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'F9' took a car into space, but 5 years on, just how ridiculous was the scene? We asked the experts
Even Universal Pictures thought it was silly when Fast & Furious took a car into space in 2021. Pump the brakes on the jokes, though, as the experts reveal there's more to this scene than meets the eye.
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Five years ago, an internet meme turned into a reality in "F9" when the Fast & Furious crew launched a car into space. Depending on your sense of humor and ability to suspend disbelief, it's either peak cinema or extreme tomfoolery, but it's clear that the only way this franchise will ever top this moment is by drag racing a velociraptor in a "Jurassic World" crossover.
The "F9" scene sees Tej Parker (played by Ludacris) and Roman Pearce (Tyrese Gibson) sit inside a rocket-strapped Pontiac Fiero that's launched from a plane and sent into orbit to destroy a satellite. They succeed in their mission, then find themselves hanging about in space and waving at the International Space Station crew, who wonder if they're Minions. No, they aren't, but they're (say this part in Dom Toretto's deep voice) family.
Now, the Fast & Furious franchise has never played by the rules of physics, or reality for that matter. It values entertainment above all, but it's still fun to explore where it gets certain parts right and wrong at times. So we asked three experts about this car-launched-into-space scene and how ridiculous it is. Surprisingly, it isn't as dumb as everybody might think it is.
The filmmakers flub the carrier plane, though. Remember the aircraft that takes the Fiero up into the sky? It's something of a Frankenstein's monster. "The cockpit that they show is crossed between a Boeing 767 and 777," David Cohen, the current dean of aeronautics at Lynn University and former colonel of the U.S. Air Force, tells Space. "However, the aircraft from the external shot looks a little like a military C-17 – except that it has four engines. The C-17 was actually used as the basis for the transport aircraft in the 'Avengers' movies."
According to Cohen, another major issue in this sequence is how the Fiero sits on top of the carrier aircraft before it's dispatched. "Even in a military aircraft that's carrying weapons and missiles, there's a tremendous amount of time that is spent on both the carriage and the release of that weapon from the aircraft, including multiple cameras and a lot of testing," he says.
"So there's never something as simple as, 'Oh, we're just going to strap this on and see how it goes.'" When the Fiero is released, it's far too close to hitting the tail of the plane. In other words, it would have needed to be launched in another manner.
Now, there is a precedent of air-launch-to-orbit (ALTO) in the real world, such as the Northrop Grumman Pegasus. However, Bryan Schmidt, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Case Western Reserve University, thinks the "F9" filmmakers took direct influence from the first spaceflight of Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo, which would coincide with the film's production timeline.
"Burt Rutan and Richard Branson formed a company called Virgin Galactic, and if you remember, they built a space plane for essentially space tourism," Schmidt says.