Fury Road is a heavily overrated spectacle that can barely be called a Mad Max Movie as it is a Furiosa Movie. 1. The Road Warrior 2. Mad Max 3. Fury Road 4. Beyond Thunderdome
I'm not a fan of the Max Max series, but these are my favorites to least favorites, not what I consider the best (Fury Road): 1. Mad Max 2. Fury Road 3. Beyond Thunderdome 4. The Road Warrior
George Miller said that the tribe of children split between those who were prepared to settle for what they already had and knew and the children like Savanah who were willing to take the risks to find and build on a wider society. Those who stayed behind stagnated and those who left were going to re-build society.
I remember watching this for the first time and being convinced I watched two separate movies. It has some fun moments but I don’t think I ever rewatched it.
Agreed. I saw it when it came out and felt like if they took out the middle section with the kids and put the tensing two parts together it would have been a better film. Almost like one long chase …
Oh boy. I think this one is the quotable and memorable of the Mad Max series because of how insane it can get at times, but still, it is an odd one in the development of the franchise. Still My mom loves this movie, and when she's enjoys something, I'm happy for her.
It's pretty telling that both Road Warrior and Thunderdome are framed as someone else telling a story about Max. I've always maintained that each film is a specific generation using Max as the hero of a story. Mad Max is the generation closest to the fall, when survival is paramount, and so we get a ruthless story about getting them before they get you. Road Warrior comes a generation later, when "every man for himself" doesn't work anymore and people realize they need to start banding together to survive. Thunderdome comes as society is starting to rise from the ruins and is a cautionary tale about not repeating the mistakes of the past. And by the time we get to Fury Road, Max is a full on folk hero version of himself, so large a figure that he bleeds into other people's stories, like Hercules showing up in The Iliad.
I like Thunderdome. It's a different take on the formula. More fanciful and theatrical with circus-y and rock opera flavors. All very 80's and beautifully shot too. Great cast... I've got no problem with it!
Another great video Matt! I LOVE THUNDERDOME. It's a beautifully shot, beautifully designed adventure that is classic 80s action cinema. "We Don't Need Another Hero" - PERFECTION. (*Mr. Draper... will you ever get round to doing a video on THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY?)
@MattDraper GBU is one of my favorite films as well, and I'd love to hear your thoughts on it. I'm sure you'll knock it out of the park if you ever do a video on it.
I don't think they were survivors of a place crash. That was all fictional. Plus they didn't call it an airplane. They called it a sky raft. They weren't even remotely familiar with aviation. At least until the end of the movie when they actually flew in the gyro captain airplane.
Thunderdome’s reputation amongst Max fans - something akin Crystal Skull’s reputation amongst Indians Jones fans - is undeserved and unjust. It has some of the most inventive world-building in it, and some truly beautiful screenwriting. That whole sequence from the kids doing “the tell” to Max turning his back on them at the plane is amazing. And little moments like the discovery of what the “sonic” really is, ending with the line “I’m going home”. It’s action sequences might not rise to the level of adrenaline-soaked kineticism of MMII, but it includes some of the most genuinely moving cinema in the entire franchise, something that only Fury Road rivals. The problem, I think, is that Mad Max had become so intrinsically tied, in the minds of viewers, to the idea of cars and roads (especially in the US, where Mad Max II was even called “The Road Warrior”), that a movie that doesn’t have a single road in it, and in which Max never even gets behind the wheel of a motor vehicle until the last five minutes of the movie, and in which his two feet are his main means of locomotion, seemed like a disappointment to people expecting lots of high-octane driving sequences. It’s a different beast, that needs to be appreciated in its own terms, not based on what it isn’t. The idea people have that the second act is the “problem” is just bizarre to me. It’s easily the best and most memorable part of the film, IMO. And I’ve NEVER felt it as any kind of lag in the pacing. It becomes more meditative and intellectual at that point, sure. But I simply don’t understand how that’s a bad thing.
I agree. Beyond Thunderdome is my favorite of all the Mad Max films. But it's like George Miller said: each film is meant to meant to be its own thing, and each story has the same reluctant hero, who is mostly trying to survive. I just love how George Miller tells stories.
There was definitely some great parts in Thunderdome, but it lost it's rawness of tight budget filming & stunts vs 1&2, got fancy with American funding, the inclusion of Turner & Anderson was a real turn-off for me, plus Bruce Spence (Gyro Cpt.) with no explanation of the bus trip to QLD with Feral kid, etc. Gibson was the only known actor required, all the others could have been unknowns.
@@Lana_Warwick I dib't think the film would hve been half as epic with anyone other than Turner playing Aunty. Aside that they would have lost an epic voice and performance of the hit song that so well encompassed the mood of the movie ( & became an 80s classic ), I don't think many, even more seasoned actresses could have carried the larger than life persona of Aunty as well as the large than life in real life persona of Tina did.
Agreed fully. Thunderdome was WONDERFUL film, & many 80s movies fans & Max fans LOVE it, myself among them. Fans of Mad Max who were mainly there for the grit and gore felt it was too soft, but it was a different tone, and as classic, in it's own way, as the ones before it. The current 2 Mad Max saga movies from the 20teenss & 2020s owe WAY more in their sweeping look, brighter & more intense colour, sweeping scale and sweeping scores to Thunderdome than they do to Mad Max one and Road Warrior. THunderdome gave a mythology, and a look into how a mythology is built, it had an EPIC score, and of course an EPIC anti-hero/villain in Tina Turner, set opposite Max, with of course an epic song. The ending of THunderdome was actually very moving. The whole movie is, IF you don't come to it looking for a grindhouse and gore show.
@@gibranlewis7300 A Great spin-off post apocalyptic film (& song) 'on it's own merit'. Like Fury it could have been done with any actors, some other guys post apocalyptic storyline, Fury played by a much 'younger' Tom-Hardly Max. Think about Max at the end of MM2, standing next to Lone Wolf (which Pappagallo died in), highway scattered with multiple vehicles, parts, fuel. Why bother being a 'Raggedy Man' in a camel drawn wagon apparently scavenging parts to 'DIY build another interceptor from scratch'? What For Purpose? reminisce or something? As Old Feral (kid) narrated at the end of MM2 "that was the last we ever saw of him". Perhaps it should have been, left a mystery we still consider today, wonder what happened to Max? And instead made a Feral Kid/Northern Tribe movie spin-off. Cyro Cpt, Humungus, Wez, etc, prequels for TV. Also, at the end of Dome, the now older Lost Tribe kids are living in Sydney 'City', a main nuke target (hot spot). If it's liveable, what about a few hours up or down the coast, where there's rivers, oceans. However years later many are still doing it tough out in the desert begging Joe to turn the water on?
