The Big Picture - The 25 Best Movies of the Century: No. 9 - 'Mad Max: Fury Road’
Episode Date: October 14, 2025Sean and Amanda return to continue their yearlong project of listing the 25 best movies of the 21st century so far. Today, they discuss George Miller’s ‘Mad Max: Fury Road,’ one of the greatest ...action movies of all time. They explain why it almost feels like a silent film despite its incredibly loud sound, celebrate Charlize Theron’s phenomenal performance and highlight it as the signature performance of her career, and reflect on George Miller’s legacy at large. Hosts: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins Producer: Jack Sanders Unlock an extra $250 at linkedin.com/thebigpicture A State Farm agent can help you choose the coverage you need. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.® Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I'm Sean Fennacy.
And this is 25 for 25, a big picture special conversation show about Mad Max Fury Road.
Witness me!
Today we ride into Valhalla because we have selected Mad Max as number nine.
This, of course, is the 2015 action epic masterpiece.
Written and directed by George Miller,
co-written by Brendan McCarthy and Nico Lothoros,
starring Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, Nicholas Holt, Hugh Kierzburn,
Rosie Huntington Whiteley, Riley Keough, Zoe Kravitz, and many more.
Let's get right into this movie.
Why did we choose Mad Max Fury Road?
This is the action achievement of the century so far,
maybe of movies as they have been filmed.
You know, there's a very famous Stephen Soderberg quote about this movie that is, I don't understand how they're not still shooting that film and I don't understand how hundreds of people aren't dead.
But what this movie accomplishes in terms of doing the things that you see on screen and getting them on film and then editing them together and putting them in a movie is, I'd like understand.
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It is unprecedented.
This is the fourth Mad Max movie.
This film was conceived some 35 years before its production.
George Miller, famously a medical doctor before becoming a filmmaker, has had one of the most extraordinary career.
in movie history.
Mad Max is really the root and heart of his career.
And he had been away from this story for a very long time.
Conceived it in 78, this film.
He made three Mad Max films in roughly a 10-year period in Australia.
Made a star ride of Mel Gibson.
I think in some ways put Australia along with a handful of other filmmakers,
including maybe Peter Weir,
a handful of others who came to America to start making films
on the map
and
Beyond Thunderdome
from 1987
was the last time
we had seen
a Mad Max movie
and then
28 years go by
and there had been
rumors of this movie
for some time
if you were following it
and I like the Mad Max movies
I wouldn't say
that the Road Warrior
is like an all-time
classic for me
but I was looking forward to this
I vividly remember
seeing this movie
in movie theaters
I was not covering movies full-time professionally.
I went on the Friday it released in the afternoon
at the Vista Theater here in Los Angeles.
Oh, fun.
I went by myself.
I don't even really know why I went by myself,
but I remember being there by myself.
And I thought I was a little bit late,
but there were some trailers.
I walked in, and I'd rarely eat popcorn at the movies,
and I got popcorn, and I got a giant soda.
And within the first 12 seconds,
I felt like I had gotten a syringe full of adrenaline in my neck.
Like, I, this is one of the most vivid movie-going experiences I have ever had in my life.
And it's weird because, like, everybody knows George Miller's a genius, right?
He's roundly celebrated.
Med Max's iconic film franchise.
I guess there were some questions because there were some conversation about the challenges of that production that the Soderberg quote alludes to.
You know, there's a, there's an incredible Kyle Buchanan book about the making of this movie, Blood Sweat and
Chrome. You can read all the details about how difficult it was to accomplish this.
And I'm sure I knew some of that stuff. But this felt like a new form of movie. Like, I don't
remember a movie feeling quite like this. And I think we use that canard about talking about like,
oh, the first time I saw Pulp Fiction. I didn't know you could do storytelling this way.
This is actually like how the film felt to my body felt different. It felt so alive and tense.
and in your face
not a 3D movie
but it felt like it was happening
and so when I look back at the movie
and I think about it
I think we should be trying to capture that
in this list you know
like some things take time
to develop cults or fandoms
this was one that the moment I saw it
I was knocked out
yeah I had a different relationship to it
and I'm trying to I don't know
if I've seen this movie in theaters
which is something I'm embarrassed to say
but is just kind of how it shook out
because I guess I had seen a Mad Max film
but I don't know you know
I wasn't like rare and like oh yes
and now we'll find out you know what's happening
in the desert
like in general deserts like eh
I can take it I can leave it
and this maybe I did see it in theaters
because it had such an awards season tale
and it was a pretty sizable hit as well
yeah but but I wasn't
I wasn't there on the Friday being like
yeah, I got to connect with this.
Like, this is the latest installment and a very exciting thing.
