OK, cutting and pasting a bunch to reply here, since Mad Max and The Road Warrior are pretty much some of my all-time favorite movies.
darksiege wrote:
explosions, loose plot, more explosions, even more explosions. I am going to enjoy the mind numbing drivel which is this movie.
In related news... Moose, I want to play Car Wars
Wow, there's a blast from the past. I may still have my copy of that game. Have either of you ever read the Harlan Ellison story that Jackson (kinda sorta) based the game on?
FarSky wrote:
Hell if I know...I've never seen a
Mad Max movie, because reasons. But the reports I've seen (like
this one) about the film say it's a prequel to the original trilogy.
I have to say, I'm pretty stupefied by this, although there are many more classic movies that I haven't seen as well. But, sheesh, you have to see them, man. What's funny, is that back in the day when they first came out and I saw The Road Warrior, I had no idea there was another one that came before it. Then I saw Mad Max, and it all came together marvelously. I might recommend seeing them in that order, in fact (and I could easily see skipping Thunderdome). At least the second half.
Edit: Oh, oh, and you have to see both versions of Mad Max. It wasn't until 2000, apparently, that the un-dubbed Australian version was released in the U.S., although I think I'd seen it earlier than that. Unfortunately, parts of it are pretty unintelligible unless you listen very closely.
More edit: Here's the story on why it didn't know it was a sequel in 1981:
Wikipedia wrote:
When Mad Max was released in 1980 in the United States, it did not receive a proper release from its distributor, American International Pictures. AIP was in the final stages of a change of ownership after being bought by Filmways, Inc. a year earlier. AIP's then-current problems affected the release of the film and its box office in the U.S., although Mad Max proved much more successful when released internationally. Warner Bros. decided to release Mad Max 2 in the United States, but they recognized that the first film was not popular in North America. Although the original Mad Max was becoming popular through cable channel showings, Warner Bros. decided to change the name of its sequel to The Road Warrior. The advertising for the film, including print ads, trailers, and TV commercials, did not refer to the Max character at all, and all shied away from the fact that the film was a sequel. For the majority of viewers, their first inkling of Road Warrior being a sequel to Mad Max was when they saw the black and white, archival footage from the previous film, during the prologue.
Which is even funnier, because I don't remember a prologue.
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Müs wrote:
FarSky wrote:
Hell if I know...I've never seen a
Mad Max movie, because reasons. But the reports I've seen (like
this one) about the film say it's a prequel to the original trilogy.
It has to go in between Mad Max and The Road Warrior.
Mad Max was just kind of a cop drama with explosions and megaviolence. The Road Warrior was when it got all post apocalyptic.
Yup. Mad Max was kind of about the beginning of the end, and the breakdown of society. The Road Warrior is fighting over who gets to eat the corpse of society.
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
FarSky wrote:
I believe Fury Road is a prequel.
An insertquel?
Yeah, it has to be after Mad Max. The sad part is that if it's before The Road Warrior, we won't get to see the Gyro Captain. I had heard he was on board for another film, but it wouldn't make sense chronologically for him to be in this one.
Man, now I'm getting all excited.