@@drop830 Landis directed a segment which featured a sequence where Vic Morrow's character was crossing a river while carrying two Vietnamese children in the middle of the Vietnam war and a helicoptor shooting at him. Said sequence is super illegal because the child actors were under the ages of 7 and filming laws forbid child actors filming at night, in close proximity to explosives, and there was no parental figure or chaperone on set. In addition, the children were undocumented or just recently immigrated to America. And against the concerns from everybody on set, from the actors, special effects crew, stunt crew, everybody; John Landis went ahead with the sequence and it went horribly wrong. The helicoptor got to close to the pyrotechnics, plus the high winds, caused the helicoptor to lose control and crash on set; decapitating Vic Morrow and one of the child actors and crushed the other child. John Landis was charged with manslaughter and his reputation is tarred in Hollywood and Steven Spielberg ended his friendship with him and wants nothing to do with him to this day.
Lawrence of Arabia being a major influence on this film (and by extension even Fury Road) makes so much sense. George Miller truly channels his inner David Lean with the Mad Max films. Also, agree on Miller's segment on the Twilight Zone movie. His and Joe Dante's segments are the best parts. Very excited for Furiosa.
When I first saw it in the mid eighties. It was like if Disney had made a Mad Max movie. But over the years Ive come to appreciate it. It was ambitious for its time and you can see the David Lean influence as the Cinematography is breathtaking.
If you play games at all make sure you play the mad max game on the PS4 it's extremely underrated,kinda slow in the beginning but so so worth your time
@@mandalorianhunter1 cool! thankfully the car combat is awesome and the fighting sometimes messes up a bit but is exactly like the Arkham games.rebuilding your car is fun AF ,like I said the first hour is a little slow but it truly is worth your time I hope you enjoy your time with it,if you enjoy the universe at all you will have a great time.
Good video, Matt! Controversial Opinion Time: I'd say Beyond Thunderdome is my third favorite of the Max Max series and I'd rank it higher than the Road Warrior. I didn't grow up with any of these films other than the first one (which I saw thinking it was the Road Warrior and is my favorite of the series because of its more relatable version of Max and the not quite, but almost apocalyptic world) and I've never really glommed onto the series, even after finally staying up late a couple of years ago watching each film one by one. I think it's because so many people have ripped off that post-apocalyptic aesthetic of insane evil people fighting over resources while wearing leather/dominatrix outfits and riding around in over-the-top vehicles, that I'm just sick of it and, generally, if I want to watch a story about a badass mysterious anti-hero, I'd rather watch any of the Dollar's films by Sergio Leone with Clint Eastwood. Plus, even though he was big in the 90s/early 2000s, I've never really warmed to Mel Gibson as an actor and never bought him as this silent Eastwood type loner. I prefer and liked Max as just this regular guy with a family who lost everything and spiraled out of control, not this mystic character who just stumbles into becoming a hero to people in need. So, I guess I didn't mind the lighter fairy tale-ish touch in Beyond Thunderdome. At least, it's a different tone than I'm what I'm used to.
A 10 million dollar budget wouldn't even be considered a movie today by Hollywood standards, but even so, Beyond Thunderdome still does more with it's 10- 12 million than a lot of films today do with over 10 times that much. Beyond Thunderdome was the movie where it occurred to me that in the Miller Universe there was going to be these legends of the savior figure that all these different cultures would have, and nobody would probably ever figure out they were based on the same person. That concept fascinated me.
When you said you thought Beyond Thunderdome was a sequel of Thunderdome, it brought me back to my childhood when I thought Revenge of the Nerds had to be a sequel to a previous Nerds movie.
I LOVE every film in the MM saga, absolutely including Thunderdome. In fact, I watch BT every year or two. It's so different, so unique, and so influential.
I just revisited it and Thunderdome isn't quite as bad as people make it out to be. The ending is actually quite emotional. But it's clear the movie's trying to blend two different storylines together and, once we get to the plane crash Lost Boys, it never reaches the Bartertown/Thunderdome highs again.
It's a deep movie. Not that some of these popcorn munching, review adopting, box-office analyzing and comparing it to MadMax part shallow 'film lovers' make it out to be.
I think the humanity part that you mention is what got Gibson to jump onboard. If you look at the movies he did after Mad Max 2 (Mrs Soffel, The River etc.) he was really trying to broaden what he did as an actor.
I'm so glad Tina Turner is in this movie. It's much more enjoyable to bring up "The Mad Max movie with Tina Turner" in a conversation about the franchise versus "The really weird one".
I've always loved Thunderdome, it's my favorite of the original trilogy. It's really where the worldbuilding came into its own, more fully elaborating things only hinted at in Road Warrior. I love the intricacy and detail of the world-building: little touches like the way the kids refer to the apocalypse as the pox eclipse and have built this religion around discarded images and technology from a world that no longer exists. Same with the whole TV game-show setup of the Thunderdome itself. For all its famous over-the-topness, there has always been something very plausible and believable about it to me. I don't know that Thunder Road would've been made without the sheer ambition and scale first undertaken by Miller and crew with Thunderdome.
I loved this movie! I watched what civilization might break down to and what happened when groups are isolated, then cross paths with others. Outstanding.
Replaying the mad max game, 3rd time I’ve played it just because I love the world so much. Same as each of the movies, can’t get enough of all of them.
This movie was a good end for the series because in my opinion, the very hopeful tone of the ending made everything that Max went through in all 3 films worth it. He's the whole "one good man can make a difference in the world" that feels very satisfying personally.
TNT had this movie on ALL THE TIME in the late 90's/early 00's and I remember spending a winter night watching this with my dad. It was a fun watch but boy did we groan any time we were flipping through the channels and saw it playing AGAIN.
It was a little disappointing, I expected Road Warrior again which is selfish, but also appropriate for the time. When a long time passes between sequels, like Mad Max and The Road Warrior, drastic change is just gonna happen. I feel in love with Tina Turner, one of the most Epic character looks ever.
I'm a huge fan of Beyond Thunderdome. I subscribe to the 'legend' theory of Max. Since the timeline is foggy and they recast some characters (Max and, with the new movie coming out, Furiosa) and the recasting of some actors in new roles (Bruce Spence and Hugh Keas-Byrne) it almost feels like we're being told tales around a post-apocalyptic fire about mythical adventures and heroes with convoluted and contradicting elements. How old is Max? How does he always have the Interceptor even though it's destroyed in nearly every movie? Why does it seem like Max is forever the catalyst lone wanderer in these stories and not the main narrative thrust? If you get a chance play the 2015 Mad Max video game. Not only is it a lot of fun and adheres to the aesthetic of the films very well but you get even more lore about Max and his world...and of course they destroy the Intercepter right off the bat.
The Interceptor never dies, Traveler. The soul walks the wasteland... Scavenging the corpi of many war wagons... Waiting to find the heart of the Chrome Immorta: V8.
