Review of "Mad Max Fury Road," DVD version
Review of
Mad Max Fury Road,
DVD version
Four out of five stars
Nonstop action overwhelms
The three Mad
Max movies starring Mel Gibson broke new ground in the post apocalypse genre.
There was some form of catastrophic event where civilization fell apart over a
very short time. There was always the underlying premise that there was a
nuclear war and most of the survivors were in very arid lands. This movie
applies the same premise, and the male hero is once again named Max. Although
we do not learn that until the end.
There is a
massive grouping of humans that are subjugated by a small band of ruthless men
that have the total obedience to the death of their war gangs. When Max
encounters that group, he is captured, enslaved and turned into a living blood
bank. Max is played by Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron plays Imperator Furiosa,
the leader of a small group of women fleeing across the wasteland in a makeshift
vehicle that has both gas and water tankers.
A road war that
dwarfs those of the previous iterations of the series takes place. There are
many vehicles in pursuit, including a man playing a very heavy metal guitar.
Some of the pursuing vehicles have large poles with men on the top that can be
swayed so the men land on the tanker. The action is essentially nonstop and intense,
yet the fundamental plot device of an understandable goal is lacking. It is
hard to determine what the massing group of humans really is and how it is
controlled.
At the end,
there is the hint of the rekindling of civilization, but the mechanism that it
will be implemented is fuzzy and ill-defined. If you are a fan of the road
warrior style action, then you will love this movie. However, if you prefer
that your post-apocalyptic stories have a basic plot towards the rebirth of
civilization in an understandable manner, then you will be disappointed.
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