It's kind of a soft reboot. This Max went through some things the old Max did (i.e. he's got the leg brace), but this Max's interpretation of being a police officer/road warrior would have to differ a bit from old Max because even the elderly in Fury Road seem to have only heard about pre-apocalypse from their parents when they were kids.Aussie and I finally got out to see Mad Max:Fury Road last week. I liked it a lot. I didn't love it like I thought I would. I thought there would be more to it. I mean it was action-packed, but kind of boring. I've seen all of the movies in the franchise starting with Mad Max when I was about 10 years old. I had expectations that it would some how tie into the older movies, but it never quite did. It wasn't exactly a reboot either. Is this some middle tale where Max isn't old yet? It didn't feel like the same Max. Not that I expected Mel Gibson to reprise the role, but the character was weirdly different and yet the same. I left not quite knowing what to make of the movie exactly. I don't regret seeing it in the theatre. I'll probably get it on Blu Ray when it comes out and watch it again.
On another note, it amuses me that Nux was the kid from About A Boy.
There's a lot to Fury Road, but the way it's done is very hands-off when it comes to the characters actually talking about it.
Can't wait to go again Sunday. While it's definitely one of the best action movies in a long time, it's not just about that for me--I say that less to anyone in this thread, more to a friend who doesn't want to see it because she thinks it's going to be like a Michael Bay film (rrg). I love this entire package of performances and this story being told through visuals and background elements, and how it informs on this world they're living in and what the characters may have gone through ... little things like Tom Hardy grunting, but you know what he means by it, or Toast giving the other wives a look as she loads Big Boy, as if they've forgotten they each had a life before Immortan Joe took each into his prison, or how different characters will misuse words and phrases because the real meanings have been lost over the years, or how the elderly characters romanticize the 21st century as a time when everyone had all the food they wanted and got to star in their own TV shows, or the look on Nux's face when Joe says he'll take him to Valhalla and everything that means to him as a war boy ... and I could go on and on, as my wife and I have to each other.
My complaint on the Blu Ray is that if you want the Blu Ray, you have to buy the DVD, and the 3D Blu Ray, and the Ultraviolet. This happened to me with some other movie, but it's annoying. Don't need all the junk.[DOUBLEPOST=1434769609,1434769466][/DOUBLEPOST]
That makes more sense of something I heard on the Cinema Snob midnight screening, paraphrasing "Max tells this story and Max doesn't strike me as a bullshitter."According to George Miller, they're all post-apocalypse legends of a man called Mad Max. It may not even be the same man, but all these stories are attributed to him.