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Ten reasons why ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ is the best blockbuster of 2015

Strap in for summer 2015’s wildest, weirdest and, yes, maddest big-screen thrill ride

Tom Huddleston
Written by
Tom Huddleston
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We never thought that George Miller’s thunderous reboot of his original ‘Mad Max’ trilogy could match those eye-frazzling trailers. How very, very wrong we were. A blistering blast of post-apocalyptic insanity starring Tom Hardy as the new-look Road Warrior, ‘Mad Max: Fury Road has set this year’s blockbuster-reboot bar so high we’ll be amazed if even the new ‘Star Wars’ can vault over it. Here are ten reasons why it just might be the most fun you’ll have in a cinema seat this year.

The cars

1. The cars

It’s not a ‘Mad Max’ movie without rusting hulks of screeching metal pounding down a desert highway, a mutant nutcase grinning behind the wheel. ‘Fury Road’ packs in more horse power than the first three films put together, with no less than four rolling armies of radioactive nutters on the trail of our taciturn hero (Tom Hardy) as he hurtles headlong in a spiked black ‘war rig’ (think a Mack Truck with more firepower). Pedal-to-the-metal action was never more ferocious.
Charlize Theron as Furiosa

2. Charlize Theron as Furiosa

As in the earlier movies, Max doesn’t have an awful lot to say for himself. Which happily leaves the driver’s side door wide open for Charlize Theron, who takes on the star-of-the-show mantle with aplomb. As the traitorous Furiosa, who rebels against her mutant overlords to save a truck-load of innocent concubines, she displays Sigourney Weaver-like levels of grit, determination and sheer bloody-minded intensity.
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The eye-melting cinematography
Image: Warner Bros.

3. The eye-melting cinematography

We expected action. We expected noise. We expected brutality. We didn’t expect quite so much beauty. In the hands of director George Miller and legendary Australian cinematographer John Seale (‘The Mosquito Coast’, ‘The English Patient’), ‘Fury Road’ is both gritty and gorgeous, the action scenes simultaneously pin-sharp and insanely fast-paced. Imagine being beaten over the head with a rolled-up Hieronymus Bosch masterpiece for two hours.
The cars

4. The cars

Hang on, didn’t we do this already? Yes, but it’s worth saying twice. The cars are incredible. We can only imagine how many junkyards Miller and his team must have trawled through to source the hundreds of classic junkers used in the film. Or how long it took the production designers to slice each one of them to bits and re-solder them in a dizzying variety of weird and disturbing shapes. Movie-buff viewers will note a number of automotive in-jokes, notably these spiked beetles, a throwback to Peter Weir’s glorious 1974 Aussie weirdie ‘The Cars That Ate Paris’.
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The CG special effects

5. The CG special effects

Yes, ‘Fury Road’ is largely built around practical special effects: stunts, pile-ups and dust-flying skids. But in the modern filmmaking landscape you can’t avoid computer effects altogether, and George Miller’s film is a masterclass in how to use them cleverly – just check out Charlize's totally convincing missing arm, above. Oh, and the two-headed chameleon in the opening moments is a bit of a scene-stealer, too.
The painstaking detail

6. The painstaking detail

What is it about Antipodean filmmakers and their obsession with nuts-and-bolts detail? Just as Peter Jackson crammed his ‘Lord of the Rings’ movies with hand-forged swords and immaculately crafted costumes, so Miller makes sure that every single prop you see on screen in ‘Fury Road’ – the clothes, the boots, the oilcans, the tattoos, the weapons, even a memorable stack of electric guitar amplifiers – feels solid and functional, a believable relic of a bygone world.
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The cars

7. The cars

Oh, okay. Here we go again. But we really can’t let it go. These cars are nuts. Just look at the detail in Furiosa’s war rig (pictured above). Look at the dust in the cracks, the pumping pistons and the whirring fan belts. That goes for every one of the hundreds of vehicles employed in the movie, from the tiniest dune buggy and desert bike to the vast caterpillar-track behemoth driven by psychotic oil-king The People Eater. And when they smash, they really smash. So if you see the film in 3D, expect to spend half your time ducking from shards of flying shrapnel.
The mutant villains

8. The mutant villains

Just the names of these leather-clad radioactive freaks are enough to make us very happy indeed. The People Eater. The Bullet Farmer. Rictus Erectus. Corpus Colossus. And above them all, Immortan Joe, the unholy emperor of this wild frontier. With his flowing white locks, pustulating skin-sores and transparent body armour, he looks like the ghastly love-child of Peter Stringfellow and Baron Harkonnen from ‘Dune’ on a night out at the local extreme fetish club. Not someone you’d mess with, anyway…
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The spectacular landscapes

9. The spectacular landscapes

Given that it is stunning, desolate and (we assume) pretty cheap, it’s a wonder more movies aren’t shot in the southern African nation of Namibia. ‘Fury Road’ is the best we can remember since Richard Stanley’s similarly bleak and beautiful ‘Dust Devil’ back in 1992. Here, the country’s endless deserts are transformed into an unholy but somehow gorgeous post-apocalyptic wasteland crammed with mutant mountain-cities, shimmering oil refineries and festering, unquiet swamps.
The cars

10. The cars

You knew it was coming. But we went there anyway. We really can’t get over how awesome these cars are. Whether they’re speeding up alongside a truck so that white-painted mutants can go leapfrogging from one to the other, rolling and shattering in the desert dust or exploding into hundreds of oil-stained splinters, the sheer volume and originality of the machines on offer make this a petrolhead’s paradise. In fact, in the film’s precious few quiet moments, it might almost be possible to hear Jeremy Clarkson weeping tears of sweet joy. Immortan Jez, anyone?

Read our ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ review

Mad Max: Fury Road
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Film
  • Action and adventure

In an age of weightless movie spectacles, here’s a movie that feels like it was made by kidnapping $150 million of studio money, fleeing with it to the Namibian desert, and sending footage back to Hollywood like the amputated body parts of a ransomed hostage.

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