🎬 Hollywood | Cannes 2026 | May 13
Vin Diesel’s
Hits Cannes 2026:
25 Years.
Last One
Ride.
Picture this: the Croisette at Cannes, night air buzzing, cameras flashing. And walking the red carpet — not some arthouse auteur — but Dominic Toretto himself. Vin Diesel. Flanked by Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson, and a very special guest: Meadow Walker, daughter of the late Paul Walker.
On May 13, 2026, the 79th Cannes Film Festival turned its iconic Grand Lumière Theatre into the most emotional movie screening of the year. The Fast and the Furious — the 2001 street-racing film that launched a $7 billion global franchise — got a midnight anniversary screening that nobody who was there will forget. And with it came a bombshell announcement that’s going to keep the Fast family running for years to come.
This is the full story of what happened in Cannes, what Vin Diesel said on that stage, and why 2026 might just be the biggest year in Fast & Furious history — even before the final film drops.
Cannes 2026 Said Yes to Fast.
Let’s be real — Cannes and Hollywood blockbusters have always had a complicated relationship. The festival lives for prestige drama, slow burns, and subtitled masterpieces. Fast and the Furious is nitrous, explosions, and family speeches. These two worlds don’t usually collide.
But 2026 was different. With Hollywood studios keeping most of their big guns away from this year’s lineup, Cannes made room — and the Fast franchise walked right in like it owned the place. Because in some ways, it does. Twenty-five years of cultural impact isn’t something you argue with.
The photo call alone was electric. Vin Diesel showed up in a black coat with a bedazzled car graphic and the words “Fast Forever” stitched across the back. Subtle, it was not. But that’s very much the point.
The Moment That Stopped Everyone
Inside the theatre, Diesel turned to Meadow Walker — seated nearby — and delivered a tribute to her father that reportedly made people tear up across the room.
“I pray that in your life you have a brother like Paul,” he said. “It wasn’t on the script at first that this blonde-haired, blue-eyed guy would be a brother to me.”
Meadow, Paul Walker’s only child, was just 15 when her father died in a car crash in 2013. She’s been a consistent presence at franchise events since — and her Cannes appearance felt like a closing of a circle. The family, together again, in one of the most glamorous settings on earth, honouring the man who made the franchise feel like it had a soul.
❤️ The Emotional Core: The Fast & Furious franchise has always said its secret weapon isn’t the cars — it’s the relationships. Meadow Walker’s presence at Cannes made that more tangible than any speech could. Paul Walker is still, in every meaningful sense, part of this family.
The Big Announcement — Fast Forever & Four TV Series
Here’s where things shifted from celebration to full-blown franchise expansion mode. Because Vin Diesel didn’t just show up at Cannes to look back. He came to signal what comes next.
Just days before the Cannes screening, Diesel took the stage at the NBCUniversal upfront presentation in New York alongside Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon. And he dropped not one, but five announcements:
Universal confirmed the final Fast & Furious film is titled Fast Forever and is set for a March 17, 2028 release. Diesel has called it the finale the fans deserve — a proper send-off for Dominic Toretto and the entire saga. The coat he wore at Cannes was already a walking teaser.
Four original Fast & Furious television series are now in development at Peacock, NBCUniversal’s streaming platform. Diesel announced this personally, saying fans have been asking for the franchise to expand into TV for over a decade. The first series has already named its showrunners: Mike Daniels and Wolfe Coleman of Sons of Anarchy fame.
The TV expansion isn’t just spin-off territory — Diesel specifically said the series will explore the legacy characters fans love most. Their backstories, their futures, the parts of their lives the movies never had time for. It’s the franchise deepening, not just extending.
By choosing Cannes for the anniversary celebration, Universal and Diesel made a deliberate statement — this franchise belongs in the same conversation as cinema’s most iconic cultural moments. The midnight screening format, traditionally reserved for prestige or cult films, was a deliberate artistic framing. It worked.
Across 11 films, the Fast franchise has earned over $7 billion at the worldwide box office. That number alone makes it one of the most successful action franchises in cinema history — alongside Mission Impossible and Marvel properties. The Cannes celebration wasn’t just nostalgia. It was a reminder of scale.
Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson, producer Neal H. Moritz, and Meadow Walker were all present at Cannes. The Fast family — real and fictional — showed up in full. And with Fast Forever still two years away, this felt like the warm-up act for what promises to be one of the biggest franchise finales ever.
“For the last decade, we have realized that the fans have wanted more. They wanted us to expand the legacy characters, their stories.”
Vin Diesel — NBCUniversal Upfront Presentation, May 2026
25 Years on the Road — The Timeline
To understand why this Cannes moment hits differently, you need to feel the journey. Here’s how a low-budget street racing movie became a global institution.
Why the TV Move Is Smarter Than It Sounds
Some fans heard “four Peacock TV series” and immediately worried. Is this franchise fatigue? Are they milking it? Is this how great franchises die?
Actually — no. Here’s why this is one of the smarter moves Fast & Furious could make at this stage.
🧠 Why the Fast TV Expansion Makes Sense
- The streaming landscape rewards franchises: The era of studio-owned streaming platforms means tentpole IP is more valuable than ever on TV. Netflix had six seasons of the Fast-adjacent animated Spy Racers. Peacock going live-action with four series is a natural escalation — and a much bigger bet.
- Legacy characters have untapped stories: Twenty-five years of films means characters like Roman (Tyrese Gibson), Tej (Ludacris), Letty (Rodriguez), and even villains like Cipher (Charlize Theron) have rich, mostly unexplored backstories. TV gives those stories room to breathe in a way a two-hour film never can.
- Fast Forever is the finale — TV is the legacy: Diesel has been clear: Fast Forever is the final chapter for Dominic Toretto. But that doesn’t mean the universe ends. TV lets the franchise live on without forcing the films to continue past their natural endpoint.
- The Fast fanbase is already global and habitual: These aren’t casual viewers. Fast & Furious fans watch every film, rewatch constantly, and treat the franchise like sports allegiance. Giving them four new series isn’t oversaturation — it’s feeding a genuine appetite that the movies alone can’t satisfy.
- Showrunner credibility matters here: The lead Peacock series has Mike Daniels and Wolfe Coleman at the helm — both veterans of Sons of Anarchy, one of the most successful and acclaimed genre TV shows ever made. That’s not a random pick. That’s Universal saying this won’t be filler content.
What This Means for Fans
If you’re a Fast & Furious fan — and given that this franchise has earned $7 billion over 25 years, there are a lot of you — here’s what the next few years actually look like.
The Road Ahead
- Fast Forever lands March 17, 2028: Mark the date. This is the finale Vin Diesel has been building toward since Fast X. The send-off for Dom Toretto. And based on his Cannes appearance, he’s treating it with the gravity it deserves.
- Four Peacock series — different tones, different stories: Details are still emerging but expect the series to cover very different corners of the Fast universe. Think anthology-style storytelling across different characters, timelines, and locations.
- Paul Walker’s legacy continues through Meadow: Her Cannes presence wasn’t just symbolic. It signals the franchise is committed to honouring Brian O’Conner’s memory in a genuine, ongoing way — not just as a one-off tribute.
- Vin Diesel as executive producer across TV: He’s not stepping back. Diesel will executive produce the Peacock series via his One Race production company alongside Neal Moritz. Quality control stays in-house.
- The Cannes moment legitimises the franchise culturally: When film festivals take your blockbuster seriously enough for a midnight premiere, it means something. The Fast franchise is no longer “just” a car movie series. It’s cinema history.
Final Word:
The Family Runs Forever.
Twenty-five years ago, a street racing movie showed up with a $38 million budget and no right to become one of cinema’s most beloved franchises. And yet. Here we are — Cannes 2026, the Grand Lumière Theatre, midnight, the original film rolling on the biggest screen in one of the world’s most prestigious festivals.
That’s not luck. That’s Vin Diesel’s stubborn belief in family — both the fictional one and the real one — carrying a franchise further than anyone thought possible.
Fast Forever is coming in 2028. Four TV series are coming before that. And Meadow Walker stood on that red carpet in Cannes, representing everything her father meant to this franchise and to the people who built it.
The engine isn’t stopping. It’s just shifting gears. And if the last 25 years are any indication — the next stretch is going to be something else entirely.
Cannes 2026 — Fast & Furious 25th Anniversary
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