Monday, May 18, 2015

Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) - Theatrical Review


Director: George Miller
Cast: Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, Hugh Keays-Bryne, Nicholas Hoult, Rosey Huntington-Whiteley
Country: Australia / United States
Rating: R
Run Time: 120 minutes

Before I start this review, let me say that I had planned on reviewing the two Mad Max sequels (Mad Max 2 [a.k.a The Road Warrior] and Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome) before I wrote about Fury Road. However, I don't think I could live with myself if I waited any longer to share my opinions on George Miller's latest masterpiece. Therefore, just know that I love the Mad Max sequels with all of my heart, flaws and all. I'll do lengthy reviews for the sequels some day, but you can check out my review for Miller's 70s classic here. (Note: I wrongly proclaimed Mad Max a post-apocalyptic film in my review even though it is set before said apocalypse. However, it might as well be one since it foretells a future on the brink of destruction and demonstrates many of the elements of a post-apocalyptic film. It's more of a pre-apocalyptic film if anything.)

After a 30 year hiatus, George Miller's Mad Max is back! It fills me with glee to see a reboot to one of my very favorite action franchises of all time be written and directed by the man who wrote and directed all previous Mad Max films. After years of development, reshoots, and delays, Mad Max: Fury Road has finally made it to theaters. And all I can say is, wow. Mad Max: Fury Road is destined to become an action classic. It is an action film so brave, so confident, so fully realized, and so bat s*** insane, that other action films wish they could match the sheer level of filmmaking on display in its two hour run time.

#bloodbagforlife

In today's day and age of overcomplicated and overcrowded summer blockbusters, Mad Max: Fury Road barrels into theaters with a simplistic and straightforward plot. Max Rockatansky (Tom Hardy) is a widowed father and former police officer who now wanders the post-apocalyptic wasteland alone. He is immediately captured by the War Boys, a cult-like group of men who worship Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Bryne), their leader and water supplier. On the day that Max is captured and turned into a blood bag, Joe sends off Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) to gather gasoline for their citadel and commune. However, Furiosa has secretly snuck Joe's "wives" and breeders out of the citadel in order to offer them a life of freedom. As Joe and his many worshippers take off after Furiosa to reclaim their breeders, Max is dragged along for the ride atop a car driven by Nux (Nicholas Hoult), a War Boy desperate to enter the gates of Valhalla. What follows is two hours of straight post-apocalyptic mayhem the likes that has never been seen before.

Fury Road is one of the most unique reboots to date. As I stated before, the film is written and directed by George Miller, the auteur and creator of the Max Rockatansky character. Therefore, it is interesting to see the man who started it all reboot his own franchise with a new actor in the lead role. Fury Road is not only a great reboot, but it also operates on a level of insanity never before seen in any Mad Max film before it. Miller fleshes out his vision of the post-apocalyptic future more than ever before thanks to an expansive budget and numerous years of development. If you thought that the world glimpsed within Beyond Thunderdome was expansive in comparison to the first two Mad Max films, than wait until you see this. Fury Road is jam packed with more vehicles, characters, varying factions, and weapons than you ever could have imagined within a Mad Max film. Fury Road is essentially a classic Mad Max film but on steroids. $150 million steroids, that is.

Miller fully immerses the viewer into the film's universe and makes little time for exposition. Instead of having a whole film to explain Max's origin as he did with Mad Max in 1979, Miller introduces us to Max at his so called "maddest" and uses flash backs and an opening narration by Max to explain how he became the way that he is. While I personally did not need any of this information, as Mad Max fans know this stuff by heart, I understand that this is a reboot and newcomers need this information in order to understand the character. While contemporary reboots like RoboCop (2014) and The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) waste entire films explaining the origins of their time honored characters, Fury Road takes a whopping minute to get Max's origin out of the way and than moves on. Studios should take a clue from Miller's treatment of Fury Road and skip origin films entirely unless the character is being introduced to an audience for the very first time. If the character is a time honored property, like Max Rockatansky, than audiences don't need to see their origin play out over an entire film again. Give it to us like Fury Road, and we'll love you for it forever studios.

