Fast X will be racing into theaters this week, and while the film is … interesting, the ending leaves Dom (Vin Diesel) and his familiar in an interesting spot with its cliffhanger. Here's what went down.

Warning: Spoilers ahead for Fast X

The plot of Fast X follows Dante (Jason Momoa) on his revenge tour against Dom and Co. He was the son of a crime boss from Fast Five that was ultimately killed in that film and wants to make Dom “suffer.” His way of doing so is by trying to blow up the Vatican and things of that nature and then blaming Dom's crew. They're on the run throughout the entire film before a final showoff occurs on the same bridge that the crew dragged a safe on in Fast Five.

Dom finally escapes Dante's grasp with his son (played by Leo Abelo Perry) and is driving on a bridge to meet with Aimes (Alan Ritchson) — a character with more face/heel turns than John Cena in his entire WWE career in this film alone. Aimes claims that he has landed the plane (the one that Dom previously drove out of and onto the highway) at a rendezvous spot to extract Dom and Brian.

But things are never that easy, and as it turns out, Aimes has been by Dante's side since the events of Fast Five (this twist is supposed to be a mic-drop moment that my cousin audibly laughed at during the screening). “Not everyone becomes family,” says Dante with a snarl. He's referring to the fact that every foe — Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson); Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham); Jakob (Cena) to name a few — ends up becoming a part of the Corona-loving family. Aimes then shoots the plane carrying Roman (Tyrese), Tej (Ludacris), Han (Sung Kang), and Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel) out of the sky with a missile, and Dante uses two self-driving gasoline trucks to pinch Dom atop a very steep dam (they allude to this earlier in the film when Aimes goes on a rant about how cars with humans behind the wheel are soon-to-be old news).

Dante claims he has taken everything from Dom — his family, friends, money, — but as Vin Diesel so eloquently says (with his signature growl), “You didn't take my car,” and he proceeds to drive down the dam as the flames chase them. Luckily, there's enough of a ramp at the bottom that Dom and Brian go airborne before landing in the water. And just like Dante had to swim out of the water as they show at the beginning of the film, Dom and Brian are shown rising to the surface before the film cuts to black.

Is it an abrupt ending? Absolutely. It's so choppy that you have to wonder if they were financially (the film cost $340 million to make) or creatively bankrupt and just ended the film. Supposedly, there are two more installments coming, so the ending of Fast X appropriately leaves the door open, and I imagine that Fast & Furious 11 will resume right after these events.

Fast X will be released on May 19.