Thunderdome was WONDERFUL film, & many 80s movies fans & Max fans LOVE it, myself among them. Fans of Mad Max who were mainly there for the grit and gore felt it was too soft, but it was a different tone, and as classic, in it's own way, as the ones before it. The current 2 Mad Max saga movies from the 20teenss & 2020s owe WAY more in their sweeping look, brighter & more intense colour, sweeping scale and sweeping scores to Thunderdome than they do to Mad Max one and Road Warrior. THunderdome gave a mythology, and a look into how a mythology is built, it had an EPIC score, and of course an EPIC anti-hero/villain in Tina Turner, set opposite Max, with of course an epic song. The ending of THunderdome was actually very moving. The whole movie is, IF you don't come to it looking for a grindhouse and gore show.
I don't care what anyone says, this move is a favourite. The production design hasn't been topped yet. So great and creative. Even if some fans say it's "not Mad Max".
Fury Road is my favorite movie of all time, it took Jurassic Park off its throne and did it in such a glorious fashion. I have watched it in theaters twice, I watch it at least once a month, I have listened to it with no video, watched it with no audio, black and white, and just clips for clips sake. I love this movie so much it is just such a perfect get in enjoy a movie and get out that I would be hard pressed to see it dethroned at this point. Also the Mad Max game is phenomenal play it with surround sound feel the rumble of the engine and then go full volume when you get the coveted 8"
Hated it as a kid (loved Road Warrior), Thunderdome is in many ways the most complex and best of the series. Leaves the simple brutality for a less clear situation. Auntie starts off less selfish and MORE of a hero than the reluctant loner Max. The end where she loses but instantly readjusts to the bigger situation, acknowledging Max will have value in it, is more badass than any vengeance scene (no time for selfish revenge as she's already thinking way ahead to rebuilding Bartertown). Also love that Max isn't tied to the Interceptor and can be just fine without it.
I remember I loved watching the Thunderdome scene on my VHS copy in the early 90's on school holidays. 'Two men enter, One man leave!'. Definitely the highlight of the film, but overall it's under rated. It's more commercial than the first two and less violent, but it's still original and crazy.
There was a Mad Max video game? I used to own a Parker Brothers board game that felt inspired by the Mad Max franchise. It had the coolest miniatures for it of all the board games I owned in the '80s.
The mad Max game on PlayStation 4 overall was a great time! The first time that I heard “we don’t need another hero“ was the very first time I ever donated blood roughly 15 years ago. I believe that’s the only time I’ve ever heard it on the radio.
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome is my second favourite Mad Max movie after the Road Warrior. It expands on the post apocalyptic world of the Road Warrior. It is highly influential, if you have ever played Fallout 3, the first town you come across looks suspiciously like Bartertown.
To me I have never understood why Max at the end of Thunderdome doesn’t just go back to the Oasis and live out his days there in a place with fresh water and I am assuming plant based food. If a person gets stuck out in the Australian outback they aren’t going to last long without water.
Sorry,...but I loved every second of it back then and these days as well!!!!!! ...and the iconic music and part of Tina as an actress in it was a extra curiosity making this movie so legendary 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
My favourite of the original 3 movies by far, and I would say probably one of the most influential stylistically of any post apocalyptic movie. It's costume and set design was emulated for decades afterwards by Mad Max Wannabees but never matched until Fury Road.
Love your work and this franchise! As of late I haven't seen Beyond Thunderdome in its entirety but its definitely on my immediate watchlist, along with Fury Road. I have seen the first and second films, and the Road Warrior one of my favorite films of all time. Could it be possible that you'll do a video on the Hitcher in the future? I've never been into slashers that much myself, but after seeing this film and your other analyses of the genre, it seems like a great fit. It very much seems to reinvent the genre it comes from, and it seems like a great allegory for an abusive parent. It feels like if the problematic parents in something like the Breakfast Club were materialized into a singular, terrifying psychopath. Long-winded, but just my general thoughts. Either which way, keep up the good work!
Thunderdome is cult classic. We used words still this day." 2 men enter 1 man leaves""we named a maximum security jail tank we named "thunderdome" " bust the deal, face the wheel" awsome!1
I think the events of Beyond Thunderdome take place AFTER the events of Fury Road. There is a small clue to this in the latest Furiosa movie when it shows the young Furiosa using the naval whistle to warn her people. It's the same whistle that Max uses to defeat Blaster in the Thunderdome fight. Perhaps Furiosa gave it to Max at the end of Fury Road as a symbol of gratuity and good luck when he left the Citadel. The same way Max gave the Feral Boy the music box in Road Warrior.
Fury Road is the biggest, most action-packed, and cinematically accomplished film of the series, but it suffers greatly (in my worthless opinion) from the absence of Mel Gibson. Hardy did a good job, but Charlize easily stole the show, and for long-time Max fans like me, Hardy (while good) just didn't have Mel's likeability. For those who's first Max film was Fury Road however, I get why Hardy may be the more popular. But for that main reason, I'd have to rank my favorites as: The Road Warrior Fury Road Beyond Thunderdome Mad Max Having said that, the series works best when watched in order, with the understanding that each film is its own unique animal, similar to the idea Tom Cruise had for the Mission: Impossible series. Originally, Cruise wanted each new Mission to have its own, unique, visual style, and he held true to that ambition for the first four M:I films. But when Ghost Protocol went through the roof, the next few films basically continued that same general aesthetic, because frankly Ghost Protocol nailed it. Miller's Max saga has varied the look and feel of each subsequent film while retaining his signature (Kurosawa-inspired) action style, but Max 2: The Road Warrior, and Beyond Thunderdome largely kept the same general aesthetic, the same way Furiosa looks like it'll retain the general look of Fury Road. My hope is that they can get Charlize back for a final Max adventure, as I heard that Miller originally intended Fury Road for Gibson, who would end up romantically involved with Furiosa, bringing both of their characters full circle. Great break down and analysis though - thanks for all the hard work!!!
I really liked Beyond Thunderdome. I found it stuck a great balance between action, humor, drama and, had some genuinely touching moments as well. Unlike a lot of 'modern' films, most of which are straight up stupid, annoying, preachy or all the above, MM BT is film I can watch over and over and not feel like my intelligence has been repeatedly insulted, or my time wasted. Same with Mad Max 1 and 2 as well. Of the 3, I like BT most because of its intelligence, humor and heart.