Theron shines as Furiosa, the true protagonist of the film.

Fury Road is a triumph of visual filmmaking, as it rarely relies upon dialog to tell its story. Characters speak or yell only when necessary or to convey characteristics about themselves. There is not a word or a frame wasted in this picture, Fury Road is that tight and filmic. Fury Road even visually feels like a classic Mad Max film thanks to Miller's trademark sped up footage. The film also contains many visual references to the classic Mad Max films (i.e. one of Joe's wives plays with a music box, Max's flashbacks reveal a character's bug eyed death, the War Rig crashes head first into a vehicle and causes its parts to explode over the front of it, and Max obtains his iconic sawed-off shotgun) that serve as fun callbacks for fans of the series like myself. I also love how Max's sawed off shotgun fizzles out when fired. It's a great callback to the scene in The Road Warrior when Max drives the tanker towards Papagallio's camp and fires his sawed off only for it to misfire on him.

If I had to express a gripe about the film, it would be that I am not a huge fan of Hardy's portrayal of the titular character. He sounds too similar to Bane from The Dark Knight Rises and grunts far more than Mel ever did. Hardy also doesn't convey the warmness of Mel's Max. That personal opinion aside, it is clear that Miller wanted to take the Max character in a different direction. Max is "madder" and more selfish than ever before, as seen evident in several scenes where he thinks about his well being before others. Fortunately, and as evident in all previous Mad Max films, Max's good natured side takes over and causes him to join Furiosa and the wives on their quest to safety. Max is also a darker and more tortured character than ever before. He repeatedly sees visions of his deceased daughter and regrets not saving her. These torturous visions control Max and shape him to be the person that he is more than anything else.

The other unique thing about Max this time around is that he isn't even the protagonist. Charlize Theron's Furiosa is the star of the film, as Fury Road is entirely her story. Max is simply along for the ride in a film about Furiosa's plight to save a group of women who want to be free from Immortan Joe's clutches. Furiosa is a fantastic character who chooses to break from her leader's wishes in order to save a group of girls from a life of imprisonment. Much of her past is left mysterious too, as we never come to learn what she was before she was an Imperator or how she lost her left arm.

An immortan villain for the modern age.

Much praise should also be heaped upon amazing supporting turns by Mad Max-alumni Hugh Keays Bryne as big baddie Immortan Joe and Nicholas Hoult's character Nux, a loveable and conflicted War Boy. It's fascinating to see Bryne, the villain of the very first Mad Max film, return as a new villain in the reboot. It's not odd unheard of within the franchise though, as Bruce Spence played two different characters in both The Road Warrior and Beyond Thunderdome. Immortan Joe is truly one of the most despicable villains in recent memory. I can't remember the last time that I watched an action film and actively anticipated the moment when the lead villain died. You know a villain is great when you simply hate their guts. Nicholas Hoult is especially great as a conflicted War Boy who learns to think for himself and join Max and Furiosa. Nux heavily reminded me of the Pig Killer, the loveable and equally scummy supporting character from Beyond Thunderdome who eventually joins Max. I also think that the romance between Nux and one of Joe's wives makes for one of the cutest and most believable romances in a blockbuster lately.

Fury Road finds Miller exploring familiar ground within the Mad Max franchise. We are once again introduced to a group of crazed people who worship and follow a cult-like leader. Immortan Joe and his War Boys are very similar to Toecutter and his gang from Mad Max, Lord Humungus and his Gay Boys from The Road Warrior, and Aunty Entity and the citizens of Bartertown from Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Miller is clearly interested in exploring how powerful leaders rule others through power and sometimes religion. The film also explores themes of redemption and feminism, something that the film has received much praise for from feminists. Whether you want to call it a feminist film or not, Fury Road shows great progressive stride in depicting females as equal ass kickers who save the male hero as much as he saves them.