And I think when I finally did see it, I mean, I felt viscerally all of the things that you felt.
It is, it is loud, it is propulsive, it is disorienting, it is, like, broad and vibrant.
I felt and still feel kind of like I'm watching, like, maybe not a new,
art form, but like fine art, essentially. And there's a little bit of like almost a silent film
quality to it, which is funny to say about a movie that is as loud as, and uses sound and specifically
an electric guitar as beautifully as this does. But I was like, oh, I see like action is an entirely
different type of art form to you than making a movie. And you're doing something. It's almost like
sculpting in real time here. And it is like amazing.
and a breathtaking and, like, a little perplexing to watch at times the way that, like, really good art kind of grabs you and is like, wait, what am I looking at here? And how are you doing this? And you've, and is this really happening. So I continue to be fascinated by, by this movie in particular. And Furiosa to like a lesser extent. But when that movie is really working, it's because what he's doing with set pieces is, like,
is, like, museum quality.
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Last night, I had a little experiment.
I rewatched the movie.
I've seen this movie many times.
I feel very comfortable with, you know, remembering sequences and lines and action.
But I watched it in the black and chrome edition, which is the black and white version of the film, which I know our producer Jack saw in theaters earlier this year and has become a little bit of a cult object onto itself.
And I thought I had seen it in that way and I had not.
and obviously it has been drained of that high contrast color that's in the movie
and the post work in this movie is kind of amazing.
So yes, he does get a lot of stuff practically on screen that is amazing, right?
There's a level of choreography in the action and a level of conception in the filmmaking
that is remarkable.
It's a huge part of it.
Right, and it's just like the scale, right?
there are just like hundreds of rigs.
Vehicles, yeah, people, they are flipping and they are exploding.
Yeah, like all of that stuff is happening.
But it is also a major act of post-production artistry that there is an enormous amount of
CGI in this film, that there is an incredible score from Junkie XL in this movie.
A lot of things that are not necessarily a part of the actual production of the movie.
And we praise that part of it because it just looks like it was so hard to do.
Right. And I'm fond of, like, praising that for movies.
Right. And we also praise it because we are at this point. And probably even in 2015,
we're accustomed to it not happening in real life anymore. Yeah. Right, right, right. And so we
become comfortable with CGI. Yeah. And we almost expect like, okay, they're going to do this big
extravaganza except it will all. Not if it'll be real. Yeah. And this is a case where, you know,
the things that would be real would be real would be.
a person wearing a green suit
that would be animated around them.
And there are aspects of this movie that have some of those
things. There is a plenty of CGI. There's a
insane sandstorm
sequence in the movie that is obviously
hugely benefits from
computer generated imagery.
It's just that in this film
it looks amazing. Like that
work is at such a high level because there's
so much time and painstaking detail
that goes into it. I think you and I fall
into the trap of very easily being like, oh
CGI, it's a purple smear. It doesn't
doesn't look like anything.
Well, there's no purple in this.
Like, honestly, the colors are very beautiful.
Yeah.
And I don't know if it is easier to work and to invent against this palette,
the sort of like orange, brown, yellow in the sand,
and then that allows the other colors in the film to kind of pop more discreetly.
But I think it is just an absolute fusion of all the things that make,
to your point about silent cinema, a kind of total cinema,
a pure cinema, which is something that we say and joke about.
But there is actually a version of it.
Like if you look at, you know, when you're in school and you study film, you study Eisenstein and you learn about technique.
You know, you study Murnau and you learn about Shadow.
You study Abel Gantz's, Napoleon, and you learn about scale.
And there's all these movies in the first 30 years of film that show you the different strategies that you can deploy to tell a certain kind of story.
And this movie does feel like one of those huge D.W. Griffith epics.
or, you know, or like Napoleon where it doesn't need the sound.
If you just had the subtitles, it is a movie about forward momentum,
this like continuous, endless, deathless strain of race.
And that's really it.
There are other ideas.
There are a lot of themes that are, that gird the movie.
But even there, dialogue is not used to express them or it is very sparingly.
And you could cut the dialogue and still understand what exactly is going on between every character.
And obviously there's that, there's that shot of Charlie's there.
And once she's learned that the Green Place is no more and, you know, and like goes out on her own for the, yeah.
And it's like, I mean, it's a ready made movie poster, but like you don't need to hear the scream to understand what's going on there.
She and Tom Hardy communicate pretty much through looking at each other.
There was a lot more acting done of someone's eyes behind a wheel, real or, you know, green-suited than there is of two people standing, like, in some room, like having a conversation.
And that's the other way that it is like silent cinema.
