Tag: mad-max

  • The ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ Honest Trailer Mocks ‘Tom Hardly in the Movie’

    Oh, what a diss. What a lovely diss! “Mad Max: Fury Road” — aka “a two-hour game of Mario Kart from hell” from the grandpa director of “Happy Feet and “Babe: Pig in the City” — just got itself a worthy Honest Trailer. Because even great movies deserve a few digs.

    The Screen Junkies video mocks the movie for being short on plot, and set in a world short on fuel and water where everyone drives gas-guzzlers and wastes all the water.

    “And there’s a guy named Max in it too,” they offer as an aside. “He just kind of hangs out. Tom Hardy *kind of* stars as Mad Max, the role Mel Gibson got too mad to play. He’s a man of few words, but many grunts.” In the end, the actor is billed as “Tom Hardly in the Movie.” (Ouch) They also credit “Bane With a Sleep Apnea Machine” and ‘Real Housewives of the Citadel,” and they may be right in suggesting the real winners of the movie are the makers of silver food mist.

    Check it out:


    “Mad Max: Fury Road” is out on DVD/Blu-ray this coming Tuesday, September 1.

    Watch the trailer.

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  • This ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’-‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’ Mashup Is Perfect, Dammit

    Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Mad Max: Fury Road
    As both “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” and “Mad Max: Fury Road” have proven, females are strong as hell. Now, one enterprising YouTuber has taken that concept to its logical conclusion, and created a mashup of the Netflix series and the action flick.

    Featuring the auto-tuned “Kimmy” viral video spliced with footage from “Fury Road,” the clip works surprisingly well, singing the virtues of the badass women who escaped the clutches of a sadistic madman who kept them trapped for years (a plotline that can apply to both the show and the movie). Kimmy’s (Ellie Kemper) story meshes perfectly with that of Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron), who similarly breaks free from Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne) to become Unbreakable Imperator Furiosa.

    Sadly, there’s no Titus (Tituss Burgess) stand-in for the ladies of “Fury Road” (maybe the next mashup video can feature Tom Hardy‘s Max belting out a special apocalypse-themed rendition of “Peeno Noir”?), but we think their new theme song is perfect all the same. Check out the awesome clip below, dammit.

    Photo credit: YouTube

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  • ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ Director George Miller Teases Sequel

    Fans flocked to theaters this weekend to see “Mad Max: Fury Road,” a reboot of the classic apocalyptic action series, dropping a collective $44.4 million at the domestic box office on the long-in-the-works flick. Based on those numbers, it seems that a sequel to the reenergized franchise is a no-brainer, and now, director George Miller himself has stated that audiences will be seeing more “Max” in the future.

    Miller, who just joined Twitter this weekend, didn’t mince words with his first tweet ever, thanking fans and critics alike for the love, and revealing that a follow-up is indeed in the works. “We had a lot of fun making it..and there’s more Max to come,” Miller wrote on Sunday evening.

    While there’s no greenlight yet from studio Warner Bros., an official announcement is all but a certainty. Dan Fellman, president of domestic distribution at Warner Bros., said in a statement that the studio was pleased with the film’s opening weekend, and envisioned the movie having “some long legs” in theaters, with strong returns rolling in for weeks to come.

    That result should guarantee Miller and co. another shot at box office glory with a “Fury Road” follow-up. Here’s hoping it doesn’t take another 30 years to get off the ground.

    [via: George Miller]

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  • Why Was ‘Pitch Perfect 2’ Such a Shocking Box Office Smash?

    box office pitch perfect 2It was supposed to be close.

    Pitch Perfect 2” and “Mad Max: Fury Road” were both expected to open in the mid-40s, with the a cappella musical having a slight edge. In fact, “Mad Max” did open in line with predictions, grossing an estimated $44.4 million. But “PP2” opened with an estimated $70.3 million — about $15 million more than the most optimistic projections, and about $5 million more than the original 2012 movie earned during its entire North American run.

    This sort of thing almost never happens. But perhaps better than asking how “PP2” became such a runaway success might be asking why everyone so grossly underestimated its chances.

    Some possible reasons:

    It’s the women, stupid.

