Blu-ray

Published on September 1st, 2015 | by Damien Straker

Mad Max Fury Road Blu-ray Review

Mad Max Fury Road Blu-ray Review Damien Straker
Feature
Video
Audio
Special Feature

Summary: Max Max Fury Road is all technique but sometimes you want more or in this case, maybe less.

3.8

Crazy


George Miller didn’t invent the post-apocalyptic subgenre. He refurnished it with the 1979 Mad Max, a low-budget piece of Australian exploitation cinema. Two sequels followed, The Road Warrior and Beyond Thunder Dome, given the success and popularity of these films in Hollywood. Yet in cinema the apocalyptic genre predates Miller, tracing back as far the 1950s, if not earlier. One of the most famous examples of the post-apocalyptic genre would be Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957), which is about a knight who returns from the Crusades and faced a plague riddled medieval village. Similarly, the Japanese wastelands in Akira Kurosawa’s samurai epic Throne of Blood (1957) visualise a dust laden, smoky aesthetic, which is fitting for a film made after the nuclear warfare of the Second World War. These are apocalyptic movies, Biblical in scale and tone, and along with the Western genre they undoubtedly influenced the Mad Max series. The character of Max was originally played by Mel Gibson, who himself has made numerous films about righteous vengeance. Set in a future Australian wasteland of scarce oil resources and rickety land vehicles, Max was a cop out for revenge against the men who murdered his family. He’s been compared to knights, samurai, cowboys and Ronins as he travels the wasteland for work and defending villages.

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It has taken an age for a new Max film to be developed, thirty years exactly, in which time Miller has delved with vastly different genres including children’s films like Babe: Pig in the City and Happy Feet. The delays for another Max are due to both politics and personnel. Miller envisioned making a new film back in 1998 and was set to shoot the film in 2001 but the September 11 terrorist attacks and the War in Iraq canned the project. A new Max would also have to be found once Mel Gibson was deemed untouchable by most studios. Health Ledger was to replace him until he died. Tom Hardy (The Dark Knight Rises and Locke) is the new Max, a role which tests his physical abilities but not his acting range. Hardy is an extremely diverse actor, shifting between action roles of raw physical power and independent character pieces. Last year he soared in Locke, utilising almost nothing but dialogue, and proving the power of his voice against the physical limitations of a moving a car. His version of Max is a troubled brawler, who says little even once he doesn’t have a mask on his face, and is plagued by visions of his dead daughter (who has a clear Australian accent). But Hardy isn’t served by interesting dialogue or personality, which puts the breaks on how much character or depth this star can employ.

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In an unusual but welcome move for a blockbuster, the female characters here, both young and old, are constantly active and more dominant than the male star. Max’s role in this episode is helping the Five Wives escape from Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne), an overlord who had imprisoned them for the sole purpose of breeding. The Five Wives are hidden away in a War Rig truck driven by the powerful and gritty Imperator Furiosa. This one-armed warrior is played by Charlize Theron in an unapologetically gritty and resilient role, fierce enough to lead the film on her own. The group are pursued in the desert through a convoy and eventual collision of vehicles belonging to Joe and his army of cultists. One cultist is a young suicide soldier named Nux (Nicholas Hoult), who later becomes an ally of Max.

Pleasingly, the film is free from verbal exposition, particularly the opening scenes, where the images and the camera alone dramatise the tyranny, like the control of the water supply over the peasants. But it’s far easier to tell a film through images when the entirety of the film is action and chase scenes, which leads to George Miller’s filmic style: a clash of microscopic details and adolescence. There are incredible visual effects, using mostly practical stunts instead of CGI, and Miller’s eye for tiny details in the costumes, vehicles and general feel of the world is admirable. But it’s also visually and audibly an over-pumped movie that blares continuously at you like an unstoppable fireball. Truthfully, some set pieces are genuinely exciting like when the group must use a sniper rifle to fend off crazed bikers jumping high into the air.

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Final Thoughts?

Some have taken the time to state that the film is a masterpiece or meaningful. At most we can suggest the film is trying to be Biblical because it is about the raging fires of an apocalyptic nightmare. It could also be interpreted as a metaphor for the end of tyranny as we’ve seen in the Iraq War given the way a dictator is overthrown and the liberation of females. The action is praiseworthy but this isn’t a new benchmark for cinema. Miller is meticulously redecorating and redressing the already existing action and apocalyptic genre or formula with his own spin or vision. A lot of imagination is on display but he’s also confined by the limitations of the action genre. The villains will get their comeuppance, henchmen will die and the heroes will survive. Fury Road is all technique but sometimes you want more or in this case, maybe less.

Special Features:

  • Maximum Fury: Filming Fury Road Documentary
  • Mad Max: Fury on Four Wheels Documentary
  • The Road Warriors: Max and Furiosa Featurette
  • The Tools of the Wasteland Featurette
  • Fury Road: Crash & Smash Featurette
  • Deleted Scenes

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Blu-ray Details

Director – George Miller
Actors – Tom Hardy/Charlize Theron/Nicholas Hoult/Zoë Kravitz/Rosie Huntington-Whiteley/Hugh Keays-Byrne/Josh Helman/Nathan Jones/Angus Sampson
Film Genre – Action
Label – Roadshow
Audio – English (Dobly ATMOS TrueHD 7.1.4)
Subtitles – English
Running Time – 120
Aspect Ratio – 2.40:1
Region Coding – B (Blu-Ray)
TV Standard – PAL
Rating – MA15+
Year of Release – 2015
Primary Format – Movies/TV – Blu-Ray


About the Author

damien@impulsegamer.com'

is a freelance writer and film critic. He studied at the University of Sydney and graduated with an Arts Honours degree in Film Studies. He is a pop culture aficionado and enjoys talking about all films, 90s TV shows, ninjas and watching Rugby League. His favourite film directors are Alfonso Cuarón, Clint Eastwood and Alexander Payne.



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