It's a movie. It's a movie. It's expressionistic in the way that it's shot. It's also expressionistic on their faces, you know?
Like Tom Hardy has maybe 30 lines of dialogue in this movie.
Right.
Charlie's Theron, maybe 40.
It's very sparse in terms of how much information is being communicated,
and yet you're kind of getting everything that you need.
I think that there is something about it, too, that is...
It's like the problem that it is reflecting,
which is this kind of ecological crisis,
and who controls natural resources, controls the world.
It just doesn't necessitate a lot of explanation.
It's not a particularly deep movie about those.
The explanation is there in the visuals and the production design and in the setting and in those heightened colors, but also the completely sparse scale of what you're seeing.
So again, it's what you see doing the work.
It's interesting too because like the amount of information that you're, the visual information that you're getting is high, is really high.
And part of it is because you've got this kind of sped up frame rate style where it feels like the movie is happening in a kind of hyper-reality, which I think.
I think we've heard a lot about frame rates, Peter Jackson, during the Hobbit films,
was trying to, you know, change the frames per second.
Ang Lee did this, I believe, in Gemini Man.
Oh, yeah, sure.
You know, there were a handful of examples of this that were, they were sort of purposefully shooting in a style that would communicate the information visually.
What were they doing?
Why?
Usually they were eating.
Right, but like, what did the, was it just so they could, what did the change enhanced frame rate do?
I think the idea was that it would immerse you more deeply in the world.
that the world would feel hyper real
in the same way that this does.
The difference is that,
at least in the Hobbit movies,
they're not pure action.
No.
You know, there's a lot of sitting around
talking about being a Hobbit and Hobbiton and all that.
They're very normal movies
that men go see together and enjoy.
What kind of foods do they eat?
We'll save it for when we get to the Hobbit on this countdown,
which is number six.
I
Gemini Man
it actually kind of made sense
what he was going for
because there was a movie
also about like doubles
and remember
there's like the
motorcycle sequence
I do remember
I mean I was trying
to remember
what was happening
at Gemini Man
and it was like
something about
a parking garage
and the motorcycle
and he jumps
you know that
yeah that's correct
and then he jumps
at some point I believe
they're
you know they filmed
I think a lot
in Atlanta as
as people do
so I think
at some point they go to the Georgia coast and I was like hey I recognize that so you know you summed up
Gemini man we don't need to do our episode about that film either um those were interesting like
attempts at changing the way that movies looked right you know and this is something that happens
obviously every 20 30 years there's a new iteration on how a movie looks first you got black and white
and silent then you got sound then you got color then you got cinemascope then you've got vista vision
then you've got 3d then you've got in theater you know physical experience
like William Castle movies.
Yeah.
You know, movies are kind of constantly evolving.
This is one where he used a very straightforward methodology
to just change how it felt watching a movie.
And when you combine that with that artistry
and craftsmanship that you were talking about,
it creates something that is Sue Jennerous.
Like there's not really a movie that feels like this movie.
We could talk about Furiosa and kind of the legacy of Furiosa,
very scandalous episode of our show where we said,
Furiosa pretty good.
Not my favorite movie of all time.
And what was the scandal that that was...
People were like, how dare you?
Because it's...
There's like a cult of Furiosa fandom.
Oh, yeah.
And then there's people who are not in that cult.
And you know what?
I think some of it is correlated to time of life.
Because if you saw Furiosa on the big screen,
but maybe you were too young to see Fury Road on the big screen,
and you look at the sort of war rig set piece with the bombs in Furiosa,
you might be like, that's one of the best things I've ever seen.
in a movie. Right. That is some of the most thrilling. And the difference is, and this is,
I think, useful in talking about these two movies, Furiosa is an action epic, not just in scope,
but in terms of duration. It's a film that takes place over a long period of time. Right.
This is a movie that takes place in a day. And it is micro. It's a mini epic. It's just a big
chase movie. And there's also not a lot of examples of that at this scale, too. That's something
that is like shrunk down, but also so big that I struggle to find comps.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
Yeah.
There is a simplicity to what is the most ornate, difficult film, like, ever, you know, put on film
that is, that really works in its favor and also, like, allows you to focus on exactly
what it is doing.
In Furiosa, you know, Chris Hemsworth is walking away with the half the movie.
competing narratives. There's, you know, as with any origin story, there's, it's, it's on a
couple different tracks. And this is on one very specific track that honestly, like, they just
like drive one way and then they just drive back the same way, quite literally. Yep.
And so you are, it's more immersive. You're just kind of, you are literally a long
for the ride. Sorry, I walked into it, but it was right there.
