![]() “We took a perfectly good, new building and made it look 85 years old,” says Don MacLean, vice president of attraction development for Universal Creative, about the laborious process he and his team went through to bring the park’s three-dimensional, physical space into alignment with the two-dimensional F&F movie world. A table is set in a courtyard for a Toretto family BBQ, complete with half-sipped Corona beers, for example. References to the films and Easter eggs abound for those in the know. As they pass the cars, workstations, automotive tools strewn about, and other selfie-optimized scenes, guests are able to get up close and personal with the inner workings of Dom’s crew. Fans of the F&F franchise (and judging by box office totals, there are gazillions of them), will adore the furious attention to detail that Universal lavished on the attraction.
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