For all the BTS tragedy, studio pressure, lighter tone, schizophrenic structure and underwhelming final chase, I still absolutely love "Thunderdome". It has just enough imagination and weirdness to work for me. And as much as some people dislike its more Spielbergian style, it's gorgeously shot. I'll *always* watch it. And unlike some, I actually love the Lost Children plot - which is a lot darker than people give it credit for, with Max basically wanting to take them over and keep them there, shooting to keep them from leaving - and him just coldly walking away as he does, etc. I think if they had gone a bit less overboard on the *humor* and made Aunty Entity and Master Blaster more serious villains, I think it would have made for a stronger piece in the series, but despite all of that, I just really enjoy the hell out of it. And when you keep in mind that Miller's always said that each Max film stands alone as its own story, almost as oral tales told by people in the wasteland who'd heard of Max - if you watch it from that perspective, it works, as I just imagine that someone's telling a more adventurous, lighter Max story they'd heard about. I usually find that the people who don't like "Thunderdome" are people who continually try to tie the three films together in a "timeline", as if it's a continuous story - and it's just not. "The Road Warrior" wasn't so much a sequel to "Mad Max", as a re-make of it, as Miller said it was basically the film he wanted to make in 1979 if he'd had the money. For all of its flaws, it's still entertaining as hell. It was also the first Max film I'd actually seen in the theater, in '85, as I'd only caught a glimpse of "The Road Warrior" when I snuck in to peak at it one time at the theater in '82 as a kid and then rented it on video and became obsessed with it - so I was already a Max fan as a kid when I saw "Thunderdome" - and seeing it on a giant screen in 1985 was just a blast.
Im not going to say this is better than RW but its my most watch of all the films including Fury Road. The world of Max is more explored with better ideas and i rank up.the final chase with the train with all the franchise chases. Even more than RW, id say Thunderdome is more influential to other properties and copy cats from the change to gas wars to nuclear. I mean, Fallout is evidence of it. And, it has Tina Turner which cements this entry as important in the entire franchise A theory of mine from this and RW is that Fury Road, Tom Hardys Max is either the feral kid cosplaying as Max OR one of these kids who left, found a new tribe and took the mantle of Max
I thought We Don’t need another hero by Tina Turner and her performance in the movie are both positives ?I Like how Auntie respects Max and let’s him live
So as I sees it the storyline arc goes.. "Mad Max", " Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior", "Hope and Glory", "Fury Road", "Beyond Thunderdome" and I say Beyond Thunderdome because Guzzulene is virtually extinct by then...Looking at the vehicles in...and well it speaks for it self. Here's to more Movies, Fan made or not helping to fill in the gaps. Defiantly more centered on Max mind you. Cheers.
Wait a minute!! The best and wildest story in Twilight Zone : The Movie was directed by George Miller?!! I never knew that. But now that you look at the camera work, and the frenetic feel, it totally makes sense.
I like that max has ups and downs. The series wouldnt have very much suspense if he was untouchable. Which none of us are. And for thunder dome although max has been done dirty and lost it all, time and time again, he still has heart. And characteristics in the wasteland are probably hard to come by. Good on ya mate
I highly recommend playing mad max on the PS4 if you even kinda like this world,it was underrated when it came out but people are now giving it its props just like days gone,the first hour or so is slow in both but it gets really great after that.
Love this movie. I know there's no chronology, but I see it as the last movie. 1) max is feral in RW and FR. It's a mid years max. 2) FR has the great desert. Is this the Pacific? 3) Entity is American. Did she grow up in the US. Did she cross that great desert? 4) what trials did Entity go through? Heck. I want to see an Entity movie.
I think this film resonates differently if you saw it as a kid when it came out at the theater. Being a PG-13 film I was able to see this when I was about seven! This was a film about Hope in a post-apocalyptic world. Even the antagonists on the whole were more civilized in this film!! Everyone is down with rebuilding or having a future! One of the few films of its kind that offers hope to all parties. The ending felt poignant to me and still does. Even the song lended gravitas to this movie. It's definitely one of the movies that piqued my interest in film in general. This is definitely not the end of this series but the conclusion!!! The same with Return of The Jedi, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade!
What's your ranking of the Mad Max movies?
1. Fury Road
2. Road Warrior
3. Beyond Thunderdome
4. Mad Max
Fury Road is a heavily overrated spectacle that can barely be called a Mad Max Movie as it is a Furiosa Movie.
1. The Road Warrior
2. Mad Max
3. Fury Road
4. Beyond Thunderdome
1. Fury Road
2. Road Warrior
3. Mad Max
4. Beyond Thunderdome
As you know, Beyond Thunderdome was Lighter and Softer.
I'm not a fan of the Max Max series, but these are my favorites to least favorites, not what I consider the best (Fury Road):
1. Mad Max
2. Fury Road
3. Beyond Thunderdome
4. The Road Warrior
What's sad is those kids left a paradise setting for basically Escape From New York.
George Miller said that the tribe of children split between those who were prepared to settle for what they already had and knew and the children like Savanah who were willing to take the risks to find and build on a wider society. Those who stayed behind stagnated and those who left were going to re-build society.
I remember watching this for the first time and being convinced I watched two separate movies. It has some fun moments but I don’t think I ever rewatched it.
I love the first 45 minutes or so, up until the end of the Thunderdome battle. The rest? Not so much. Tried to be an Indiana Jones movie - bad idea.
Kids ruin ever adult movie,look at that zorro sequel with Antonio.
Agreed. I saw it when it came out and felt like if they took out the middle section with the kids and put the tensing two parts together it would have been a better film. Almost like one long chase …
same here.
I don't like the part with the feral kids, it kind of drags. But it does have some cool parts.
I LOVE this movie! My favorite Mad Max and a sentimental favorite
“But he’s just a raggedy man!”
Oh boy. I think this one is the quotable and memorable of the Mad Max series because of how insane it can get at times, but still, it is an odd one in the development of the franchise. Still My mom loves this movie, and when she's enjoys something, I'm happy for her.
It's pretty telling that both Road Warrior and Thunderdome are framed as someone else telling a story about Max. I've always maintained that each film is a specific generation using Max as the hero of a story. Mad Max is the generation closest to the fall, when survival is paramount, and so we get a ruthless story about getting them before they get you. Road Warrior comes a generation later, when "every man for himself" doesn't work anymore and people realize they need to start banding together to survive. Thunderdome comes as society is starting to rise from the ruins and is a cautionary tale about not repeating the mistakes of the past. And by the time we get to Fury Road, Max is a full on folk hero version of himself, so large a figure that he bleeds into other people's stories, like Hercules showing up in The Iliad.
👍🏻
I like Thunderdome. It's a different take on the formula. More fanciful and theatrical with circus-y and rock opera flavors. All very 80's and beautifully shot too. Great cast... I've got no problem with it!
It should be watched all the time for pride month
Same. I have NO issue with it as I even saw this in the theater and VHS. Mel Gibson will always be Mad Max, and nothing against Tom Hardy.
