What happens to the cars used in The Fast and The Furious movies after the filming is over?
January 22nd, 2010 | by cars |buzzdogear777 asked:
I know that the extras bring their own cars, but the ones used by the actors, what happens to those? Do they auction them off?
MONTE
I know that the extras bring their own cars, but the ones used by the actors, what happens to those? Do they auction them off?
MONTE















5 Responses to “What happens to the cars used in The Fast and The Furious movies after the filming is over?”
By nwcowgirl024 on Jan 24, 2010 | Reply
JAROD
i know that frankie muniz baught one of the cars from the 1st fast and the furious.
By Sam B on Jan 27, 2010 | Reply
JACOB
yep or they give it to their rite owners
By ARUBASUN_99 on Jan 29, 2010 | Reply
WILMER
I have no clue hi people.
By Tony Montana on Jan 29, 2010 | Reply
MOISES
sell them to the highest bidder
By ebony on Feb 1, 2010 | Reply
ROBERTO
Let’s get the film’s basics out of the way. As the keener among you willhave already figured out, this is the third The Fast and the Furiousfilm following in the tire tracks of 2001’s original and the 2003sequel, 2 Fast 2 Furious. And as the name of this new film implies, muchof the story takes place in Tokyo, and much of the action involves thecurrent craze of drifting. But none of the actors from the first twofilms and none the characters they played are back for this sequel. Thenew movie’s story doesn’t reference the first two movies, either.
Construction Top View
The movie’s main character has to install a Nissan Skyline GT-R engineto transform his dad’s Mustang into a drift machine overnight. But whenthe real drifting needed to be done, the Tokyo Drift stunt team reliedon 430 ci of Windsor V-8.
Instead, Universal is treating The Fast and the Furious as a brand nameit can apply to any youth-oriented car-culture movie it wants. It’s sortof the same way Snapple makes different flavors of iced tea. There’speach, raspberry, and unsweetened–but it’s all Snapple. Since the firstmovie made $207 million at the U.S. box office, the second one broughtin $236 million, and they both sold huge numbers of DVDs, Universalwould like to make as many of these relatively cheap and enormouslyprofitable movies as it can.