Miller has truly out done himself with the action sequences this time around. Fury Road is a wonderful throw back to the old days when actual cars crashed into one another and filmmakers relied upon practical effects as much as possible. It'll be tough looking back on The Road Warrior now, as that film's action sequences may seem dated or tame in comparison to the insanity on display here. Every single one of Fury Road's action sequences are so good that they all equal The Road Warrior's infamous final tanker chase. It's clear that Miller based Fury Road off of The Road Warrior more than any other Mad Max film, as the film depicts the chase between Joe and Furiosa's War Rig. You could easily replace Joe and his War Boys with Lord Humungus and his Gay Boys and replace the War Rig with Max and the tanker and you'd have The Road Warrior more or less. However, what differentiates Fury Road from all previous Mad Max films is that its central conflict is constantly in motion. The entire film is based around one long chase between Furiosa and Joe. Therefore, the action rarely lets up and forces the viewer onto the edge of their seat for nearly the entire running time.

Cirque de Max

One could write about Mad Max: Fury Road for a long damn time. I didn't even touch upon the film's incredible art direction, exhilarating score by Junkie XL, and the unforgettable supporting characters like The Bullet Farmer or the crazy guitar guy who spews fire out of his guitar. However, I think that Fury Road is an action film that will be revisited until the end of time. It is an action film so insane, so emotional, and so jaw dropping, that it begs repeat viewings. I immediately wanted to watch it again as soon the credits began to roll. To be honest, I don't think any action film has ever affected me in that way before.

I'm sure I should probably hold out for multiple viewings and further analysis, but Fury Road is easily one of the best action films to grace the screen in the last 15 years. Rarely do we see such vehicular mayhem on a scale as grand and epic as this. Most film buffs would agree that Mad Max was a game changer in 1979 for post-apocalyptic cinema and The Road Warrior was a game changer in 1981 for action cinema in general as well as how sequels stack up to their predecessors. If those were Miller's first two game changers, than I would argue that Fury Road is his third. This film will be viewed as a game changer in how it rebooted a 30 year old franchise and brought back practical action filmmaking to the modern blockbuster. George Miller essentially drove a War Rig straight through the summer competition and put blockbusters like Furious 7 and Avengers: Age of Ultron to shame. I can almost guarantee that Fury Road will top my list as the greatest action film of 2015.

Rating: 10/10 - An overwhelming tense, beautiful, and emotional action masterpiece that revives Mad Max for the modern age and proves that George Miller is truly one of the greatest visual filmmakers of our time.

Franchise:
Mad Max (dir. George Miller, 1979)
Mad Max 2 [The Road Warrior] (dir. George Miller, 1981)
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (dir. George Miller and George Ogilvie, 1985)
Mad Max: Fury Road (dir. George Miller, 2015)

2 comments:

  1. I'm so pleased about the love this film is getting - I've seen it twice in theaters already. And I'm glad to have some context about the references to the original trilogy thanks to your review. I haven't seen them yet, but that will soon be rectified.

    But a common element of most of the reviews that I've read is that people find Tom Hardy wanting, but I for one was bowled over by his performance. Do you think people are finding it hard to separate Mel Gibson from the role? Maybe I'll have a different perspective once I see the original trilogy.

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  2. Yeah it's the only complaint or gripe I have found consistent with many opinions. It's not that Mel Gibson's portrayal is super iconic and difficult to separate, but he definitely conveyed a warmth and a kindness that Hardy doesn't convey as much. The only time you see a glimmer of kindness in Max is during two points where he smiles in reaction to what one of the wives did and what one of them says. Also Hardy literally grunts, which Mel never did. And his grunt-like choice words sound very similar to Bane too which makes it a little odd at times. I agree that he is still great and positively bad ass, but in comparison with Mel he is a much madder and more hard core Max. He's far more tortured about the death of his family too.

    But yeah, I'm happy to see that you loved it too! And yeah, can't wait to see what you think of original films!

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