LOS ANGELES—“Furious 7” is the fuel-injected fusion of all that is and ever has been good in “The Fast and the Furious” saga that began in 2001 with souped-up cars and a stripped-down story about a tightknit East L.A. street racing crew. Although 2006’s “Tokyo Drift,” the third in the series, will always remain for me the one in which the films find their footing, in “Furious 7” they learn how to fly. In every sense. The always-fabulous autos spend much of the time airborne in stunning, heart-dropping effects.Read more on NewsOK.com