Another great video Matt! I LOVE THUNDERDOME. It's a beautifully shot, beautifully designed adventure that is classic 80s action cinema. "We Don't Need Another Hero" - PERFECTION. (*Mr. Draper... will you ever get round to doing a video on THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY?)
GBU is my favorite movie of all time. To me, it's very intimidated to make a video about something that you love so much. So maybe someday?
@MattDraper GBU is one of my favorite films as well, and I'd love to hear your thoughts on it. I'm sure you'll knock it out of the park if you ever do a video on it.
How about some other spaghetti westerns? There's a bunch
This was my first Mad Max and it really started the fun for me. It was a great entry point as a kid for the time.
I don't think they were survivors of a place crash. That was all fictional. Plus they didn't call it an airplane. They called it a sky raft. They weren't even remotely familiar with aviation. At least until the end of the movie when they actually flew in the gyro captain airplane.
Nothing beats the ending form the second one. That still gives me chills.
Thunderdome’s reputation amongst Max fans - something akin Crystal Skull’s reputation amongst Indians Jones fans - is undeserved and unjust. It has some of the most inventive world-building in it, and some truly beautiful screenwriting. That whole sequence from the kids doing “the tell” to Max turning his back on them at the plane is amazing. And little moments like the discovery of what the “sonic” really is, ending with the line “I’m going home”. It’s action sequences might not rise to the level of adrenaline-soaked kineticism of MMII, but it includes some of the most genuinely moving cinema in the entire franchise, something that only Fury Road rivals.
The problem, I think, is that Mad Max had become so intrinsically tied, in the minds of viewers, to the idea of cars and roads (especially in the US, where Mad Max II was even called “The Road Warrior”), that a movie that doesn’t have a single road in it, and in which Max never even gets behind the wheel of a motor vehicle until the last five minutes of the movie, and in which his two feet are his main means of locomotion, seemed like a disappointment to people expecting lots of high-octane driving sequences. It’s a different beast, that needs to be appreciated in its own terms, not based on what it isn’t.
The idea people have that the second act is the “problem” is just bizarre to me. It’s easily the best and most memorable part of the film, IMO. And I’ve NEVER felt it as any kind of lag in the pacing. It becomes more meditative and intellectual at that point, sure. But I simply don’t understand how that’s a bad thing.
I agree. Beyond Thunderdome is my favorite of all the Mad Max films. But it's like George Miller said: each film is meant to meant to be its own thing, and each story has the same reluctant hero, who is mostly trying to survive. I just love how George Miller tells stories.
There was definitely some great parts in Thunderdome, but it lost it's rawness of tight budget filming & stunts vs 1&2, got fancy with American funding, the inclusion of Turner & Anderson was a real turn-off for me, plus Bruce Spence (Gyro Cpt.) with no explanation of the bus trip to QLD with Feral kid, etc.
Gibson was the only known actor required, all the others could have been unknowns.
@@Lana_Warwick I dib't think the film would hve been half as epic with anyone other than Turner playing Aunty. Aside that they would have lost an epic voice and performance of the hit song that so well encompassed the mood of the movie ( & became an 80s classic ), I don't think many, even more seasoned actresses could have carried the larger than life persona of Aunty as well as the large than life in real life persona of Tina did.
Agreed fully. Thunderdome was WONDERFUL film, & many 80s movies fans & Max fans LOVE it, myself among them. Fans of Mad Max who were mainly there for the grit and gore felt it was too soft, but it was a different tone, and as classic, in it's own way, as the ones before it. The current 2 Mad Max saga movies from the 20teenss & 2020s owe WAY more in their sweeping look, brighter & more intense colour, sweeping scale and sweeping scores to Thunderdome than they do to Mad Max one and Road Warrior. THunderdome gave a mythology, and a look into how a mythology is built, it had an EPIC score, and of course an EPIC anti-hero/villain in Tina Turner, set opposite Max, with of course an epic song. The ending of THunderdome was actually very moving. The whole movie is, IF you don't come to it looking for a grindhouse and gore show.
@@gibranlewis7300 A Great spin-off post apocalyptic film (& song) 'on it's own merit'.
Like Fury it could have been done with any actors, some other guys post apocalyptic storyline, Fury played by a much 'younger' Tom-Hardly Max.
Think about Max at the end of MM2, standing next to Lone Wolf (which Pappagallo died in), highway scattered with multiple vehicles, parts, fuel. Why bother being a 'Raggedy Man' in a camel drawn wagon apparently scavenging parts to 'DIY build another interceptor from scratch'? What For Purpose? reminisce or something?
As Old Feral (kid) narrated at the end of MM2 "that was the last we ever saw of him". Perhaps it should have been, left a mystery we still consider today, wonder what happened to Max? And instead made a Feral Kid/Northern Tribe movie spin-off. Cyro Cpt, Humungus, Wez, etc, prequels for TV.
Also, at the end of Dome, the now older Lost Tribe kids are living in Sydney 'City', a main nuke target (hot spot). If it's liveable, what about a few hours up or down the coast, where there's rivers, oceans. However years later many are still doing it tough out in the desert begging Joe to turn the water on?
"Also, John Landis, straight to jail" no matter what else you say in this video I won't unlike it for saying this in the opening.
Agreed.
Also, put his son in jail as well.
Ok what did I miss?
@@drop830 look up the history of the making of his segment for the twilight zone movie in the 80s
@@drop830 Landis directed a segment which featured a sequence where Vic Morrow's character was crossing a river while carrying two Vietnamese children in the middle of the Vietnam war and a helicoptor shooting at him. Said sequence is super illegal because the child actors were under the ages of 7 and filming laws forbid child actors filming at night, in close proximity to explosives, and there was no parental figure or chaperone on set. In addition, the children were undocumented or just recently immigrated to America.
And against the concerns from everybody on set, from the actors, special effects crew, stunt crew, everybody; John Landis went ahead with the sequence and it went horribly wrong. The helicoptor got to close to the pyrotechnics, plus the high winds, caused the helicoptor to lose control and crash on set; decapitating Vic Morrow and one of the child actors and crushed the other child.
John Landis was charged with manslaughter and his reputation is tarred in Hollywood and Steven Spielberg ended his friendship with him and wants nothing to do with him to this day.
Lawrence of Arabia being a major influence on this film (and by extension even Fury Road) makes so much sense. George Miller truly channels his inner David Lean with the Mad Max films. Also, agree on Miller's segment on the Twilight Zone movie. His and Joe Dante's segments are the best parts. Very excited for Furiosa.
When I first saw it in the mid eighties. It was like if Disney had made a Mad Max movie. But over the years Ive come to appreciate it. It was ambitious for its time and you can see the David Lean influence as the Cinematography is breathtaking.
I been thinking about getting into the Mad Max series now.
Thanks Matt for giving me your perspective on this series. You are awesome.
