Frank Martin, played by newcomer Ed Skrein, a former special-ops mercenary, is now living a less perilous life - or so he thinks - transporting classified packages for questionable people. When Frank's father (Ray Steven...
Frank Martin, played by newcomer Ed Skrein, a former special-ops mercenary, is now living a less perilous life - or so he thinks - transporting classified packages for questionable people. When Frank's father (Ray Steven...
The film focuses on individual action and a professional code to combat a universally condemned criminal enterprise, without engaging in deep political commentary or promoting specific ideological solutions, thus remaining neutral.
The movie features visible diversity within its supporting cast, though the lead role maintains its traditional demographic. The narrative primarily focuses on action and a revenge plot, without explicitly critiquing or negatively portraying traditional identities.
The Transporter Refueled is an action film centered on heists and revenge. There are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in the movie's plot or character development, resulting in an N/A rating for LGBTQ+ portrayal.
The film features several capable female characters who are central to the plot's criminal enterprise. While they are involved in action sequences and use firearms, there are no distinct scenes where a female character is shown to be victorious in close-quarters physical combat against one or more male opponents.
The main character, Frank Martin, was established as male in previous installments and remains male in this film. No other established characters from the franchise undergo a gender change.
The main character, Frank Martin, was portrayed by a white actor in the original series and remains so in this film. All other significant characters are new to this installment, not established characters from prior canon. Therefore, no race swap occurred.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources