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Category: Mad Max Fury Road

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  • We’re never going to see a movie like Mad Max: Fury Road again

    The second people got their hands on it, Mad Max: Fury Road felt special. The movie, which came 30 years after the last installment in this franchise, felt like a miracle. Set almost entirely in the desert, its sheer scale and intensity were so marvelous that, even though it’s a deeply weird movie, the 2016 Oscars simply couldn’t resist nominating it for many awards.

    10 years later, Fury Road‘s stature has only grown. Even though we got Furiosa, which I’d argue is every bit as good as Fury Road, Miller’s first return to Mad Max since Beyond Thunderdome is undeniably the one with the bigger cultural imprint. It’s a movie we’re not likely to ever see again, not just because of its greatness, but because no one else will be dumb enough to try.

    Fury Road could have been a disaster

    Part of the reason Fury Road feels like such an overwhelming success is because you get the sense, even just watching the movie, that the whole thing could so easily have gone sideways. The movie is set almost entirely outside, and by her own admission, one of its stars didn’t fully understand what they were doing.

    Charlize Theron said that she was “incredibly scared” while shooting the film because she had never worked on a project like it and “didn’t always understand the narrative that we were telling.”

    An entire book was written about the making of Fury Road. The movie could have gone off the rails in so many different places. Instead, it feels like a singular, kinetic achievement because of the person behind the camera and his approach to the material.

    Fury Road is action filmmaking in its purest form

    Perhaps the greatest compliment you can pay to director George Miller is that you can watch Fury Road with the sound off and the movie still totally works. Fury Road is kinetic cinema at its finest, a movie where characters’ actions are explained almost entirely by how they move and where the point of almost every second of screen time is to see where characters are headed next.

    It’s been pointed out that Fury Road is essentially a two-hour chase scene. The irony is the main characters decide to turn around a little over an hour in and just head back to where they came from.

    The pointlessness of all that plotting could kill a movie with less visual flair than this one has. Instead, the movie manages to pack a punch not in spite of the circles it sends its characters in, but because of the combination of movement and stasis. These are characters trying to find a better life who realize that they’ll have to build one for themselves.

    Director George Miller is working at the peak of his powers here, and he was given the resources to make what seems to be almost exactly the movie he wanted to make. Furiosa, for all of its brilliance, is slower and more operatic than Fury Road. This is the kind of action cinema we rarely get on this scale, and it rips from the second it starts.

    It’s got a generational performance at its center

    Fury Road is brilliant enough, but the most remarkable thing about the movie might be that it manages to center its main character’s emotional journey through all the chaos that surrounds her. Theron’s Imperator Furiosa is such an indelible character that Miller felt the need to make an entire prequel about her.

    Much of that is thanks to Theron’s performance. As Furiosa, she’s fierce, vengeful, and protective, a pseudo-mother to the wives that she rescues from imprisonment. The film’s most important moment belongs to her and her alone, as she collapses onto a once green desert, realizing that her entire plan is hopeless.

    It’s telling, too, that Furiosa so gracefully takes the mantle from Max and that the movie seems designed to facilitate that transition. The moment when Furiosa nails a shot that Max can’t make, using him to steady her rifle, is brilliant and subtle, and one that both Theron and Tom Hardy sell completely.

    Fury Road was a risk, and one that wouldn’t get taken today

    Fury Road rules because it doesn’t feel safe. It’s the kind of movie that can only be a home run or a disaster. Thankfully, it was the former. The modern blockbuster is defined in part by the desire to ensure that it will make enough money.

    That means, in part, sanding all the edges off of every movie until all that’s left is the parts that everyone can agree they like. Fury Road has imagery in it that could easily alienate, and that imagery likely did bother at least some people. For all of its success, Fury Road did not gross $1 billion, but it was a success nonetheless because it achieved a kind of word-of-mouth status that is still rare in Hollywood.

