Movie Review – ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ – The Thirst is Real

Mad Max Fury Road

Directed by George Miller
Written by George Miller & Brendan McCarthy & Nick Lathouris
Cast: Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, Nicholas Hoult, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Josh Helman, Nathan Jones, Zoë Kravitz, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Riley Keough, Abbey Lee, Courtney Eaton, John Howard, Richard Carter, iOTA, Angus Sampson, Jennifer Hagan, Megan Gale, Melissa Jaffer, Richard Norton
Soundtrack: Junkie XL

Among the ultimate compliments I can pay this film is that after leaving the theater I had an insatiable desire to make my car’s engine ROOAAARRR.

And so I did.  As often as I could.

Made it home in record time.

Anyway, if you’ve seen the trailer for this movie (and if you haven’t, just click the picture above), you might wonder if the film can possibly live up to its own brilliantly edited preview.  I can say with certainty that Mad Max: Fury Road does live up to its trailer, and perhaps even surpasses the expectations it sets.

What I cannot say for certain is whether this movie is a sequel or a reboot, a question that simultaneously does and does not matter.

One of the beauties of any Mad Max film is that you need not see the previous installment in order to understand the movie you’re currently watching.  However, there are little rewards for being caught up, so I was glad I watched the original three films before heading down Fury Road.  There aren’t too many explicit callbacks in this new Mad Max, but there are a lot of subtle echoes that fans of the franchise will appreciate (not to mention Hugh Keays-Byrne, aka “The Toecutter” himself from the 1979 original, plays the main baddie in this one, although it’s definitely an entirely separate character; no confusion here, unlike when Bruce Spence played two different pilots in two different movies).

I know that George Miller originally wanted to make this film in the early 2000s, starring Mel Gibson (before a lot of things fell through, making this the Duke Nukem Forever of action movies for a while), so that fact would suggest sequel, but almost everything else points to a reboot, especially “Max” himself; and not just the fact that it’s a different actor, but the character as written on the page.  Tom Hardy’s “Max” has definitely had more of his humanity stripped away than Mel’s ever did.  I guess this isn’t a bad thing, it’s just an adjustment for anyone already familiar with the franchise.

Other than that key character difference though, my main criticisms of this movie are its length and its questionable protagonist.  To be sure, I wouldn’t say that Fury Road ever drags or feels boring, it’s just a little bit of an ice cream headache by the end of its two hour running time (in comparison, Mad Max 1 and 2 are about 90 minutes, and Beyond Thunderdome is around 100 minutes).  And as far as ambiguous protagonists go, Fury Road isn’t nearly as bad as, say, The Hobbit trilogy, but there are some long stretches where Max feels like just a passenger in this story (regardless of whether or not he’s physically driving).  When your title character doesn’t behave like a title character, well, it just creates a little bit of a disconnect.

But hey!  Who cares about all that mamble jamble!?

All you really want to know is whether this movie will totally rock your socks off, right!?

Well, let me tell you, it will.

Whatever minor weaknesses Fury Road has in story and characterization are more than made up for by the visuals.  It’s the Maddest Max of them all; equal parts aesthetic beauty and visceral brutality.  Quite frankly, in terms of pure cinematic grandeur, it’s the biggest and boldest thing I’ve seen since Interstellar.  Not only do I want to see this movie again, I want to see it on the largest screen I can find.

You’ve got to hand it to George Miller.  The man knows how to capture desolate places in the most gorgeous way possible, and, despite the fact that Fury Road is basically one-long-full-blast-high-octane-action-scene, I hope it gets some love from the Academy come Oscar season.  Sure, it’s not likely to earn a Best Picture nod, but in terms of cinematography, costume and production design, editing, sound, and visual effects, it deserves top marks.  It’s especially impressive given that it “only” cost $150 million, seeing as how many of the biggest movies these days are being made for well more than that.

And did I mention the ridiculous cars?  If you thought the vehicle design in Furious 7 was gratuitously awesome, wait til you see what Fury Road has in store for you.

My ultimate point is that going to the movies is an expensive proposition these days, and more and more people are becoming more and more picky about what they actually pay money to see in theaters.  Well, my friends, Fury Road is definitely one that’s worth the cost, because this Mad Max might just go down as The Greatest Show of 2015.  It’s an incredible spectacle.

And, if you’re someone who doesn’t just want an “experience”, but something deeper, there’s plenty of material for you to work with here.  I just didn’t pay it all that much mind, what with all the explosions and everything.

