Summary

  • Paul Walker's family and CGI technology were instrumental in completing his scenes for Furious 7 after his death.
  • The movie went on to become a massive success, grossing over $1.5 billion worldwide and receiving acclaim for its touching tribute to Paul Walker's character.
  • The Fast & Furious 7 production team used a combination of archived footage, CGI replacements, and Paul Walker's brothers to complete his remaining scenes and give his character a fitting conclusion to his personal journey.

Paul Walker's Furious 7 scenes were able to be finished following the actor's death thanks to some help from his family and CGI work. The seventh installment in the high-octane franchise was rocked with tragedy when Walker was killed in a vehicular crash in November 2013, at which point F7 was only partially done. Having played Brian O'Conner alongside Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) since the original The Fast and the Furious in 2001, Walker's tragic passing left a massive hole in The Fast Saga. Understandably, the movie's creatives gave serious thought to canceling Furious 7 afterward, rather than trying to finish it without him.

Eventually, they decided to continue on in the wake of Walker's passing and the movie went on to become a massive box office success, grossing over $1.5 billion in theaters worldwide (via Box Office Mojo), in addition to earning widespread acclaim for the touching and tasteful way it "retires" Brian. In order to both finish the film and give Paul Walker's Fast and Furious character a fitting conclusion to his personal journey, the Fast & Furious 7 production team (including screenwriter Chris Morgan, director James Wan, and their many VFX artists) had to think decidedly outside the box.

Where To Watch Furious 7

How Brian's Furious 7 Scenes Were Finished

Paul Walker's Own Brothers Helped Complete His Work

Paul Walker as Brian in the Fast X trailer.

After Brian O'Conner's storyline in Furious 7 was rewritten, including the new tribute to Paul Walker, the film's crew set about the task of producing some 350 additional shots of Walker to flesh out his role in the movie, 90 of which used archived footage of the actor from previous outtakes or shots from earlier Fast & Furious films, which were then relit and repurposed.

The other 260 shots were completed by having Paul's brothers, Caleb and Cody, perform his scenes in character, then replacing their faces with CGI versions of Paul in post-production. As Weta VFX supervisor Joe Letteri explained in 2015 (via THR), the Fast & Furious 7 effects team created the CGI replacement for Paul Walker's face by first scanning his brothers to use them as a point of reference.

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Paul Walker's Long History In The Fast Saga Helped Complete Furious 7

Walker's Tribue Created An Iconic Cinematic Moment

In the end, the Furious 7 filmmakers ended up using older footage of Walker as a reference the most, "because as close as the brothers were in style and mannerisms, they just weren't Paul when Paul played his character," according to Letteri. Complicating matters, many of these shots included dialogue, which the movie's sound editors had to create by drawing from existing dialogue previously recorded by Walker. Letteri also touched on the process of crafting Walker's CGI face and how the film's VFX artists had to be extra careful to prevent the effect from landing somewhere in the "Uncanny Valley."

While the final result wasn't flawless, it was nevertheless very impressive, considering the major obstacles the movie's VFX artists had to overcome. It all culminated in the Furious 7 ending, where Dom and Brian have one final "race" but are far more invested in simply enjoying their time riding together before reaching a fork in the road and heading off in separate directions. It is an emotional moment of the movie nearly breaking the fourth wall in a touching tribute to the late costar.

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While the moment provided a lovely sendoff for Walker's O'Conner, F9 featured a non-visual cameo of the character. At the end of the film, Dom pauses before the family of friends says grace, saying that there's one empty chair at the table. Mia's response is "he's on the way," just before a blue Nissan Skyline drives up to the home and pulls up into the driveway.

The car is obviously a nod to Walker's character, who drove the vehicle throughout the Fast and Furious franchise, causing many to speculate whether Brian could appear in future Fast Saga movies (with the help of CGI). Ultimately, Furious 7 bid O'Conner farewell in a satisfactory way, and time will tell whether the filmmakers do bring him back through digital rendering as the film franchise comes to a close.

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Furious 7: Which Brian O'Conner Scenes Weren't Paul Walker
Following Paul Walker's death in 2013 during the production of Furious 7, some scenes were completed using CGI and his brothers as body doubles.

The Fast Saga Didn't Need CGI To Include Brian After Furious 7

Brian's Presence In The Movies Has Continued To Be A Tribue To Walker's Importance To The Franchise

Mia sits on Brian’s lap in Fast and Furious

The remaining movies have Brian O'Conner living his best life offscreen looking after the kids, and the team retired him to protect his family. Killing his character would have felt insensitive considering that Walker passed away in a car accident, so keeping his character alive is a great way to honor the actor without recasting or over-relying on tasteless CGI. In F9, Brian's looking after Dom's son, too, and he's become a really useful narrative tool for keeping important characters safe offscreen.

Brian O'Conner's presence is felt not only in the plot points but also when his trademark Nissan Skyline pulls up to the family barbecue during the F9 ending. It gives Brian a physical presence for the first time, yet doesn't need Walker's likeness to be impactful. Ultimately, Brian has become a safe haven for the next generation of Torettos and O'Conners, and the unfortunate verisimilitude of Walker's death has been adapted into The Fast Saga in a way that, surprisingly poignantly, hammers home the series' themes of family, memory, and legacy.

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Is Paul Walker's Brian In Fast X?
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How Fast X Handles Paul Walker's Character

Brian Still Remains An Important Person In Dom's Life

Dom and Brian drive off a bridge in Fast Five

Nearly a decade after Paul Walker's death and his last appearance in Furious 7, fans still miss having him a part of this story and continue to see the ways the franchise is honoring the character. Fans theorized that the Fast Saga would debut Brian O'Conner's sister in the form of Brie Larson's new character who debuted in Fast X. That didn't happen, as Larson played the daughter of Mr. Nobody in the movie. However, Fast X used Brian anyway.

For the first time since Furious 7, Brian was in action in Fast X. However, it wasn't in the present-day story action, but in flashback footage from 10 years before this story took place. The entire opening scene showed the origin story of Dante Reyes, the new big bad in the Fast Saga universe. That means that fans saw Walker up close and in action, as he and Dom stole the vault from Hernan Reyes before leaving him there to die. It was nice to see Walker back again, even if it was older scenes from Fast Five. Furthermore, Dom had a long look at several photos of Brian, once again showing Paul Walker's importance in the franchise.

  • Fast and Furious 7 Poster
    Furious 7
    Summary:
    Deckard Shaw (Statham) is out for revenge against Dominic Toretto (Diesel) and his crew, following what happened to his brother in 'Fast & Furious 6.'
    Release Date:
    2015-04-03
    Cast:
    Tyrese Gibson, Jason Statham, Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Luke Hobbs, Dwayne Johnson, Dominic Toretto
    Director:
    James Wan
    Genres:
    Crime, Action, Thriller
    Rating:
    PG-13
    Writers:
    Chris Morgan
    Runtime:
    2h 20m
    Budget:
    190–250 million
    Studio(s):
    Universal Pictures
    Distributor(s):
    Universal Pictures
    Sequel(s):
    F9: The Fast Saga1, The Fate of the Furious
    prequel(s):
    Fast 5, The Fast And The Furious, 2 Fast 2 Furious, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, Fast & Furious 6
    Franchise(s):
    Fast and Furious