No, it's true. I mean, the other thing, too, is that Miller's sensibility, the world that he has created in the previous Mad Max films, is kind of a weird, like, little gross, kind of visceral, odd collection of characters with weird names and funny voices, and his comic timing is fairly unusual. And so, you know, all the interactions between Immorten Joe and his sons and his sort of generals and his army.
are all very odd.
You know, there is something that feels displaced from reality
in the storytelling.
For the most part, Imperator Furiosa is, I guess, a grounded character.
You know, her dialogue is not, like, extravagant.
She doesn't speechify, but she does have only one arm
and has a claw for a hand and is in constant state of battle.
Yeah.
And everyone's surrounding her, especially...
you know, all the warboys are, they're like an ancient tribe, but they're also slaves. They feel like
they're part of the history of like, you know, um, zombie movies from the 50s, but then they also feel
like they're, you know, cultists from the future. It's like a very strange collection. Right.
Of created people. But, but also we don't have to know anything about their lore, you know? Like,
It's not, and if you do, it's there on the surface.
It's in the costuming and the makeup and the production sign.
You get the one speech from a Morton Joe at the beginning of the movie that kind of
clarifies like, here's what's going on in this world right now, here's what this
apocalypse is, and then that's it.
You get signposts.
And I'm sure books have been written about this world and the lore of it all, but that's
like, right, but those are people projecting on to the text, you know?
You don't have to have any of that.
It is, um, they are symbols.
They are, they are things to be moved around and in service of this, this like visual play
that you're watching.
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When I was doing the series of conversations with Bill Hader about Barry on the Prestige TV podcast,
there was one episode that we were discussing where Barry was overlooking like a base camp of some kind.
And he asked me, do you know what I was ripping off there?
And I said, I don't.
He said, that's from the road warrior.
And then we did like a side-by-side, and it was, you know, shot for shot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Take.
And, you know, Bill is a huge cinephile, and he did that a lot in Barry.
He picked and chose a lot of different kind of visual inspirations.
And Miller is a very inspirational figure.
He makes a lot of images that filmmakers, especially action filmmakers, but not just action filmmakers, tend to pull from.
This is a movie where it would be hard to.
to do that because of the way that the film was made, you know, you could recapture that scene
where, you know, she falls to her knees or you could, you know, pay homage to the absolutely,
like, to me, breathtaking final moments of the movie.
Yeah, of course.
Which is like one of my favorite endings in movie history, just visually.
But there's so much that is difficult to accomplish in this movie, you know, the pole cat's swinging
and the war boys jumping off, the spikes.
And also so much of it is movement.
And it is, you know, and it's cutting so fast, which is the, you know, it's a feature, not a bug.
But so it's meant to communicate that everyone is just moving forward as fast as they can.
And so that, like, what you're talking about, like a shot is when we think about it in our minds, it's a stationary image, you know?
When we want to play compliment to someone's, some things visuals, we often say it's very painterly, you know, which is still.
And there is something, like the kineticism of these images are part of what makes them the images that they are.
So you can't recreate it unless you get everyone to move in that exact same way and then cut it in that exact same way.
That's a great point.
Charlize is an interesting component in this movie.
She is kind of used like a living painting in some ways.
You know, she has an imposing physique.
She's very strong.
She's very striking.
as you said she doesn't say a lot
at this point in her career though
she is representative of something right
she's like
one of if not the most powerful woman
in movies
right yeah
and
the timing for this makes a lot of sense
she's already won an academy award at this point
for her work in monster
she's used that to kind of elevate
out of the girl in movies
to being the center of the film
and she goes on this stretch of films
that are sort of like, some of which are
unglamorous, you know, she's in North Country
and in the Valley of Ella.
She does do some Hollywood movies
like Hancock, where she plays
a strong figure.
He's an angel in that?
No, he's a superhero.
Oh.
And she's also a superhero.
Oh, okay.
Just spoilers for the, you know,
2008 film Hancock.
And then the old guard, they're angels sort of?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
We're just making sure.
We're going to get to that.
I'm bringing that up for a reason.
No, I know.
I know.
But I just, you know, I was conflating my, like, what kind of superpowers have been assigned to Charlize?
Yeah.
I mean, in the run-up to this movie, though, she's in kind of a weird stretch.
She makes young adult a movie I really like, Jason Reitman's young adult.
Snow White and the Huntsman, Prometheus, a million ways to die in the West in Dark Places are the films that immediately precede this.
Okay.
Prometheus is great.
She's got a modest-sized role in that movie.
This movie hits, makes $380 million at the bottom.
box office, it's tremendously successful.
And then you're like, okay.
Here we go.
This is going to be one of the great film careers of all time.
And since that's been kind of weird.
And she's taking some risks that I really admire.