If you play games at all make sure you play the mad max game on the PS4 it's extremely underrated,kinda slow in the beginning but so so worth your time
@@ericseitzler81 thanks for the info
@@mandalorianhunter1 cool! thankfully the car combat is awesome and the fighting sometimes messes up a bit but is exactly like the Arkham games.rebuilding your car is fun AF ,like I said the first hour is a little slow but it truly is worth your time I hope you enjoy your time with it,if you enjoy the universe at all you will have a great time.
@@mandalorianhunter1 also please stop hunting the madalorians their are so few left
@@ericseitzler81 lol no I'm a mandalorian myself lol
I remember my father taking us out to the theaters to see this. While watching this my dad was like, "Where are the cars??"
Good video, Matt!
Controversial Opinion Time: I'd say Beyond Thunderdome is my third favorite of the Max Max series and I'd rank it higher than the Road Warrior. I didn't grow up with any of these films other than the first one (which I saw thinking it was the Road Warrior and is my favorite of the series because of its more relatable version of Max and the not quite, but almost apocalyptic world) and I've never really glommed onto the series, even after finally staying up late a couple of years ago watching each film one by one. I think it's because so many people have ripped off that post-apocalyptic aesthetic of insane evil people fighting over resources while wearing leather/dominatrix outfits and riding around in over-the-top vehicles, that I'm just sick of it and, generally, if I want to watch a story about a badass mysterious anti-hero, I'd rather watch any of the Dollar's films by Sergio Leone with Clint Eastwood. Plus, even though he was big in the 90s/early 2000s, I've never really warmed to Mel Gibson as an actor and never bought him as this silent Eastwood type loner. I prefer and liked Max as just this regular guy with a family who lost everything and spiraled out of control, not this mystic character who just stumbles into becoming a hero to people in need. So, I guess I didn't mind the lighter fairy tale-ish touch in Beyond Thunderdome. At least, it's a different tone than I'm what I'm used to.
A 10 million dollar budget wouldn't even be considered a movie today by Hollywood standards, but even so, Beyond Thunderdome still does more with it's 10- 12 million than a lot of films today do with over 10 times that much. Beyond Thunderdome was the movie where it occurred to me that in the Miller Universe there was going to be these legends of the savior figure that all these different cultures would have, and nobody would probably ever figure out they were based on the same person. That concept fascinated me.
When you said you thought Beyond Thunderdome was a sequel of Thunderdome, it brought me back to my childhood when I thought Revenge of the Nerds had to be a sequel to a previous Nerds movie.
I LOVE every film in the MM saga, absolutely including Thunderdome. In fact, I watch BT every year or two. It's so different, so unique, and so influential.
I just revisited it and Thunderdome isn't quite as bad as people make it out to be. The ending is actually quite emotional. But it's clear the movie's trying to blend two different storylines together and, once we get to the plane crash Lost Boys, it never reaches the Bartertown/Thunderdome highs again.
It's a deep movie. Not that some of these popcorn munching, review adopting, box-office analyzing and comparing it to MadMax part shallow 'film lovers' make it out to be.
Idk why I always cry watching him walk alone in the desert at the very end.
@@ericseitzler81when they get a last look at him before he pulls ahead of the plane to crash and clear the runway for them to escape gets me
@@capttrips1523 yea he kinda gets his humanity back in that moment to me.
first 45 mins or so is good..rest of it sucks and is a kids pg13 movie
I loved how the Tupac song California love was all Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome themed even though the movie was ten years old in 95.
I think the humanity part that you mention is what got Gibson to jump onboard. If you look at the movies he did after Mad Max 2 (Mrs Soffel, The River etc.) he was really trying to broaden what he did as an actor.
I'm so glad Tina Turner is in this movie. It's much more enjoyable to bring up "The Mad Max movie with Tina Turner" in a conversation about the franchise versus "The really weird one".
Maurice Jarre's complete score is available on a 2CD set from the Tadlow soundtrack label.
I was always under the belief that the kids were based on Peter Pan's Lost Boys.
New day, a new matt draper video, covering mad max no less. Love it.
I've always loved Thunderdome, it's my favorite of the original trilogy. It's really where the worldbuilding came into its own, more fully elaborating things only hinted at in Road Warrior. I love the intricacy and detail of the world-building: little touches like the way the kids refer to the apocalypse as the pox eclipse and have built this religion around discarded images and technology from a world that no longer exists. Same with the whole TV game-show setup of the Thunderdome itself. For all its famous over-the-topness, there has always been something very plausible and believable about it to me. I don't know that Thunder Road would've been made without the sheer ambition and scale first undertaken by Miller and crew with Thunderdome.
Interesting observations you have presented here, Matt. I'm going to down load this and archive for future references. Thank you.
I loved this movie! I watched what civilization might break down to and what happened when groups are isolated, then cross paths with others. Outstanding.
I was an 80s kid and this movie landed at the right time for me. I’ll always love it.
Incredible!!! I loved your vid dude good job.
Replaying the mad max game, 3rd time I’ve played it just because I love the world so much.
Same as each of the movies, can’t get enough of all of them.
I haven't watched this one since 96. Thank you for reminding me of its existence
This movie was a good end for the series because in my opinion, the very hopeful tone of the ending made everything that Max went through in all 3 films worth it. He's the whole "one good man can make a difference in the world" that feels very satisfying personally.
TNT had this movie on ALL THE TIME in the late 90's/early 00's and I remember spending a winter night watching this with my dad. It was a fun watch but boy did we groan any time we were flipping through the channels and saw it playing AGAIN.
Love this film - the ending always gets me . Just beautiful.❤
Rip tina turner😢❤
I was born in 85. I grew up with heishei era godzilla movies &mad max movies
This actually was my favorite one
It was a little disappointing, I expected Road Warrior again which is selfish, but also appropriate for the time. When a long time passes between sequels, like Mad Max and The Road Warrior, drastic change is just gonna happen. I feel in love with Tina Turner, one of the most Epic character looks ever.
Tbh beyond thunderdome is still the most quotable movie for me, my parents and I still quote the master blaster duo every chance we get
I'm a huge fan of Beyond Thunderdome. I subscribe to the 'legend' theory of Max. Since the timeline is foggy and they recast some characters (Max and, with the new movie coming out, Furiosa) and the recasting of some actors in new roles (Bruce Spence and Hugh Keas-Byrne) it almost feels like we're being told tales around a post-apocalyptic fire about mythical adventures and heroes with convoluted and contradicting elements.
How old is Max? How does he always have the Interceptor even though it's destroyed in nearly every movie? Why does it seem like Max is forever the catalyst lone wanderer in these stories and not the main narrative thrust?
