by lhb412 » Wed May 27, 2015 10:41 pm
Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome
This one is pretty divisive, huh? I thought it was good, I mean, it was a lot of fun. Nowhere near a masterpiece like Road Warrior and Fury Road, but very entertaining on it's own. You can see the seeds of George Miller becoming a maker of family films what with the child characters, animals (Babe?), and gentle whimsy. What's very interesting is how when viewed as a whole the series sees a primary creator exploring a few themes over and over, as well as developing a style.
- Mad Max is a zero budget, nihilistic action movie.
- The Road Warrior is an epic action masterpiece (what a difference two years and a bigger budget makes!) and more emotionally intelligent than it's predecessor.
- Beyond Thunderdome is a more concerned with worldbuilding, mythology, and has a hard edge softened by that aforementioned gentle whimsy.
- Fury Road takes all the lessons learned in making the three previous movies to go back to the hard edge, actioneer roots of the series, but with the worldbuiling and mythology we saw in Thunderdome and the wisdom of an older, less bloodthirsty artist - I mean, it's incredibly violent, but it's a film that always makes it clear why this violence is happening, what the cost of that violence is, ect. That's something missing in, like, 99% of action films.
The end result is a very satisfying franchise. I proclaim that it is both shiny and chrome.