![]() And gloriously lacking in Political Correctness. Scott, you call the second half of this movie sillier than the first half but really it's all a campy hoot. Tina Turner and Angry Anderson in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. If the promised fourth film ever does get made (with Tom Hardy signed on to take over the part of Max), I only hope it's a return to its R-rated roots rather than a reprise of the quality of this one. It feels like a big studio trying to cash in on the success of a small franchise. While the second Mad Max film felt like a natural extension of the first and actually surpassed it in quality, Beyond Thunderdome is worse in every way. This doesn't really hurt the story, but is indicative of the general sloppiness in the way the movie was put together. The prologue to Mad Max 2 describes it happening in exactly that manner and makes no mention of nuclear war. Always before this movie the end of the world was described as a general decaying of society because of the scarcity of fuel. The backstory for this installment includes stories of a nuclear holocaust, which contradicts both the previous two movies and interviews that George Miller had given before its release. It's odd because he's playing a completely different character and no attempt is made to disguise his appearance. An odd bit of casting is the return of Bruce Spence, who also appeared in The Road Warrior. Turner wasn't actually as bad as I remember, but her mere presence does add a certain camp value to the proceedings. Gibson does another fine job as Max, although the character feels a little flat this time, but more due to the writing than his performance. The city of Bartertown also feels as though its been around longer than the thirteen years would account for. The kids are fairly annoying and from the story of their experiences seem to have been living out there for longer than the timeline would allow. Once Max is tied to that horse and sent out into the desert however, it starts to lose its way. It starts strong and right up until the battle in the Thunderdome arena it's fairly entertaining. Miller gets a co-director credit because he staged the action sequences.Īlthough this is the worst of the three films, it does still have some entertaining moments. He co-created the franchise with George Miller and reportedly Miller lost interest in making Thunderdome after the death of his friend, which is why George Ogilvie was brought on as director, where Miller had directed the first two. I wonder how much of the weakening of the film was caused by the death of producer Byron Kennedy, who died while location scouting for the film. His arm tightens and flops before rising just long enough to flip its middle finger, before falling limp. Later, when the same henchman dies, the camera focuses on his clenched fist. It's almost as if he's doing a Coyote impression from an old Road Runner cartoon. Instead of dying however, he simply lands on the front of the train covered in soot. When Aunty's main henchman drives in front of the train/truck hybrid that Max is driving, Max crashes into the back of the henchman's car, causing it to explode. This is particularly noticeable in the final, and only, car chase. Because of this, the violence is toned way down and some campy, cartoonish humor is injected. In order, I assume, to appeal to a broader audience and to suck in the teen audience, the filmmaker's opted to make this installment rated PG-13 instead of the R rating of the first two movies. Max gets caught up in their power struggle before finding himself in the desert where he meets up with the cast of Lord of the Flies in the more silly last half of the story. After his belongings are stolen, he ends up in Bartertown, a city powered by pig shit where a battle for control is taking place between Master Blaster (a technologically savvy midget named Master carried on the shoulders of a strong, but dumb giant named Blaster) and Aunt Entity (Tina Turner in a chain mail dress slit as far up as a PG-13 rating will allow). Max is still wandering the wasteland on his own. This infusion of money and production by a major studio gives the film a slightly more polished look, but is inferior to the previous two films in every other way.Īlthough the timeline is again never made clear, general opinion, based on the novelization and interviews with the writers, have made it clear that the story begins some 13 years after The Road Warrior, which was set roughly 5 years after the original. and featured not only returning and now bona fide star Mel Gibson, but also American songstress Tina Turner, who co-starred and sang the opening and closing songs. Where the first movie was made on the cheap with Australian money and featured a cast of unknowns, Beyond Thunderdome was produced by American Studio Warner Bros. Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome is the third and, so far, final installment in the Mad Max series. Mel Gibson in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.
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