Fun Facts about the Doof Warrior and his actor Sean Hape:

kukkiisart:

- His eyes were really pasted over with make up
- Thus, he didn’t see anything, often for hours
- Being bling, he had to be guided around the set several times
- He was up on the stage even during the high speed chases, no fakes
- The guitar does indeed shoot flames, it’s not CGI
- Its base was made from two bedpans and weighs 60 kg
- Which is why it was hold by strings; it was impossible to carry
- Sean mostly played Led Zeppelin and ACDC in the morning
- When he got tired later on, he just shredded, which everybody on set loved
- He tried to make the Doof Warrior like “Keith Richards, with double the drugs, lost for six months in the desert”

(via bonehandledknife)

strangetheknowing:

enchanted-snail:

soysaucebase:

When all your war boys are on point.

sereniv theliamthing

“The approach that Keays-Byrne took when portraying the Immortan made a huge impression on those playing his acolytes, even before filming started. Nicholas Hoult, who portrays Nux, says, “Hugh was also referred to on this set as ‘Daddy.’ He went round for the first build-up of pre-production putting big posters everywhere. He even got some of them in places where you wouldn’t expect it, like the top of the stunt room gym… there would be posters of his face, saying, ‘Daddy loves you.’ It was like all of us War Boys were his strange family and kids. And we completely worship him. Hugh’s a fantastic actor to work with. I understand why those kids growing up here would believe every word he said and want to die for him.”

- Abbie Bernstein, The Art of Mad Max Fury Road

(Source: vine.co, via cthulhu-with-a-fez)

  • Me: IDK Mad Max isnt my thing, I don't really get it.
  • MRA Activists: THE NEW MAD MAX MOVIE IS FEMINIST PROPAGANDA I WAS TRICKED INTO WATCHING!!!
  • Me: *immediately looks up Mad Max session times*

dignifiedrice:

Current Me: I came back in time four weeks to tell you … you’re about to watch your new favorite movie. 

Past Me: ‘K. 

Current Me: It’s the fourth installment in a series. 

Past Me: … Okay … 

Current Me: It’s an action movie about cars, essentially a two hour car chase scene. 

Past Me: But I hate – 

Current Me: Yeah, I know. Listen. It stars the dude who played Bane in that shitty Batman movie. It was directed by the same guy who helmed such classics as Happy Feet, and Happy Feet 2. 

Past Me: I – 

Current Me: His most recent live-action film? Babe 2: Pig in the City. 

(via bonehandledknife)

  • *puts on feminist media critique hat*: I'm glad that there was no kiss or forced romance between Furiosa and Max.
  • *puts on filthy shipping hat*: I want them to touch each other's scars with trembling fingers, run reverential hands over the other's body, and fuck tenderly underneath cyan post apocalyptic stars as they reach tentatively into one another's souls in the hope, the faintest thread of hope, that they might find redemption there.

bonehandledknife:

strangetheknowing:

enchanted-snail:

soysaucebase:

When all your war boys are on point.

sereniv theliamthing

“The approach that Keays-Byrne took when portraying the Immortan made a huge impression on those playing his acolytes, even before filming started. Nicholas Hoult, who portrays Nux, says, “Hugh was also referred to on this set as ‘Daddy.’ He went round for the first build-up of pre-production putting big posters everywhere. He even got some of them in places where you wouldn’t expect it, like the top of the stunt room gym… there would be posters of his face, saying, ‘Daddy loves you.’ It was like all of us War Boys were his strange family and kids. And we completely worship him. Hugh’s a fantastic actor to work with. I understand why those kids growing up here would believe every word he said and want to die for him.”

- Abbie Bernstein, The Art of Mad Max Fury Road

Reminder that this was the same guy that originally said to Miller during ‘Mad Max’, “Hey I’ll bring a couple actor friends to you to shoot that movie.” A couple days later Keays-Byrne showed up with a legit motorcycle gang formed from various actor friends. The Force is strong with this one.

Also: remember that costuming post I made?

Check out the wrap around Joe: the same fabric. I’m not sure either of his sons or any other males wear it, with the exception of the bit of wrap that Nux grabbed off Capable and ended up wrapping around his wrist.

(Source: vine.co)

thewightknight:
““Charlize is a real warrior,” director George Miller declares. “She was the one who said, ‘I’m going to shave my head’ and she took on the 10-pound (4.5-kilogram) mechanical arm for the whole shoot and rolled around in the dust in...

thewightknight:

“Charlize is a real warrior,” director George Miller declares. “She was the one who said, ‘I’m going to shave my head’ and she took on the 10-pound (4.5-kilogram) mechanical arm for the whole shoot and rolled around in the dust in fight scenes so it all felt real. I remember driving back to base camp one night as the sun was going down and I was in the back of the War Rig watching her drive and thinking, ‘If there was an apocalypse, I’d be glad she’s here!’”

(x)

(via im-lost-but-not-gone)

lies:

Favorite world-building elements: Realistic depiction of trauma

One of the things that makes Fury Road so immersive is the way it presents the result of violence. Unlike movies in which characters shrug off what in the real world would be horrific injuries*, the inhabitants of the Wasteland experience the full effect of the bad things that happen to them.

Some examples:

  • Angharad’s graze wound. When Max shoots The Splendid Angharad in the leg, we see a close-up of the injury. When Furiosa asks her how it feels, she says, “It hurts,” and it apparently is a factor in her subsequently slipping from the war rig and being crushed. In the world of Fury Road, even a relatively minor injury can have severe consequences.
  • Avoidance of gratuitous on-screen gore. At the same time, the film avoids depicting injuries just to be shocking. When Angharad is dying and Immortan Joe orders her cut open to try to save the fetus, we see the scene unfold – but we don’t see the actual procedure. The movie only shows enough for us to understand what’s happening. That restraint reflects a maturity in how the film approaches trauma that contrasts with the adolescent gross-out porn of other action movies.
  • Realistic emotional responses. The inhabitants of the Wasteland carry both literal and figurative scars of past experiences. Angharad has a history of self-harm. Max exhibits a degree of PTSD that leaves him unable to speak. I ship Max/Furiosa, and there’s a side of me that wants to believe there were sexy fun times in the back of the war rig during that one chance Nux and Capable had, but I appreciate that the film respects its characters and what they’ve been through enough not to force them into emotionally false situations.
  • Furiosa’s chest wound. When Furiosa is stabbed with the gear-shift dagger, we see the pain of it in her face. Especially given how stoic she’s been up to this point, the increasingly desperate look in her eyes during subsequent events shows the effect it is having on her. Unlike less-realistic movies, where such an injury might lead to a) a quick clichéd death scene with a few coughs of blood, an exhortation or two, and boom, dead, or conversely b) lots of ass-kicking followed by a wince and some light-hearted banter in the denouement, Furiosa’s injury follows a steady and clinically realistic progression through increasing distress and eventual loss of breath function due to tension pneumothorax. That the true emotional climax of the movie centers on an act of healing, as Max decompresses her chest and then treats her subsequent exsanguination with a transfusion of his own blood, is a beautiful inversion of action-movie tropes.

George Miller financed the original Mad Max with his earnings as an ER doctor, and made the movie in part to explore the effects of trauma on people who encounter lots of it. Although he hasn’t worked as a physician in many years, his experience and willingness to hold the movie to a high standard adds greatly to the believability of Fury Road.

*No disrespect to Holy Grail. That shit’s hilarious.

(via bonehandledknife)

scuttlebuttstuch:

We are War Boys! War boys!
Kami-crazy War Boys! War boys!
Fukushima kami-crazy War Boys! War boys!

Today we’re headin’ to Gastown! Gastown!
Today we’re haulin’ Aqua-Cola! Aqua-Cola!
Today we’re haulin’ produce! Produce!
And today we’re drinkin’ Mother’s Milk! Mother’s Milk!

(via bonehandledknife)

nautilusing:

OKAY BUT NO LISTEN TO THE MAD MAX THEME IN ITS ENTIRETY BECAUSE IT IS FOR REAL A THING OF UNPARALLELED AWE-INSPIRING RAMPAGING TRIUMPHANT PERFECTION

the fucking RAGE DRUMS and the P.T. Barnum-esque fuckin’ CIRCUS MUSIC - like, you know shit is going to get CRAY when that comes in - and it’s just this continuous pounding build that leads into these STRINGS that are so incongruously fucking BEAUTIFUL and hope-stirring and victorious and sure you might be racing straight to your fucking death on this hell-road but goddamn it you’re going down swinging

I MEANNNNNNNNN

this movie did a lot - a lot - of things right but holy shit son

this soundtrack is transcendent

Like…thirty seconds into the soundtrack and I’m going “BRING ME MY WHEEL, WARBOYS, AND LOAD UP THE RIG.”

Hell.

Yes.

(via bonehandledknife)