Is it the best Mad Max of them all?  Hard to say.  I think The Road Warrior will always be my favorite, but maybe the question doesn’t even matter.

All that does matter is that you see this movie as George Miller intended, because it’s totally worth it.

“I live.  I die.  I live again.”

Rating: ★★★★½

 

P.S.
Speaking of $200 million movies, there’s almost a handful of nouveau X-Men alumni in the cast: Nicholas Hoult (Young Beast), Josh Helman (‘Lil Willie Stryker), Zoë Kravitz (Angel Salvadore), and even Hugh Jackman’s personal double, Taris Tyler, had some involvement.  This is totally irrelevant to Max Max: Fury Road, but as an avid moviegoer it was definitely something I noticed.

Carry on.

Twofer Movie Review: ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’ and ‘Godzilla’ (2014) – Why So Boring?

I never anticipated that I’d be formally reviewing these two movies, as I’m trying to stick to ground less traveled here, but I had the…experience…of seeing both this past week, and they coaxed almost the exact same reaction out of me: disappointment.

X-Men: Days of Future Past and the new Godzilla are the latest members of a growing and increasingly wearisome club of “big” summer movies whose trailers make them look fantastic, but the movies themselves leave much to be desired (perhaps the most notable example of this from 2013 is Man of Steel, though at least the first half is worth watching).  I understand movies are a business, but at this point I’m just tired of all the lies.

So, here I am, reviewing these films that many, many people have seen already, but I want to warn others while they’re still at risk of wasting their time and money.

 

Directed by Bryan Singer
Written by Simon Kinberg
(Screenplay and Story), Jane Goldman and Matthew Vaughn (Story)
Cast: Hugh Jackman, James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, Halle Berry, Nicholas Hoult, Ellen Page, Peter Dinklage, Shawn Ashmore, Omar Sy, Evan Peters, Josh Helman, Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart, Famke Janssen, James Marsden, Lucas Till, Daniel Cudmore, Booboo Stewart, Michael Lerner
Soundtrack: John Ottman

I had such high hopes…

Before I get too ahead of myself here, I will point out two scenes in this movie that are quite well done, without spoiling too much (not that it really matters):
1. An action scene that takes place in a famous government building where our heroes have to break someone out.  It is the best scene in the film (though not worth the price of admission), and makes great use of Quicksilver (Marvel’s version of The Flash, if you don’t know).
2. A more poignant scene where the two Xaviers (past and future) are talking to one another.  It’s the only scene that really connects on an emotional level to any significant degree.

That’s about it.  Two scenes.

The basic premise of this movie (we need to fix the past in order to save the future) is interesting enough to keep you going for the lengthy running time; I was never so bored that I just wanted to go to sleep, but there’s a substantial gap between being passively interested and actively invested, and this movie consistently fails to fill it.  If I was so inclined, I could complain about lots of things like plot holes, anachronisms, and various other X-Men problems that I know nothing about, but even before all of that, this movie constantly fails to be compelling.  I was expecting Days of Future Past to be big and emotional; it is neither of those.

Whatever needs to happen to advance the story happens in short order, leaving very little room for dramatic tension.  We need to find the professor?  We find the professor.  We need to find Eric?  We find Eric.  We need them to reconcile?  They reconcile in two minutes (even though “they’ve never been further apart”).  And so on and so forth.  Not only that, but they couldn’t seem to figure out an interesting way of delivering mass exposition, which leads to more tedium as a viewer.

Now, again, I know very little about X-Men, and I’ve certainly never read the Days of Future Past storyline in the comics, so I can’t tell you how good of an adaptation the movie is, but, you know what?  I know very little about Captain America and S.H.I.E.L.D., and I really enjoyed The Winter Soldier.  I know very little about Iron Man, and all three of those movies are fantastic (Iron Man 2 is actually my favorite of the trilogy).  All four of the movies I just mentioned work as movies first and worry about the other comic book stuff later, therefore I recommend all of them, but I cannot recommend this new X-Men film (outside of a Netflix/Redbox sort of viewing if you’re that curious).  X-Men: First Class had its problems, and I did not recommend seeing it in a theater when it came out, but there are at least some compelling storylines and interesting cinematic goings-on to get you moderately invested; it’s not a total flop.  I can’t say the same for Days of Future Past.  Ordinarily I’d offer up some sort of suggestion on how to improve the film, but I honestly don’t know about this one outside of having a completely different creative team leading the charge.

