Saturday, September 14, 2019

Dojo Classics - When Max Got Madder!


Like many folks I'd imagine, I saw the sequel The Road Warrior before I ever got the chance (or had the inclination or even knew about it to have the inclination) to see the George Miller original Mad Max. So to some extent the intensity of the original was undone (at least initially) by my knowledge of what came after.


But just a while back I got to see Mad Max again, after many many years and with the original Mel Gibson-voiced soundtrack (the other is totally offbeat) and I have to say it holds up remarkably well and I'll even go so far as to say better than its more famous successor. What is missing from The Road Warrior is an emotional story that has sufficient bite to hold the audience, despite several attempts to superficially tug at the heartstrings. Mad Max is loaded with that and more.



The world of The Road Warrior is so alien and so depraved that identifying with the survivors can be difficult. Not so with the immediately recognizable folks who populate Mad Max. The story of Max's family is a tragic one indeed, but the story builds to its somewhat inevitable conclusion with remarkable steadiness and with a patience which is oddly missing from the more spectacular sequel. Mad Max has real tension and even a few actual surprises. The Road Warrior is a bombastic adventure with lots of spills and even a few chills, but little suspense.


So there you go, a change of heart. Mad Max is for me at least (as of this writing) my favorite of the three Mad Max movies so far.


The overly sentimental and wildly over-the-top Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome was never in the running by the way. Though even it survived Tina's overacting and gave us some grand scenes and memorable characters.


UPDATE: Since I first composed this several years ago a whole new Mad Max movie has landed and let's put Fury Road into the context of the earlier movies. It's wildly kinetic and absorbing. Tom Hardy is a wonderful replacement for Mel Gibson and he gives Max that quixotic brew of cruelty and kindness which defines the character in the barren landscape of a world undone. So now Mad Max still wins, Road Warrior is second, this one a close third and sad old Thunderdome is dragging up the tail still and all.

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