I mean, Atomic Blonde is after this, right?
Atomic blonde, which is a very fun movie.
But as also her leaning into now, I'm just going to like really kick people.
Yeah, I'm John Wick.
And this obviously set it up.
This set up the trajectory for her as a true action heroine.
But she also makes...
The Old Guard, and she starts appearing in the Fast and the Furious films, as Cypher, one of the key villains.
She makes Tully after this, right?
She does make Tully, another movie that I think is...
It's amazing until the end.
Right.
I'm more okay with the ending, but I realize mothers are not fond of the ending of that film.
It's really, really not okay.
Again, I think that she and Jason Reitman are very good together.
I think he gets something good out of her as a performer.
Longshot, we loved.
Yeah, no one else did, though.
Bombshell's okay.
Yeah.
that's pretty much it.
Old Guard 2, Fast X.
She's in one cameo and Dr. Strange
in the multiverse of madness
and we'll never be seen again
in a Marvel film probably.
She is going to be in the Odyssey.
Ah, yes.
As Circe.
Yeah.
And I think it's...
That's good.
It makes sense.
It is good casting.
I think this is an interesting
10-year period for her
where after this movie,
you could say
I don't know that there's ever been a woman at the movies
who can do what she does.
Right.
You know, Angelina Jolie has kind of like
has tipped in this direction at times
but she's really...
But has stepped back.
She's pulled back from this stuff heavily,
give or take the Eternals.
Like, she doesn't really make movies like this anymore.
And Charlize has kind of firmly stayed in this
with the occasional Reitman movie or Longshot.
Right.
And so I was bringing all this up
and I'm saying all this to say,
like, is this the iconic
Charlie's Theron movie.
I think so.
What else would you put in the...
Well, she won an Academy Award for Monster.
Yeah, but we all know that that's just
you make yourself, you know, ugly
in order to win an Oscar.
Well, she...
The Italian job?
Like, what else is in the running?
Yeah, she's very good in some...
You know, she's good in the yards,
and she's trying her best in The Devil's Advocate
with a woefully written part.
Yeah.
And she is iconic in two days in the valley
and 14-year-old me appreciated her.
work.
But yeah, I mean, I think this is pretty far and away her signature performance, her signature
character, her signature work.
Anya Taylor-Joy, that's another thing about that movie.
I think I had a lot to live up to.
I thought she's good and Furiosa, but this is a, she carved this character.
And conversely, Tom Hardy has the same job.
Tom Hardy has to represent what Mel Gibson did, which, as Van would say, why Mel.
Why?
Yeah, why?
Because Mel Gibson,
one of the great movie actors
of the 1990s,
1980s, 2000s even.
And his Max
is different
from Hardy's Max.
Hardy's Max is a bit strange.
You know, you can tell
that there was a lot
of clashing on this production.
You can see clearly
that maybe Hardy and
Charlies didn't get along
so great.
Right, that's the rumor.
You can see,
I mean,
they are all used
as interchangeable pieces
of the tableau.
And I would have
imagine if you're an actor, you're not, like, thrilled about that. I agree. I think that, yeah.
So that's, that's hard. And I, you know, Tom Hardy, as I know, has opinions about things. So
maybe he resisted it. He loves a weird voice. He does. His voice is very dubbed in this film,
which I do find a bit distracting. I do, I do as well. I mean, also knowing everything we know now
about his voices. Yes. If he would just do the Bain voice in this film, I would be okay with
that. He does have the mask on. A thing I like about, if this is Mel Gibson, then
Mel Gibson has taken up a lot more space
in this movie and I think
that the receding quality
of Max and of Tom Hardy's performance
whether purposeful or cut together
because that's what George Miller wanted
adds to that
the singular nature of the movie.
This is a movie about Furiosa.
And this is a movie about
and the women who are following her
but this is a movie about the women
And so...
And female power and femininity and so if Mel Gibson is there melling it up, you know,
it's, you have that imbalance a little bit, the way that you did with Chris Hensworth and Furiosa.
You're right. And it is an interesting choice for him to sort of know.
And I don't, I don't, you don't, we don't know specifically like how they landed in that place.
But it does feel like that, I don't know if restraint is the right word, but there's a quieter aspect.
Mel Gibson is a very center of the frame kind of performer.
right um i also just wanted to mention nicholas holt who has by contrast gone on to have a wonderful 10
years and one of the greatest cucks in the history of movies this is kind of cuck ground zero i would say
a hundred percent uh nux who is just a live wire who brings this movie to life really one in the
in the kind of rising action of the first half and i got to give a guy this handsome credit
for going this crazy yeah yeah being this weird this strange this
gross.
He does it again and again.
He does.