    Few filmmakers ever get the chance to make exactly what they want on this scale, and even when they do, it’s not something as daring and impressive as Fury Road. We should celebrate this movie’s existence every chance we get. It’s one of the great cinematic experiences any of us will ever get, and it seems unlikely we’ll get another anytime soon.

    Buy or rent Mad Max: Fury Road on Amazon or Apple.

  • 10 films that deserve an Oscar for Best Stunt Design

    The Academy Awards have made a huge step forward with the announcement that it will finally feature a category for Best Stunt Design. According to Variety, this award will be given out starting with the movies released in 2027 competing in the 2028 Oscars. However, one can’t help but wonder which films could’ve received a golden statue for their stunt work had it been available decades prior.

    Countless movies feature breathtaking stunts that were executed thanks to hard work, planning, and risk during production. Some of the performers even lost their lives trying to pull off stunts for films. It’s a shame stunt teams never won Oscars for their work sooner. But to commemorate the Oscars finally adding a category for them, here’s a look back at the top films that deserved to win the Academy Award for Best Stunt Design.

    The Fall Guy (2024)

    Since The Fall Guy shows a stunt performer becoming a real-life action hero, director David Leitch and his team clearly did everything they could to make Ryan Gosling’s protagonist shine. The film thus went all out with its daring and stylish practical stunts, with Gosling’s character performing such mind-blowing falls, car chases, and fight scenes with more than their fair share of explosions. All in all, The Fall Guy showed audiences why stunt performers are the unsung heroes of movie productions, with the new Oscar category giving them more of the recognition they deserve.

    Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

    Terminator 2: Judgment Day is famous for delivering explosive, high-concept stunts that left the original film in the dust. Such memorable scenes include the T-1000 chasing John Connor in a trench with a big rig truck and under a highway in a helicopter. Though Terminator 2 featured revolutionary VFX for its time with its shapeshifting villain, director James Cameron went all-out with the practical effects to create such realistic and heart-pounding sequences that hold up even today.

    Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)

    George Miller’s magnum opus revolutionized action movies in 2015 with its bevy of practical stunts. Since it is essentially a two-hour-long chase across the Wasteland, Mad Max: Fury Road hardly slows down as Max, Furiosa, and their allies take on dozens of marauders in classic cars, monster trucks, BMX bikes, and big rigs. Much of the film’s action takes place on real, moving vehicles, with actual collisions and explosions occurring on-screen. Released at a time when blockbusters overloaded on CGI, this ambitious and meticulously bombastic blockbuster set a new standard for practical stunts and visuals.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

    With its many creative and thrilling action scenes, Raiders of the Lost Ark set off one of the most popular movie franchises ever. Audiences fell in love with Indiana Jones as he embarked on a globe-trotting adventure, which saw him fighting Nazis, riding horses, climbing onto moving cars, and swinging over gaps with his trusty whip. However, the most remarkable scene of them all showed Indy running away from a giant boulder, hooking viewers in the film’s first few minutes.

    Ben-Hur (1959)

    Though Ben-Hur isn’t a traditional action film, one of the most iconic stunts in cinema history came in the form of the protagonist’s thrilling chariot race against Messala in 1959’s Ben-Hur. Filmed in an age without CGI, this 15-minute race still keeps viewers on the edge of their seats as contestants are thrust into the air or trampled by their own steeds. Such a spectacular sequence has been replicated in several films in the decades since its release, singlehandedly cementing Ben-Hur as an eternal classic.

    Police Story (1985)

    Jackie Chan became famous for doing his own stunts in his films, many of which deserve awards for his gymnastic achievements. Arguably, the actor’s most impressive work in this field can be found in Police Story, which he also co-wrote and directed. Along with presenting some incredible kung fu fighting, Chan famously slid down a pole covered with shining string lights down several stories without any wires or even a safety net. Film School Rejects claimed he walked away from this stunt with second-degree burns, as the string light bulbs had unintentionally heated the pole. At another point in the film, Chan also climbed onto a moving bus with just an umbrella in this film in a scene reminiscent of Buster Keaton, encapsulating the timelessness of the former’s practical stunt work.

