By: Robert Murphy
The post apocalyptic genre is a place many film makers have tried to go to and that is for one simple reason, Mad Max. Some thirty odd years ago the first of the three films came out and set the standard for this type of film with its desolate and society crumbling idea for the future of the human race. We would all basically become animals trying to make our way through desolate and grungy looking scenes and I loved that. Now, George Miller returns after three decades to the wastes and the character he started all those years ago but he receives a new face with Tom Hardy. This isn’t a bad thing as Tom fits the strong and silent Max character well as he now faces a new sort of danger than the one he had before. Desperately trying to forget the mistakes of his past, Max is traveling from place to place hoping to escape the ghosts that now haunt him but it seems the world just can’t leave him alone.
Max is no longer a warrior who travels from place to place trying to scrounge up whatever fuel he can scavenge, no now his character really wants nothing to do with the outside world. Running away from the past is his main concern at this point as people and faces haunt the stoic Max to this day, all the people he couldn’t save and the ones that couldn’t survive this harsh new world. He has frankly gone just as mad as the rest of the world around him. The rest of the remaining human race are still ragged and tattered but now they no longer run around looking for power or fuel rather they come to the new found source of all power, Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne, a former bad guy in the first Mad Max film). Joe has created an empire out of the wasteland that currently remains of the world by controlling one of the few remaining sources of dependable water. He controls those underneath him and the men that fight for him by supplying them shelter and promises of immortality. His army of pasty skinned soldiers all believe that they will die and be reborn again in Valhalla by following his commands and doing his bidding. They all attack with no fear of what will happen if they die as it appears Immortan Joe knows just how to control the feeble minded masses.
What causes all the trouble for the story though comes when Joe's second in command steals a very precious commodity of his. Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) leaves on the scheduled trip to secure fuel for Immortan Joe's machines but she secretly has her own plans and has made away with all of Joe's beautiful wives. She is honestly just as much a main character as Max though as she is both intricate to the plot but she also supplies some of the hard hitting action as well. The one armed Furiosa commands a mighty rig that only she knows how to drive, she is able to hold her own and take a hit like no other woman and she has plenty of skills with guns, knives and fists. She hopes to free the former enslaved wives of Joe and take them to her former home which is now run by a few remaining biker grannies who really know how to put up a fight on their own too. Once Joe finds out about all of this, that's when things really kick off.
Almost immediately the somewhat decrepit Joe sends out every available War Boy and heavy hitting vehicles to retrieve his stolen property. This leads to some of the most spectacular CGI stunts and massive car chase that I have ever seen. The makeshift vehicles in Joe's command vary from supped up mustangs to giant war rigs and even a traveling bard car complete with massive speakers and a flame wielding guitar player on bungee wires. If you think that was a mouthful to read wait until you see just how crazy it is on screen. All the vehicles are decked out to the maximum with all sorts of weaponry like flamethrowers and machines gun. You then have the crazed War Boys swinging from car to car by paper thin poles as well and it truly is quite a sight to behold. It's this madness, the crescendo of the music and the vibration coming off of the cars and explosions that will have your eyes glued to the screen. It has been awhile since I was on the edge of my seat for an action movie such as this an I guess it took the return of George Miller and his Mad Max to do it.
This also happens to be where Max comes back into the picture after being initially captured in the first few scenes of the movie. A bright eyed and thoroughly brain washed War Boy by the name of Nux (Nicholas Hoult) is using Max as a sort of blood donor after being previously injured. He comes into play later after questioning Immortan Joe and all he has stood for. In the meantime Max has sort of felt like a back seat driver for most of the movie and that works out in all honesty because his story is more of a quiet one this time around and he wants to go unnoticed. This still doesn't stop him from tearing through the never ending onslaught of Joe's men and being an all around solid character, perhaps one of my favorite scenes is when he mysteriously walks off from the rig and you hear some brief explosions in the background. Max returns a bit bloodied with an full arsenal of weapons around his shoulders and only utters at most one word while the flaming wreckage of what occurred laid behind him.
Fury Road excels at creating an absolutely out of this world post apocalyptic action movie. Once the ball starts rolling in the story there is just no stopping it and that is what a great action movie needs to do, it supplies over the top stunts, intriguing characters and doesn't fall into the the slumps of what all normal action movies do today. Out of the wreckage and chaos that ensues throughout this Mad Max sequel, you get a truly beautiful experience.
Good:
- The sheer amount of insane stunts and action
- Tom Hardy's Max may take a backseat for some of the film but he still hits insanely hard
- The incredible world that is built and presented before you
- Theron and her portrayal of Furiosa
Bad:
- Keep on scrolling, nothing to see here
Scully Rating: 9.5 out of 10
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