Frankly, and this will sound harsh, I think Bryan Singer himself might be the biggest problem here.  Now, he did write and direct the first two X-Men films, and they’re solid, I guess (it’s been a while since I’ve watched them), but on the whole I think his career path is much closer to M. Night Shyamalan than his hero, Richard Donner.  I suppose based on his original X-Men work he was able to wrangle a lot of creative control for Superman Returns, and that movie suffers many of the same problems as Days of Future Past.  Granted, I really enjoyed it when I first saw it in theaters, but I was a younger man, and highly nostalgic for Superman I and II; watching it again though, that movie’s a mess (Lex Luthor wants real estate again, really?), and a good chunk of the running time simply isn’t compelling.  I can understand the studio’s desire to return to the guy that put X-Men on the cinematic map, but, at this point, it seems that Bryan Singer is damaged goods, at least for superhero movies.

★★☆☆☆

 

Directed by Gareth Edwards
Written by Max Borenstein
(Screenplay), Dave Callaham (Story)
Cast: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, Juliette Binoche, CJ Adams, Sally Hawkins, David Strathairn, Richard T. Jones, Victor Rasuk, Jared Keeso
Soundtrack: Alexandre Desplat

The most common comment (and I uttered it myself many a time) I heard in anticipation of Godzilla was, “Bryan Cranston’s in it,” and that is a true statement; Bryan Cranston is in the new Godzilla, and he’s really good in it when he’s in it, but he’s not in it nearly enough to save it.

This movie started off with a lot of promise.  In the first 15 minutes or so, we see that Bryan Cranston plays an engineer at a nuclear power plant in Japan who’s concerned about a repeating pattern of seismic tremors (whose origins we as the audience already know something about) that might cause his plant some trouble.  Sure enough, he’s right, and the plant suffers a terrible accident as a result of a mysterious earthquake, and, of course, this comes at a great personal cost to our beloved engineer.

BOOM.  That’s a great intro, and a great way to get your audience invested into your movie.  BUT, they then proceed to almost immediately scrap that for a shift in perspective to a different character.  Bryan Cranston’s engineer comes back for a little bit, and you find out what he’s been doing for the past 15 years and it leads to the next plot point, but after that he’s done.  See ya never.

This is my first big problem with this film.  They get you emotionally invested, but then throw it away and give you characters that you just don’t care about; you can’t care about them, at least not in the same way.  The engineer’s character’s arc coulda/shoulda/woulda made up the whole movie, or at least the first half of it.  But jettisoning it so quickly into the run time (no matter who was playing him, really) was a huge mistake in the writing; and replacing him with such boring other characters compounds the problem further.  Let him hang around a lot longer, and you’ve instantly got a better movie; hands down.

My second big issue is creature design; not so much for Godzilla, he looks alright, I guess, but the other creatures (this is not a spoiler; they’re in the trailer if you look close).  They just look so generic, like they got focus-grouped to death or something.  I don’t know, they just don’t look interesting or very creative.  This is where maybe a little more liaising with Toho would have reaped huge benefits.  I mean I know this is a ‘murican Godzilla movie, and I appreciate that they moved the story along more so than a standard reboot, but when your film features giant monsters, those monsters need to be engaging, and they almost completely failed in that respect.

My third and final problematic issue with Godzilla is too much tease and not enough payoff.  Say what you want about Pacific Rim (I’m not that high on it myself, but it’s okay), but you can’t deny that they went all out when it came to showing you the monsters.  Now I’m not saying Godzilla has to be that explicit, but the title of the movie is GODZILLA.  A Godzilla movie should have the payoff of seeing Godzilla doing Godzilla things, and he does, eventually, but even when it’s an all-out brawl, they still cut away and tease you in the midst of it.  It doesn’t come as a fully-satisfying payoff; it’s just more frustration at the end of an already frustrating movie.

What’s also frustrating is that they gave this movie to a promising young director, Gareth Edwards (not to be confused with Gareth Evans, who’s making the fantastic Raid series), whose first feature was also a monster movie called Monsters that appears to be much more worthwhile than Godzilla.

Now, is Godzilla a better movie than X-Men: Days of Future Past?  Yes.  It at least gives you an initial emotional connection, and though you’re largely waiting for something to happen, it does draw you back in a couple of times with legitimate suspense (something X-Men particularly fails to do); not to mention the visuals are much better on the whole.  But it’s not good enough to warrant a better rating, unfortunately.

★★☆☆☆