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Nathalie Kelley (born 3 March 1984) is a Peruvian-Australian actress, known for her role as Neela in the 2006 action film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, and for her roles in various television series including Body of Proof (2011–2012), Unreal (2015), The Vampire Diaries (2016–2017), Dynasty (2017–2018) and The Baker and the Beauty (2020).
Kamata honors his word, and Sean, dubbed the new Drift King, remains in Tokyo. Neela, Twinkie, and Sean, now driving a Nissan Silvia S15 Spec R, enjoy themselves at a car meet when Dominic Toretto arrives in a 1970 Plymouth Road Runner to challenge Sean to a race. Sean accepts after Dom proclaims Han was family.
Takashi is a street racer who was acknowledged as the best drift racer in Tokyo given the title "DK" (Drift King). He first confronts Sean at the drift race when Sean is talking to Neela. In the first race between them he easily beats Sean while Sean demolishes Han's favorite car.
Sean makes his debut appearance in the 2006 film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, the third movie in the franchise.He is introduced as a 17-year-old lonely high school troublemaker living with his mother, Ms. Boswell in Oro Valley, Arizona, having relocated to several different cities and states with him every time he got into trouble with the law.
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (Original Score) was released on June 27 via Varèse Sarabande, a week after Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. It was recorded at Todd-AO Scoring Stage and composed by Brian Tyler .
Newly installed security barriers are seen on Bourbon Street next to a memorial for victims of the Jan. 1 car attack ahead of the Super Bowl in New Orleans, Friday, Jan. 31, 2025.
In addition to ongoing trips to Truckee, Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Upstate New York and Tokyo, the expansion includes testing in San Diego and Las Vegas, with more cities yet to be announced.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.