And then he just absolutely, you know, kills the press to a catwalk.
Yes.
He's very tall, as you know.
Yeah.
But, you know, he's, he's leaning into it.
He is leaning into it.
The movie's legacy.
Yeah.
Now, 10 Oscar nominations.
Right.
Six wins.
Mm-hmm.
No above the line wins.
Yeah.
Well, let's go back to 2015.
Okay.
2015 is the year of the Revenant
and the year of Spotlight
In the fall
Did you intentionally do a little Boston
Just there when you're like Spallite
I didn't I couldn't even attempt a Boston accent
That was entirely unintentional
Spotlight wins best picture
Yeah
Inor It wins best director
For the Revenant
Lubeski
That's their choice
Lubeski wins cinematography
Cheebo
But then the film wins
costume design editing
makeup production design
sound editing, sound mixing, and lost visual effects to Ex Machina, an interesting choice.
Those six wins are sort of like all the stuff you need to make a movie, you did a great job, except not best picture.
Yeah, exactly.
I think some of it is because the film is not an acting showcase.
And Spotlight is the ultimate acting showcase and the Revenant is the ultimate one guy turns his life over to a movie.
Right.
And where's a bear?
masculine thing that Leo did in that movie.
And 2015 is a funky year.
It's always going to be a funky year in this way.
There was a time that night watching the Oscars when all of the below-the-line categories are going to Mad Max Fury Road where you're like, oh, is this turning?
Like, is this happening?
Do we think this is happening?
And then the actors get to vote again, and so it doesn't happen.
And I do think that that's what happened.
I do think that the actors being the largest, you know, block of voters.
You know, this is a perfectly fine year.
The Big Short, Bridge of Spies, Brooklyn.
I was recently talking with somebody about this.
The other movie that I think operates in a similar fashion of this movie
that was nominated is The Martian.
The Martian and Mad Max were two huge crowd-pleasing kind of sci-fi adventure movies
that don't usually win Academy Awards,
but that when you look back on the year, you're like,
you know what I liked is The Martian?
Yeah, but one has Matt Damon just like charming some potatoes into existence.
And the other has people just, like, staring at each other.
You know, this is...
I mean, the Martian didn't win either.
That's true.
This movie is an incredible artistic achievement and can also be off-putting if you're not there wanting to sit and get your face rocked off by a bunch of cars driving around in the desert.
It is so laser-focused on what it is that I can't.
imagine people, you know, I do think sometimes, you know, I sit down and watch it and I'm
like, okay, well, if I'm looking for some sort of human connection, I'm not really, I'm getting
tiny glimpses of it from Nicholas Holt. Like, I'm getting Charlize. His character has an
arc. He has a proper arc. He becomes more human. You know, Mad Max has like all of the
flashbacks of his kids being like, you know, and he has an arc too of saying his name. But it is,
It is just a lot of going for it, gunning.
And so you can see how voters who are more interested in potatoes, like, maybe didn't connect with it.
And might have been mystified by, like, the Doof Warrior.
Yeah.
You know, that there are certain things in the movie that are just so strange.
Right.
And outsized and absurdist that, you know, another filmmaker in this movie reminds me of a little bit as Terry Gilliam, too.
or Terry Gilliam's movies feel like they're just off-kilter.
You know, the way that the dialogue is being read,
the way that the film looks and feels is just a little bit off.
And those movies often become hugely celebrated over time.
Totally.
The difference with this one is that it is a big action movie
that made almost $400 million.
Right, because in addition to it being like this Titanic achievement of craft
and like a singular commitment to an artistic vision,
it also like does feature like a bunch of cars,
going really fast and a dude rocking out on a guitar and then like very gnarly weapons being
jabbed in people and like random angles in the same way that you can watch it purely as like
a silent film masterpiece you can also just watch it like yeah you know for for two hours
straight so you know it's it's sort of amazing because i think the way george miller made it is
really, really
only according to what's in
his brain and not letting any
sort of crowd-pleasing audience,
whatever, and it doesn't have any of the hallmarks
of a like
a pop studio blockbuster
masterpiece, I guess, except for
violence and things
going really fast. But it
turns out that's all you need.
If done well.
If done well, sure. Yeah. I think
if those set pieces, if it gives
you that you've got to see this feeling,
Which this movie does.
Miller, we can talk about briefly about him
in terms of his legacy, too.
So the very early stages of his career,
the first three features he makes for Mad Max movies.
And then he goes on this interesting journey
through Hollywood.
He makes The Witches of Eastwick and Lorenzo's Oil.
Two somewhat more conventional kinds of movies.
You know, a literary adaptation with some fantasy elements
and then just a pure drama in Lorenzo's Oil.