If you get a chance play the 2015 Mad Max video game. Not only is it a lot of fun and adheres to the aesthetic of the films very well but you get even more lore about Max and his world...and of course they destroy the Intercepter right off the bat.
The Interceptor never dies, Traveler. The soul walks the wasteland... Scavenging the corpi of many war wagons...
Waiting to find the heart of the Chrome Immorta: V8.
The movie is epic, the arrival to Bartertown, aunty entity, master blaster, the kids 😊
Thunderdome was WONDERFUL film, & many 80s movies fans & Max fans LOVE it, myself among them. Fans of Mad Max who were mainly there for the grit and gore felt it was too soft, but it was a different tone, and as classic, in it's own way, as the ones before it. The current 2 Mad Max saga movies from the 20teenss & 2020s owe WAY more in their sweeping look, brighter & more intense colour, sweeping scale and sweeping scores to Thunderdome than they do to Mad Max one and Road Warrior. THunderdome gave a mythology, and a look into how a mythology is built, it had an EPIC score, and of course an EPIC anti-hero/villain in Tina Turner, set opposite Max, with of course an epic song. The ending of THunderdome was actually very moving. The whole movie is, IF you don't come to it looking for a grindhouse and gore show.
I don't care what anyone says, this move is a favourite. The production design hasn't been topped yet. So great and creative. Even if some fans say it's "not Mad Max".
Angry Anderson helps make this movie:
"AHHHH! PIG KILLA!"
Also Aunty is in the top 5 most badass baddies. Tina sold it hard
A very fair and interesting review. 👍
Woah, we are really going BEYOND THUNDERDOME!
Fury Road is my favorite movie of all time, it took Jurassic Park off its throne and did it in such a glorious fashion. I have watched it in theaters twice, I watch it at least once a month, I have listened to it with no video, watched it with no audio, black and white, and just clips for clips sake. I love this movie so much it is just such a perfect get in enjoy a movie and get out that I would be hard pressed to see it dethroned at this point. Also the Mad Max game is phenomenal play it with surround sound feel the rumble of the engine and then go full volume when you get the coveted 8"
Hated it as a kid (loved Road Warrior), Thunderdome is in many ways the most complex and best of the series. Leaves the simple brutality for a less clear situation. Auntie starts off less selfish and MORE of a hero than the reluctant loner Max. The end where she loses but instantly readjusts to the bigger situation, acknowledging Max will have value in it, is more badass than any vengeance scene (no time for selfish revenge as she's already thinking way ahead to rebuilding Bartertown). Also love that Max isn't tied to the Interceptor and can be just fine without it.
I remember I loved watching the Thunderdome scene on my VHS copy in the early 90's on school holidays. 'Two men enter, One man leave!'. Definitely the highlight of the film, but overall it's under rated. It's more commercial than the first two and less violent, but it's still original and crazy.
There was a Mad Max video game?
I used to own a Parker Brothers board game that felt inspired by the Mad Max franchise. It had the coolest miniatures for it of all the board games I owned in the '80s.
Yea don't play the one on the nes you literally can't drive to the top of the screen without running out of gas,no joke.
The mad Max game on PlayStation 4 overall was a great time! The first time that I heard “we don’t need another hero“ was the very first time I ever donated blood roughly 15 years ago. I believe that’s the only time I’ve ever heard it on the radio.
Thanks for the amazing video Matt. Big mad max fan ❤
My FAVORITE Mad Max of all of them!
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome is my second favourite Mad Max movie after the Road Warrior. It expands on the post apocalyptic world of the Road Warrior. It is highly influential, if you have ever played Fallout 3, the first town you come across looks suspiciously like Bartertown.
We dont need another hero, we dont need another way home
Tina Turner and Master Blaster made this movie my favorite in the series 👏😎🎉
Awesome video, gotta love mad max! Would love to see you cover return of the living dead 🙏
RotLD is on the list of upcoming retrospectives!
@@MattDraper excellent, I love your content keep up the fantastic work!!!
To me I have never understood why Max at the end of Thunderdome doesn’t just go back to the Oasis and live out his days there in a place with fresh water and I am assuming plant based food. If a person gets stuck out in the Australian outback they aren’t going to last long without water.
Sorry,...but I loved every second of it back then and these days as well!!!!!!
...and the iconic music and part of Tina as an actress in it was a extra curiosity making this movie so legendary 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
My favourite of the original 3 movies by far, and I would say probably one of the most influential stylistically of any post apocalyptic movie. It's costume and set design was emulated for decades afterwards by Mad Max Wannabees but never matched until Fury Road.
Neber understood the hate for this movie. I loved it.
That Tina Turner song is pure power ballad banger gold and Wasteland worthy.
I'm Surprise when most Say this is the Worst of the Bunch and then i heard it was the Favorite of the Nostalgic Critic himself.
Love your work and this franchise! As of late I haven't seen Beyond Thunderdome in its entirety but its definitely on my immediate watchlist, along with Fury Road. I have seen the first and second films, and the Road Warrior one of my favorite films of all time.
Could it be possible that you'll do a video on the Hitcher in the future? I've never been into slashers that much myself, but after seeing this film and your other analyses of the genre, it seems like a great fit. It very much seems to reinvent the genre it comes from, and it seems like a great allegory for an abusive parent. It feels like if the problematic parents in something like the Breakfast Club were materialized into a singular, terrifying psychopath. Long-winded, but just my general thoughts. Either which way, keep up the good work!
Thunderdome is cult classic. We used words still this day." 2 men enter 1 man leaves""we named a maximum security jail tank we named "thunderdome" " bust the deal, face the wheel" awsome!1
I think the events of Beyond Thunderdome take place AFTER the events of Fury Road. There is a small clue to this in the latest Furiosa movie when it shows the young Furiosa using the naval whistle to warn her people. It's the same whistle that Max uses to defeat Blaster in the Thunderdome fight. Perhaps Furiosa gave it to Max at the end of Fury Road as a symbol of gratuity and good luck when he left the Citadel. The same way Max gave the Feral Boy the music box in Road Warrior.
I gave MAD MAX 3 an A+, it is a great film and the very best of the series.
I remember thinking this was like an extended or directors cut of "Mad Max Thunderdome" well into adolescence.
I think Rich at RLM summed up the first 3 movies well: the first is civilization dying, the second is a dead civilization and the third is rebirth.
If this movie gave us anything, it gave us a cool idea of how Max would fight in a general sense. Possibly a moveset for a game of sorts.
This was a great movie. Mad Max isn't just about cars or chases, it's a post-apocalyptic world.
Wow, i had no idea he directed that story in the Twilight Zone movie. It's also my favorite of the movie.
