Film Writing
Review of The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift Using the Sociological Imagination
In The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift, Sean Boswell, an American teenager with a long
record for street racing, is forced to move to Tokyo, Japan to evade arrest. Struggling to integrate
into this new society and cope with cultural shock, he finds himself entangled in the drifting
subculture. His interactions with Neela, a girl he quickly falls in love with, and Han, his drifting
mentor, help Sean discover his love for drifting. However, his accelerating performance in the
dangerous racing world grabs the attention of the Yakuza, the hegemonic institution that rules
the Tokyo underground. Confrontations with DK, Drift King, and the Japanese mafia force Sean
to race for a simple outcome: drift or die.
Symbolic interactionism is a main branch of social theory. Dalton Conley, author of
“You May Ask Yourself,” defines it as “a micro-level theory in which shared meanings,
orientations, and assumptions form the basic motivations behind people’s actions…[things]
which we take for granted as natural or self-evident, assigned meanings and values in different
cultural contexts”(Conley 35 and 144). To unpack this theory further, the objects, languages, and
environments we find ourselves, as individuals, interacting with, symbolize and mean certain
things. The way we interpret these things, and how we modify these meanings, guides us to act
and behave in specific ways. Symbolic interactionism is demonstrated clearly in the film, for
every aspect of the theory is present as the characters’ motivations unfold. The movie illustrates
the key principles of the theory as characters interact with each other in the dangerous drifting
subculture: the meanings one associates with their environment and languages direct their
interactions with society, the same thing can have a different meaning for different people, and
the meaning one gives something can change as they interact with the world around them.
To begin our application of sociological concepts to the fan-favorite movie, the
environment in which Sean interacts with is deeply rooted in symbolic interactionism. Sean finds
himself neck-deep in the drifting subculture that dominates the Tokyo underground. According
to Conley, a subculture is “a group united by sets of concepts, values, symbols, and shared
meaning specific to the members of that group distinctive enough to distinguish it from others
within the same culture or society” (Conley 94). For the drifting subculture, the shared meaning
behind the sport is the distinct characteristic that makes it unique and different from Japanese
culture in general. This environment, where all the action takes place, illustrates the crucial role
symbolic interactionism plays as we analyze The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift. However, the
theory as defined by Conley, breeds at a more micro-level. To truly unveil these sociological
roots, we must analyze the symbolic interactions between individual characters.
The meanings characters associate with their environment and languages direct how they
behave and interact with the world and people around them. A perfect example is the word
“gaijin,” meaning “outsider” in Japanese, is a label given to both Sean and Neela. For Sean, his
interpretation of the word motivates him to act in a certain way; he spends the entire film
learning and perfecting the art of drifting so that he no longer is a “gaijin.” The term would mean
nothing significant to anybody else and, like many characters in the film, we would take it for
granted. However, for both Sean and Neela, the word means something entirely different and it
motivates both of them to behave in a way that might change their label and how society
perceives them. In the film, Neela explains her relationship with the word, “I hate that word. It’s
what they used to call me when I was a kid.” The way she interprets the language guided her
behavior as, theoretically, a child and in the film. She taught herself to drift so that society would
no longer see her as an “outsider.” The same meaning applies to Sean. He too falls under the
label and his actions work to get rid of the title. By the end of the film, Sean assumes a new label
after he wins his race against DK, as “The New Drift King.”
The same thing can have a different meaning for different people. This aspect of
symbolic interactionism is best illustrated by Sean and Han’s conflicting meaning of what it
means to “race.” In the drifting subculture, to “race” can mean a variety of different things to
different people. This crucial branch of the theory further informs our analysis of the film and is
illustrated perfectly in one interaction between Han and Sean. This interaction takes place before
Han and Sean have established a deeper relationship. As they drive, they talk about what a “race”
means to them individually. Sean describes it as a way to demonstrate dominance over others,
“to see if I’m better than the other guy.” Han’s interpretation and meaning differs significantly,
and obviously is the product of countless symbolic interactions between him, others, and society.
He offers Sean a different perspective, “what’s the point of a race? It just proves you’re faster,
that’s all. If I were to race, it’d have to be for something important. Or why else do it at all?” For
Han, a “race” has nothing to do with comparing greatness to others; he sees no point at all, unless
for an important outcome. This brief interaction between the two and what it means to “race”
illustrates how an understanding of symbolic interactionism informs a deeper analysis of the
film.
The final part of this theory as it’s exemplified in The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift, is
the idea that the meaning we give something can change as we interact with the world around us.
This essential aspect of symbolic interactionism accounts for flexibility and cognitive
assimilation. It describes the reflective, introspective, and transformative nature of all members
in society. A brilliant example from the film is an interaction between Sean and Neela as they
drift down a mountain. The scene takes place towards the end of the film, and displays Sean’s
new interpretation on what it means to “drift.” As mentioned earlier, Sean’s initial meaning
behind a “race,” directly correlated with his meaning associated to “drifting,” symbolized
dominance. However, after symbolically interacting with Han and Neela, Sean’s perspective on
what it means to “drift” changes entirely. Neela begins the interaction with her associated
meaning, “it feels like everything else just disappears,” to which Sean responds with, “No past
and no future.” A brief pause and Neela concludes the crucial dialogue, “No problems. Just the
moment.” This incredible scene illustrates just how much the meaning we give something can
change as we interact with others. For both Neela and Sean, “drifting” now symbolizes
momentary peace and freedom. It symbolizes living in the moment, a meaning far from Sean’s
previously associated dominant interpretation. The symbolic interactions that motivate Sean’s
actions prior to the scene, have allowed change in what it means to “drift.”
The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift, when watched with a tuned sociological imagination,
becomes a vibrant display of symbolic interactionism. Within the dangerous subculture, the
highlighted social interactions between characters illustrates the core aspects of the theory: the
meanings one associates with their environment guides their actions and relationships, the same
thing can have a different meaning for different people, and the meaning one gives something
can change as they interact with other members of society. This social theory, and its essential
parts, not only informs our deeper analysis of the film, but illuminates the importance of a
sociological imagination as we interact with the changing world around us. The way we act as
members of society depends on the meanings we give to things in our environment. A tuned
sociological imagination breeds a more open mindset, thus allowing us to change and adapt as
we interact with the beautiful cultures that make humans so special. Like Sean, something that
symbolizes dominance over others can gradually assume a more peaceful and freeing notion.
References
Conley, Dalton. You May Ask Yourself. W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2015.
Lin, Justin, director. The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift. Universal Pictures, Relativity Media,
June 16, 2006
Symbolic Interactionism. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/social-
sciences/symbolic-interactionism