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Driving the Super-Dreamy Porsche 911 GT3 RS From Fast Five, Including Video

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  • Driving the Porsche 911 GT3 RS From Fast Five

    OK, it's not really a GT3 RS. It's actually just a 996-series 911 Carrera 2 with a graphics package and new wheels. But it's still a Porsche. | April 26, 2011

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Driving the Super-Dreamy Porsche 911 GT3 RS From Fast Five, Including Video

Exclusive First Drive of the Porsche 911 GT3 RS From Fast Five

    13 Ratings

    At some point we all grow up. Back in 2001, super-dreamy Paul Walker was a callow 28-year-old when he first played Officer Brian O'Connor in The Fast and the Furious. As he enters Fast Five, however, he's now a mature 38-year-old fugitive from the law headed for Rio. And when you get into your late 30s, you start wanting a Porsche. So in Fast Five, super-dreamy early-middle-ager Paul Walker drives this 2001 Porsche GT3 RS.

    OK, it's not really a GT3 RS. It's actually just a 996-series 911 Carrera 2 with a graphics package and new wheels. But it's still a Porsche. No, it's not the first Porsche in the F&F series, but it's the first one driven by a male character.

    By the way, Vin Diesel will turn 44 in July. And his character is still driving that old Charger.

    Good Enough
    "We didn't really have to do anything to the 911," says Fast Five Picture Car Coordinator Dennis McCarthy. "It had plenty of power to do what we wanted. We welded up the spider gear in the rear differential so it would be locked...and that was about it."

    Visually, all McCarthy's crew had to do was paint the two 911s the production acquired the same, add the same rear wings, and throw on the "GT3 RS" script along the sides. The 18-inch diameter wheels are made by CCW and the tires are Continentals.

    Inside, the 911 is finished with a custom-fabricated roll cage painted the same shade of blue as the car, a pair of narrow Sparco driving seats and an NRG steering wheel. Otherwise it's just like any other decade-old 996.

    "Actually we did do one cool thing with the 911," McCarthy adds. "We built the other car with right-hand drive and kept the left-hand steering wheel aboard. That way stunt driver Rich Rutherford could be driving the car from the right-hand side and Paul could be sitting in the left-hand driver's seat pretending to drive. With the camera aimed at Paul, you'd never know it wasn't him doing the driving and drifting."

    Still Good Enough
    It took some squeezing, but finally some of us squeezed into the 911. It was all familiar appearances and familiar sensations as we turned the key and the 3.4-liter flat-6 spun to life. The 996 may never be the most beloved of Porsches, but it's still a sweetheart. In most ways this car felt as tight as the day it was new, despite a decade and 100,000 miles of civilian use before its repurposing and abuse as a movie car.

    The left rear blew out like a shotgun blast in a Brooklyn convenience store.

    "It drives exactly like what it is," said Josh Jacquot, Inside Line's resident master of the incredibly obvious. "It's a 10-year-old Porsche 911 and 10 years ago Porsche 911s were pretty good."

    The locked rear end, combined with the nearly bald tires, does make drifting around corners more of an inevitability instead of something that needs to be induced. But otherwise, this is pure used Porsche. It's the sort of Porsche you buy for $30,000, keep for three years, then trade in for a new 911 when you get promoted to Vice President of Financial Treachery at some bank. Think of it as a starter Porsche.

    Dramatic Exit
    As Inside Line's day with the Fast Five vehicles at the Streets of Willow was coming to an end, Jacquot took the 911 out for a few last sideways passes. As he screamed across the skid pad, suddenly there was a thumping sound from the left rear tire. Exactly the thump-thump-thump sound that a tire makes when it has developed a tread tumor the size of a grapefruit.

    Did that stop Josh? Nah. This car was built to be hammered on.

    So, right in the middle of a sweet smokey arc...BLAMMO! The left rear blew out with all the drama of a shotgun blast in a Brooklyn convenience store.

    Not a bad way to end the day.

    NBC Universal loaned Edmunds.com this vehicle for evaluation.

    Sort By:

    skidrive9 says:

    07:35 AM, 04/28/2011

    This is what this car says about paul walker's character in this movie. "I can't afford a 997, so I got a much older 996, and I think I want to be oldschool, but I'm not sure, so I went with a 996 which is right between the 993 and 997."

    Now I'm curious, did the budget not allow for a new 997? or was buying the 996 all part of the part paul walker is playing?

    a1c_scg says:

    07:09 AM, 04/28/2011

    1. There'll be plenty of car guys that watch this movie. I'm one of them. Just because I know a lot about cars doesn't mean I can't distinguish fact from fiction and enjoy what is obviously entertainment, first and foremost.

    2. The 997 is not necessarily better than the 996. It depends on what you mean by 'better'. It's faster, has higher cornering ability, is nicer and more comfortable. But the 996 unquestionably sounds better, handles more delicately, is more playful, and has more of that old 911 charm.

    3. I demand that someone be fired, or at the least, kicked in the balls for this garbage.

    v8vader says:

    07:15 PM, 04/27/2011

    its like the "meow" game from Super Troopers.

    devnix says:

    05:27 PM, 04/27/2011

    At first I was LMAOing while reading the captions about the "super-dreamy" Porsche, and then suddenly, as I was laughing, I felt an overwhelming urge to punch something...

    lostboyz says:

    07:25 AM, 04/27/2011

    @mieden, I beg to differ, anyone who likes cars should like car chases, plausible or not. Its pure entertainment.

    nonohonda says:

    06:46 AM, 04/27/2011

    Ha!  With the age of Paul Walker and Vin Diesel the movie titles should have transitioned from "The fast and the furious" to "the somewhat speedy and the mildly agressive".

    As an owner of a 03 996, I agree that a 996 is a great starter Porsche.  I just hope that when the big promotion comes, I can keep the 996 and pick up a 1 year old 997 GT3 as opposed to a 991.  The 996 is a great car.

    bruceleroy81 says:

    05:12 AM, 04/27/2011

    WTF!?!?!? Paul Walker drive this thing in the movie? What happened to the driving Skyline? I mean I saw what happened to it on the Fast 4, but you'd think that what he would stick to.

    mieden says:

    05:04 AM, 04/27/2011

    mrharris, no one who "knows anything about cars" can stand to watch the FF movies...

    mrharris says:

    03:55 AM, 04/27/2011

    What's up with "super-dreamy" in every caption for almost every picture?  It was painful for me to flip through the pictures.  I'm curious why they are putting a 996 in this movie.  Everyone knows the 997 is better in every way especially in looks.  If they want to go old school they should've put a 993 aka last of the oil-cooled which would've gotten a lot more respect from anyone that knows anything about cars.

    joefrompa says:

    03:53 AM, 04/27/2011

    So you like the 3.4 liter in this car?

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