Hardcore car enthusiasts search for technical indexes: PDFs breaking down the VeilSide Mazda RX-7 (the "Fortune" car), the Monte Carlo with a Skyline engine, and the actual suspension geometry used for the stunts.
The index’s heart. Han is the philosopher-king of the parking garage, forever chewing a snack and dispensing zen koans like, “Life is simple: you make choices and you don’t look back.” Tokyo Drift introduced Han before he appeared in the timeline, creating a beloved anomaly. His quiet cool and tragic fate (the explosive crash that would later be retconned multiple times) gave the film unexpected emotional weight.
No index is complete without the geography of its action:
While searching for an "index" feels like a treasure hunt, the reality is that most public indexes are dead or dangerous (ransomware hiding in .exe files). The best way to "index" Tokyo Drift is to own it:
If you are a librarian or data hoarder, you can legally create your own private index by ripping your purchased disc using MakeMKV and organizing the files into a clean directory structure.