Fury Road is the biggest, most action-packed, and cinematically accomplished film of the series, but it suffers greatly (in my worthless opinion) from the absence of Mel Gibson. Hardy did a good job, but Charlize easily stole the show, and for long-time Max fans like me, Hardy (while good) just didn't have Mel's likeability. For those who's first Max film was Fury Road however, I get why Hardy may be the more popular. But for that main reason, I'd have to rank my favorites as:
The Road Warrior
Fury Road
Beyond Thunderdome
Mad Max
Having said that, the series works best when watched in order, with the understanding that each film is its own unique animal, similar to the idea Tom Cruise had for the Mission: Impossible series. Originally, Cruise wanted each new Mission to have its own, unique, visual style, and he held true to that ambition for the first four M:I films. But when Ghost Protocol went through the roof, the next few films basically continued that same general aesthetic, because frankly Ghost Protocol nailed it.
Miller's Max saga has varied the look and feel of each subsequent film while retaining his signature (Kurosawa-inspired) action style, but Max 2: The Road Warrior, and Beyond Thunderdome largely kept the same general aesthetic, the same way Furiosa looks like it'll retain the general look of Fury Road. My hope is that they can get Charlize back for a final Max adventure, as I heard that Miller originally intended Fury Road for Gibson, who would end up romantically involved with Furiosa, bringing both of their characters full circle.
Great break down and analysis though - thanks for all the hard work!!!
I really liked Beyond Thunderdome. I found it stuck a great balance between action, humor, drama and, had some genuinely touching moments as well. Unlike a lot of 'modern' films, most of which are straight up stupid, annoying, preachy or all the above, MM BT is film I can watch over and over and not feel like my intelligence has been repeatedly insulted, or my time wasted. Same with Mad Max 1 and 2 as well. Of the 3, I like BT most because of its intelligence, humor and heart.
And im old enough now that I can say that I’ve seen all 4 in the theater; but I still look younger than Max in Beyond Thunderchicken.
Mad Max was filmed in 1977 in Melbourne and released in 1979 in Australia, Britain, Ireland and Japan.
For all the BTS tragedy, studio pressure, lighter tone, schizophrenic structure and underwhelming final chase, I still absolutely love "Thunderdome". It has just enough imagination and weirdness to work for me. And as much as some people dislike its more Spielbergian style, it's gorgeously shot. I'll *always* watch it. And unlike some, I actually love the Lost Children plot - which is a lot darker than people give it credit for, with Max basically wanting to take them over and keep them there, shooting to keep them from leaving - and him just coldly walking away as he does, etc. I think if they had gone a bit less overboard on the *humor* and made Aunty Entity and Master Blaster more serious villains, I think it would have made for a stronger piece in the series, but despite all of that, I just really enjoy the hell out of it. And when you keep in mind that Miller's always said that each Max film stands alone as its own story, almost as oral tales told by people in the wasteland who'd heard of Max - if you watch it from that perspective, it works, as I just imagine that someone's telling a more adventurous, lighter Max story they'd heard about. I usually find that the people who don't like "Thunderdome" are people who continually try to tie the three films together in a "timeline", as if it's a continuous story - and it's just not. "The Road Warrior" wasn't so much a sequel to "Mad Max", as a re-make of it, as Miller said it was basically the film he wanted to make in 1979 if he'd had the money. For all of its flaws, it's still entertaining as hell. It was also the first Max film I'd actually seen in the theater, in '85, as I'd only caught a glimpse of "The Road Warrior" when I snuck in to peak at it one time at the theater in '82 as a kid and then rented it on video and became obsessed with it - so I was already a Max fan as a kid when I saw "Thunderdome" - and seeing it on a giant screen in 1985 was just a blast.
Still one of my favorite Mad Max movies along with Road Warrior.
Spot on review!
I watched this movie again and its still entertaining to this day.
Peter Pan is a MASSIVE influence on Mad Max 3
Im not going to say this is better than RW but its my most watch of all the films including Fury Road. The world of Max is more explored with better ideas and i rank up.the final chase with the train with all the franchise chases.
Even more than RW, id say Thunderdome is more influential to other properties and copy cats from the change to gas wars to nuclear. I mean, Fallout is evidence of it.
And, it has Tina Turner which cements this entry as important in the entire franchise
A theory of mine from this and RW is that Fury Road, Tom Hardys Max is either the feral kid cosplaying as Max OR one of these kids who left, found a new tribe and took the mantle of Max
WAOS, just when i'm re-watching the trilogy this video cames out
great timing
This is my favorite one besides Fury Road
I thought We Don’t need another hero by Tina Turner and her performance in the movie are both positives ?I Like how Auntie respects Max and let’s him live
So as I sees it the storyline arc goes.. "Mad Max", " Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior", "Hope and Glory", "Fury Road", "Beyond Thunderdome" and I say Beyond Thunderdome because Guzzulene is virtually extinct by then...Looking at the vehicles in...and well it speaks for it self. Here's to more Movies, Fan made or not helping to fill in the gaps. Defiantly more centered on Max mind you. Cheers.
Wait a minute!! The best and wildest story in Twilight Zone : The Movie was directed by George Miller?!! I never knew that. But now that you look at the camera work, and the frenetic feel, it totally makes sense.
I like that max has ups and downs. The series wouldnt have very much suspense if he was untouchable. Which none of us are. And for thunder dome although max has been done dirty and lost it all, time and time again, he still has heart. And characteristics in the wasteland are probably hard to come by. Good on ya mate
It’s kind of like the same thing that happened to Army of Darkness, except I *really* like that film.
I always saw this one as "a day in the life of Max". Not everything in life is an epic moment.
I highly recommend playing mad max on the PS4 if you even kinda like this world,it was underrated when it came out but people are now giving it its props just like days gone,the first hour or so is slow in both but it gets really great after that.
I have all the Mad Max movies on DVD.
Love this movie. I know there's no chronology, but I see it as the last movie.
1) max is feral in RW and FR. It's a mid years max.
2) FR has the great desert. Is this the Pacific?
3) Entity is American. Did she grow up in the US. Did she cross that great desert?
4) what trials did Entity go through?
Heck. I want to see an Entity movie.
Well said my friend well said.
I think this film resonates differently if you saw it as a kid when it came out at the theater. Being a PG-13 film I was able to see this when I was about seven! This was a film about Hope in a post-apocalyptic world. Even the antagonists on the whole were more civilized in this film!! Everyone is down with rebuilding or having a future! One of the few films of its kind that offers hope to all parties. The ending felt poignant to me and still does. Even the song lended gravitas to this movie. It's definitely one of the movies that piqued my interest in film in general. This is definitely not the end of this series but the conclusion!!! The same with Return of The Jedi, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade!
this is like when rock
bands take themselves too seriously, and change their sound and identity
I love this movie. It was iconic in my teen years
"He was almost one of the last people you would expect to die in a helicopter accident."
Is there a list ranking these people somewhere?
Ask Landis.