A rock and roll opera on screen

Director George Miller on bringing back the ‘Mad Max’ franchise after 20 years


Reuters May 14, 2015
Charlize Theron has shaved her head to play the imperator Furiosa. PHOTOS: FILE

LOS ANGELES: When director George Miller returned to his dystopian Mad Max franchise after 30 years for Fury Road, he wanted to find a visceral way to immerse the audience in his surreal, saturated post-apocalyptic world.“It felt like going back to something we had done in the past,” said Miller. “I wanted to make a movie almost like visual rock-and-roll or opera that just sweeps you up into the screen.”

The 70-year-old director also wanted to put a powerful woman on the Mad Max map, with Charlize Theron as Imperator Furiosa. Mad Max: Fury Road, out in US theatres on Friday, follows Furiosa on a mission to rescue a group of beautiful women imprisoned by warlord Immortan Joe.



Lone warrior Max Rockatansky, played by Tom Hardy, is captured by Immortan Joe’s War Boys and finds himself thrown into Furiosa’s plan. Furiosa provides the biggest progression in Miller’s world: a hardened female counterpart to Max in a society that reduces women to being ‘breeders’ to the warlord.“I don’t think a lot of filmmakers really truly have an interest to want to understand what women represent not only in the post apocalyptic world, but the world today,” said Theron, who shaved her hair off to play the warrior.

The director said Fury Road is “uniquely familiar” to his first Mad Max film trilogy, released between 1979 and 1985. Those movies, which starred Mel Gibson, were also set in a world fueled by fire, rage and war. The new film plays out mostly through a constantly moving car chase across the Australian wastelands. Advances in movie-making technology allow Miller to place cameras in positions that give viewers an adrenaline rush by immersing them in the action.



Time Warner Inc-owned Warner Bros’ Mad Max has already won praise from critics, with a 98 per cent rating on review aggregator RottenTomatoes.com. It is poised for a $40-million US opening, according to box-office monitor Rentrak’s senior media analyst, Paul Dergarabedian.Hardy said he did not try to fill Gibson’s Mad Max shoes. Instead, he sought to further Miller’s vision of the tormented Max, who spends half the film muzzled by his captors and is haunted throughout by visions of his dead family. “This is George’s world and he’s pushing the boundaries and endeavoring to grow it and develop more the world of the post apocalyptic landscape that it’s set in,” he said.


Previous Mad Max films include


Mad Max-1979 (1985)

Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior- (1981)

Mad Max beyond Thunderdome-  (1985)

Published in The Express Tribune, May 15th,  2015.

Like Life & Style on Facebook, follow @ETLifeandStyle on Twitter for the latest in fashion, gossip and entertainment.a

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