts away just as mysteriously as
it materializes. Virtually every decision Universal has made, including
taking a pass on Diesel, has revolved around the issue of cool.
Letting Diesel go certainly involved economics -- Tyrese is being
paid roughly $750,000, a fraction of Diesel's asking price. But
the film's budget is still twice the original's $38 million, with
$8 million to $10 million alone being spent on an armada of 189
specially designed street racers. Even though Walker was signed
to a $2-million sequel option, the actor is getting $7 million,
a reward, in part, for not letting his ego get out of joint when
Diesel got the lion's share of credit for the original film's runaway
success.
In today's sequel-happy Hollywood, there was never any doubt that
"The Fast and the Furious," having spawned a new breed of maverick
action heroes, was a franchise in the making. In fact, the studio
was so eager to get a sequel going that it had screenwriters working
on two scripts simultaneously, one with Diesel's character, one
without him. As negotiations with Diesel wore on, the studio became
convinced that it would be impossible for the sequel to have any
underdog appeal with a $20-million star in the lead. (Case in point:
"Bad Boys 2," which is paying untold millions in salary and profit
participation to Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, has also been shooting
in Miami for the past few months, but whenever I asked local kids
about the two films, all they wanted to hear about was "F&F2.")
When Diesel departed, so did the film's original director, Rob
Cohen, who joined Diesel and Moritz in making "XXX," which many
in Hollywood saw as a de facto "Fast and Furious" sequel. Universal
was unperturbed, even when Fox TV hastily put a "F&F" knockoff called
"Fast Lane" on the air this fall. One reason the studio's confidence
remained high was a Teen Research Unlimited survey of teenage moviegoers,
which discovered that its respondents' all-time favorite movie was
"The Fast and the Furious," out-polling both "The Matrix" and "Spider-Man."
Across ethnic lines
All along, the studio believed that its film's coolness was rooted
in its multiethnic appeal. Although Diesel and co-stars Michelle
Rodriguez and Rick Yune have departed, the new cast hits as many
cross-cultural chords as possible. According to studio surveys,
Latinos made up roughly 40% of the audience for the original film,
one reason why Universal chose to set the picture here. So the sequel
remains heavily ethnic, with lots of Spanglish slang and Latin humor.
When most filmmakers shoot in Miami, they swarm around Art Deco
South Beach; Singleton has been filming his street-racing scenes
in Overtown and Little Haiti. As he puts it: "This isn't going to
look like every Joel Silver movie from the '80s." Cuban-born actress
Eva Mendes ("Training Day") plays an undercover agent romancing
both Walker and his drug-lord foe, played by Cole Hauser, who first
worked with Singleton in "Higher Learning." Singleton cast Chanel
model Devon Aoki as a street racer and hip-hop star Ludacris
as a race organizer. The role of the film's top auto mechanic went
to Jin, a Chinese-American hip-hop artist Singleton discovered "doing
freestyle rapping, shutting all the brothers down" on a BET music
show.
Although Singleton's recent movies haven't been as well received
as such early films as "Boyz N the Hood" and "Poetic Justice," the
34-year-old director has a knack for discovering new talent and
coaxing good performances out of young actors. Singleton initially
wanted to direct another Universal project, a sequel to "Pitch Black,"
but after Moritz and Universal Co-President Scott Stuber solicited
Singleton's advice on casting Tyrese in "F&F2," they came back with
another question: "What about you?"
Singleton acknowledges that he's a director for hire on this film,
which pulses with far more pedal-to-the-metal action than any of
his previous films. After virtually every take, he asks his script
supervisor how long the scene ran. When a dialogue scene plays for
49 seconds, Singleton jumps into action. "I know you can act, so
don't give me none of those pregnant pauses," he tells the actors.
He turns to me and explains: "Fifteen or 17 seconds is a long time
to hold on anything in this picture. You oughta call this my attention-deficit
movie."
Singleton sees "F&F2" as a "bubble-gum movie" but one that won't
insult the intelligence of its audience. When he spoke to a group
of University of Miami film students the other night, someone asked
if he'd been criticized for making such an "escapist" film. Singleton:
"Nobody can tell me [anything]. I made serious dramas like 'Boyz,'
'Rosewood' and 'Higher Learning.' I have a right to have some fun."
He laughs. "Why should the hack directors get all the good jobs!"
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