Who the villain Johnson is blackmailing. Johnson orders Frank to take Valentina to Budapest and if he doesn't follow his instructions the bracelet which he and Valentina are wearing will detonate if he is far away from the car. The Audi is later stolen by one of Johnson's men but Frank manages to retrieve the car after a chase. The car suffers minor damage when Frank crashes it into the train to rescue Valentina. Did it come up as an alert on his sat-nav? Is he psychic? No matter. Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox!
Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. If I drive my car into the water and there's 10 men on a bridge shooting at me AND I can't leave my car because I'll explode I can take the cap off one of my tires and breathe the air from it, for long enough so the bad guys think I'm dead. I love how Frank Martin is listening to opera in the first transporter, and we get to see his house and garage. Nothing can beat the original.
Considering how this was the third intallment, the chase was not bad, but not good enough. The show stopper for the chase was supposed to be when Jason blances his Audi on two wheels and drives between two moving semis. It doesn't lead up to the previous two. It's like the coordinators were trying to kill two birds with one stone for the audience instead of remaining terra firm. After a while of repeated scenes on the highway, the chase movies into the dirt kicking woodlands.
THIS scene should have been the former. After nearly getting an arm torn off, the bad men in the Mercedes are pushed by Jason off a cliff to where the car explodes, just for the purpose of further demonstrating Jason's broad driving like we've haven't seen enough in six years? I saw this on Saturday evening. While not great, it's definitely an improvement on the awful Transporter 2 and does manage to stay consistently entertaining and moves quickly enough. The chase scene with the Mercedes is well shot and entertaining, and there's a goofy but creative and fun scene where a bad guy steals the Audi, and he takes a BMX bicycle and has to catch up with the car, cutting through warehouses and along narrow city streets, grinding on railings and jumping across factory tables.
It's preposterous as hell but still entertaining, unlike the awful CGI car flipping action in the previous film. The female lead was a strange choice, to say the least. She's apparently Ukrainian, but doesn't look like any Ukrainian girls I saw when I visited there last summer. She's pasty white, very freckled and red haired, with an overabundance of nasty black eyeliner.
Definitely an acquired taste lookswise, but I didn't think she was very attractive. She has zero acting experience prior to this, and was apparently literally picked off the street randomly. Again, very strange move to make, especially for a fairly mainstream film. She is fairly amusing in the film thougg, and has a dumb hyperactive bimbo-ish charm to her. The Group also manages the licensing of TV rights. Luc Besson and Pierre-Ange Le Pogam created the unique EuropaCorp modus operandi in , which allows control of the entire life cycle of a film on the artistic and economic level.
This control of the production and distribution chain makes EuropaCorp one of the few independent and integrated studios in Europe. Close Ad. Join MotorTrend. Staff Writer creator.
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