And then he produces and writes Babe,
but doesn't direct it,
which becomes a phenomenon
an Oscar-nominated film
and then he chooses to direct
Babe Pig in the City
classic
then he directs
happy feet and happy feet too
so
from 1995 through 2015
he's made four children's movies
and that's it
right and four animated
movies
so
yeah babe
it's certainly a kind of animation
right exactly
but so you know
to then go into the mindset
of these like very practical effects
But even...
You can see him learning, though.
He's learning.
He's learning.
And he is also...
He's in the real world,
but is still thinking it in his head
as if it's animation, you know?
And so he's like,
oh, we'll just make it do like this,
except that involves 45 stuntmen,
you know, just going absolutely bananas.
You should read Cal Buchanan's book
just for all of the quotes from the stuntmen
who are awesome and who love George Miller.
Like, they are so dedicated.
And every single...
They go through the stunt.
They're just like,
I just thought it would be pretty cool to try it, you know?
It's funny you bring that up because the movie that I wanted to reference as
what this movie is standing in for is John Wick.
Yeah.
John Wick, none of the John Wick films have made our list here.
As listeners know, I worship the John Wick movies.
I think they're wonderful.
And I just watched on the plane home from New York,
Wick is Pain, which is a two-hour documentary about the making of the John Wick franchise.
One of the better making of documentaries I've ever seen,
these are mostly like fluffy studio-supported pieces.
But this is about, in part, the relationships between the two filmmakers who started the John Wick movies, Chad Stahelsky and David Leach, who made Atomic Blonde, and they directed the first film together.
And they were stuntmen.
And then they were stunt designers.
And then they were stunt coordinators.
And they were also ultimately second unit directors before taking on John Wick.
And that spirit that you're talking about from the stuntmen who turned themselves over to George Miller exists in those films.
And when you look at the best action films of the century,
most of them have that spirit,
have that spirit of people doing things that seem impossible.
The previous action film that we talked about on this list
was Mission Impossible Fallout.
Another franchise that is about the physical commitment
and the ingenious design that are both become married
to make amazing action films.
This film is also beyond just action.
It does have that kind of mythic, poetic storytelling aspect to it,
which the Mission Impossible Movement,
movies don't have that.
Yeah, and many of the other action films that don't, didn't make our list, do not have,
or they're about, you know, Batman is to save Gotham.
Yeah, modern mythology.
Or even, like, John Wick is so mythological that I don't really know what's going on.
And that was retrofitted.
The first film was barely.
And then the second film, they're basically like, how do we build this world out so that we can make five movies?
Which they did end up doing it pretty successfully, I would say.
But that's hard to do and hard to do well.
this movie has the grace of three previous installments in the film to lean on.
You know, the other two films he's made since Fierro, 3,000 years of longing,
which I did an episode with Joanna about when you were on leave,
a film I found utterly perplexing,
but that is deeply interested in that mythological storytelling that we're talking about,
this idea of thousands of years of history being compressed and fractured and retold.
Yeah.
And he's really into that.
This film ends with a quote from The History Man about the passage of time
and the way that, you know, who controls power in the passage of time.
And then Furios is his last film.
And I hope he makes another film.
He's 80 years old.
Yeah.
He is, there's no careers like him.
There's no one who's ever done anything quite like him.
There are a lot of filmmakers you could say, oh, he's a contemporary of Spielberg, right?
He's a contemporary of Coppola.
You know, these kind of like grand.
visionaries. But the way that he makes movies is just so outside of the traditional expectations
and systems that he's a one-of-one. That's, I mean, that to me, I think he is, he is an artiste
with a, with a capital A and an E at the end. Are there any other movies that you feel like we're,
we've placed this in for? I mean, you made a list here of all the great action movies. John Wick,
you mentioned, Edge of Tomorrow, the Bonds, Casino Royale for me.
Skyfall for me.
The Borns, Black Panther,
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,
anything Michael Bay for you,
RR, R, R, and then Top Gun Maverick,
and the Fast and Furious movies,
basically anything in the, like,
moving fast vehicle go category,
which this does achieve,
but does other things as well.
Recommend it if you like.
Obviously, any Mad Max movie applies,
I think,
uh,
I think the Warriors is a good one
in terms of the warring tribes
Apocalypse now.
Sure, which some of the stunt guys
in Calby Cannon's book do evoke.
I think in two ways probably too
in the struggle of the production,
but also in the attempt to make
something that lasts forever.
Yeah.
Which I really appreciate.
Sometimes it doesn't work out.
But you gotta keep trying.
But you gotta keep trying.
Dune.
You know, if you really like Dune or Dune Part 2,
either one.