    John Wick: Chapter 4 (2023)

    As the apex of the Baba Yaga’s ultraviolent odyssey, John Wick: Chapter 4 presents many of the best stunts in a franchise already renowned for its stunning action scenes. As usual, John Wick presents his trademark brand of gun-fu as he takes down hordes of armed assassins. On top of that, the film features memorable scenes of Wick taking down a maze full of mercenaries with a fire-breathing shotgun and rolling down several flights of stairs. Whether or not this movie ends up being Wick’s final adventure, all these stunts ensured that he went out on a high note.

    Mission: Impossible – Fallout (2018)

    The Mission: Impossible franchise is chock full of scenes featuring Tom Cruise performing death-defying stunts, and they have grown more outrageous over time. However, these stunts all came to a head in Mission: Impossible – Fallout. This spy blockbuster showed Cruise hanging from a helicopter, jumping across rooftops, and getting beat up in a bathroom. Cruise even performs a HALO jump in one of the most mind-blowing continuous shots ever made, showing that no cinematic stunt was impossible in this franchise.

    The Dark Knight Rises (2012)

    Director Christopher Nolan is famous for shooting his blockbusters practically, and the Dark Knight Trilogy is a prime example of this. In particular, The Dark Knight Rises wrapped up Batman’s saga with the franchise’s biggest stunts. The film’s first scene showed Bane dropping a plane out of the sky, much of which showed real stunt performers going from one plane to the other in midair. The movie also delivers plenty of excitement with sprawling chase scenes through the streets and skies of Gotham City, making The Dark Knight Rises a thrill ride all the way through.

    The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)

    One can’t talk about cinematic stunts without bringing up James Bond. Agent 007 has been responsible for many incredible feats as an action star in movies. But in the 60+ years he’s appeared on film, his most remarkable stunts were featured in Roger Moore’s The Spy Who Loved Me. The film opens with an unforgettable ski chase down the Austrian slopes, with his parachute ride off the mountain pulling the audience into the rest of the film. With explosive showdowns and high-speed car chases galore, this whole film delivered stunts that were simply extraordinary.

  • Michael Fassbender recalls ‘awful’ Mad Max: Fury Road audition

    Michael Fassbender had his eyes set on entering the Wasteland in Mad Max: Fury Road. However, that never happened.

    Fassbender recently spoke about his Fury Road tryout on the Happy Sad Confused podcast, calling it one of his “worst” auditions.

    “Oh my God. It was awful,” Fassbender said.

    The Oscar nominee explained how the audition started poorly even before entering the room due to getting lost on the way to the Warner Bros. lot.

    “I was going to Warner Bros. in the Valley, not complicated,” Fassbender explained. “I got lost, and I ended up getting to the audition almost an hour late. I was not in the correct headspace.”

    Upon arriving late, Fassbender met George Miller’s acting coach, who immediately worsened the situation.

    “It was so excruciating,” Fassbender said when describing the acting coach. “I’ve been classically trained, so I have my process of, obviously, there’s an objective that the character has and activities that I’m gonna play to get it. So I felt like you’re teaching granny how to suck eggs here. This guy really got on my nerves.”

    Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron as Max and Furiosa in Mad Max: Fury Road.
    Warner Bros.

    Fassbender hilariously explained how the coach wanted him to “physicalize” his performance after reciting a phrase. This only added insult to injury, as Fassbender could not convey the coach’s instructions.

    “I couldn’t wait to get out of there. Obviously, I didn’t get the part,” Fassbender jokingly admitted. “Tom Hardy got the part, and deservedly so.”

    As Fassbender stated, Hardy went on to play “Mad Max” Rockatansky in Fury Road, one of the most critically acclaimed action movies of the 21st century.

    Perhaps Fassbender could get another crack at the Wasteland if Miller makes another Mad Max movie.