Oh, I thought you meant.
O. G. Dune.
Well, that's, it's good question because Lynch's Dune is probably tonally closer to this movie in terms of the oddball sense of humor.
But the scale and action in the Villeneuve movie is very similar to this one.
Totally. Yeah. And desert.
Part of the, I think part of the reason why, I mean, there's no Denny Villeneuve on film on our list.
Spoiler, yeah.
That was a hard decision.
Was it, really? I mean, we had a lot of hard decisions, but I don't know.
about a rival.
We did,
which I love.
And,
and Sikario.
And I think we had a hard time coming.
We would have had a hard time coming to the middle ground.
What would have been our agreement?
It's a little hard to say with Dune because we haven't seen the third film.
I'm kind of curious what the long-term legacy of that franchise is going to be,
because I have just a huge affection for both of them.
I think they're both excellent.
I think they might be his best movies.
They're just not as fun as Fury Road.
There is something exuberant about Fury Road that those movies never, you know, Villeneuve's quite self-serious.
Yeah, there's, and there's also just, they feel, I mean, they are ensemble pieces, but they feel big and Villeneuve is like, you know, opening and trying to embrace as much of the world as possible.
And George Miller is just like, my guys are on a road.
Yeah, yeah, it's shrunk down.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's specific.
It's very Australian.
I mean, that's the thing is it's very much about where he's from.
It's not a created world.
It's our world.
It's just our world, you know, fucked up state.
A couple of other movies, Snowpiercer, I think, is also a film that this has a lot in common with.
It's a slightly snowier version of this story, but kind of humanity at the end and the desperation that kicks in in terms of keeping life going forward and Planet of the Apes.
Yeah.
Well, once again, which version?
Definitely the original.
Okay.
The most recent ones that are pretty cool.
Yeah, I know.
That's what I like, you know.
But not the Tim Burton one.
Okay.
No one should be deleted.
Death proof?
This is like four gals get together and beat the shit out of a guy?
Yeah.
It's enjoyable.
They sure do.
Yeah.
Anything else?
Number nine, good spot for this?
At this point, I think we're questioning ourselves.
and, you know, the power of numbers
every time we do one of these.
Yeah, you know, it's just kind of like,
well, we can't, they have to go in order.
What are we doing here?
Okay.
And not that many surprises left.
I doubt that this was a surprise for anyone.
Not a lot of surprises left.
Maybe one or two.
Yeah.
Well, that'll do it.
Number eight is not going to be surprising.
It's a good film.
Thanks for our producer, Jack Sanders.
I'd love to share a brief story
before we get out of here
that I learned about the film
when I saw it at Vidyates.
Please do, Jack.
They had Mark Mangini,
who was an amazing sound editor.
He won the Academy Award for sound editing on Dune,
as well as this film,
and he did a Q&A before the movie.
And one of the stories he shared
is that when they first test screened the film,
it bombed.
It had a cinema score somewhere around the 40s or the 50s,
and because it was so late,
they didn't have a lot of time
to make adjustments for Wiggle Room.
And Mark pleaded with George Miller,
and he said, please just let me get in there,
let me scrap it all up,
let me get in the sound design and change it.
There was picture lock, color correction was locked, music was locked, you know, all this stuff.
The only variable that changed before they did the second round of test screenings was Mark getting in there for sound design and sound effects.
And he did it, he tore it all up, he went back in there and he changed it.
And they did a second round of tests and had a cinema score of 90.
That's so strange.
I can't even imagine what...
You know, I guess that is the story you would tell if you're being interviewed.
Yeah, that is very true.
And then I won an Academy Award.
But I do, that is very true, but I also do think, you know, at the beginning of the show, you guys were like, it almost plays a silent film, which it does, but the world feels so lived in, not just because of the visuals, but you are living with that sound design, obviously, the infamous guitar and whatnot, but I just wanted to highlight that because I thought it was really cool.
Well, maybe I should turn the sound on next time I watch it, you know?
Later this week, we're going to dive into a few recent releases.
After the Hunt, Roof Man, Tron Ares.
Yeah, I've seen one of three.
We're going to...
In full now.
That's great.
I hope you check out more of them.
It's a few days from now, okay?
What I want to try to do in that conversation is talk about what makes the movie theatrical.
Okay.
Because we can...
What I don't want to have is a conversation about the box office, but I think the box office
performance of a couple of these movies. It's kind of indicative of what people think is worth
going out to the movies for. Yeah. So maybe we can see these three movies, which all have some
positives and some negatives. Yeah. And discuss what those are and whether or not people should
show up or wait, because that's really how people are making their decisions. So we will do that
later this week on the show. See you then.
Thank you.