    Both the industry and the pundits who watch it have a long history of accepting the conventional wisdom that female-driven movies don’t open big, and that female moviegoers don’t buy tickets. Every time a movie comes along that proves this notion wrong (from “Bridesmaids” to “Cinderella“), it’s considered a fluke, rather than evidence of an underserved audience responding to one of the few well-executed movies tailored to its interests. (As it turned out, the “PP2” audience was 75 percent women and girls.) So the Hollywood studios simply doesn’t make many such movies because it assumes they’ll fail, and on the rare occasion that they do make one, they’re always surprised when it’s a hit.

    A corollary to the notion that women don’t sell (or buy) tickets is the idea that overseas audiences aren’t interested, either. But “PP2” had already opened at No. 1 in Australia (perhaps not coincidentally, home of Aussie native and “PP2” star Rebel Wilson), so pundits shouldn’t have been shocked that it would do proportionally well here, either. Considering how foreign grosses now drive Hollywood’s filmmaking choices, maybe the studios should recognize that the international success of a movie like “PP2” isn’t any more of a fluke than it’s domestic success.

    The off-screen fanbase.

    The first “Pitch Perfect” may have been just a modest hit in theaters, but it had a huge life beyond its theatrical run, thanks to word of mouth that has only escalated over the past three years. It sold $100 million worth of DVDs (this at a time when the DVD market is supposedly dead), spawned a smash soundtrack, and was replayed endlessly on premium cable. No doubt these were all factors in greenlighting a sequel, but still, it’s not apparent from the first film’s ticket sales alone how large and avid a fanbase the Bellas have. It’s too big to be dismissed as just a cult.

    The execution.

    Perhaps pundits saw the other female-driven movies currently playing — notably, “Hot Pursuit” and “The Age of Adaline” — and thought the market was already saturated. But “Adaline” isn’t a comedy, and audiences didn’t much care for “Hot Pursuit.” If moviegoers were hungry for a comedy that actually delivers — no matter whether it’s male- or female-oriented — “PP2” had the market all to itself. The movie earned a very high A- at CinemaScore, suggesting that audience are delighted and that word-of-mouth is strong.

    The talent.

    Wilson’s Fat Amy was the first film’s breakout character, and the fearless comic actress ups the ante this time. Co-star Anna Kendrick is relentlessly charming on and off-screen, and she’s been tirelessly promoting the film in magazine interviews and talk-show segments that have gone viral. And director/producer/co-star Elizabeth Banks confirms the savvy that marked her production of the first film. A lot of Hollywood was wondering whether she could pull it off and turn her first directing project into a hit — again, largely because Hollywood is always fascinated when a woman steps behind the camera, since it happens so seldom — but now, you can bet she’ll be asked to helm “Pitch Perfect 3” in a heartbeat.

    Indeed, rather than being stunned by the success of “PP2,” we should be marveling that “Mad Max” did as well as it did. After all, it’s the sequel to a franchise whose last installment came out 30 years ago, its lead isn’t a proven box office draw (sorry, Tom Hardy fans, but it’s true), it’s a hard R that’s extreme violence is surely keeping some viewers away (“PP2” is rated a more welcoming PG-13), it’s opening against a still-strong “Avengers: Age of Ultron” (which came in third this weekend, with an estimated $38.8 million), and while critics have raved about “Fury Road,” audiences haven’t been as impressed (it earned a so-so B+ from CinemaScore). For a movie to have all those strikes against it and still open in the mid-40s is a stellar achievement.

    One nice paradox: For months, this column has noted that the studios’ strategy of counterprogramming almost never works. Just because a testosterone-heavy action film is opening doesn’t mean that women will feel compelled to come to the multiplex as well if a female-driven film is opening as well. (Last week’s lackluster debut of “Hot Pursuit,” opposite the still-massive “Ultron,” bore this out.) This weekend’s results, however, show that counterprogramming can work if both movies are well-made and compelling enough. But it’s the guy-friendly “Mad Max: Fury Road” that was the counterprogramming, while “Pitch Perfect 2” was the main event.
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  • Charlize Theron Facts: 12 Things You (Probably) Don’t Know About the ‘Mad Max’ Star

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    If you look up glam in the dictionary, there’s probably a picture of Charlize Theron waiting for you there. When you think about, it’s hard to believe that little Charlize went from growing up on a small farm in South Africa to starring huge Hollywood movies like “Mad Max.”

    From her ballet dancing days to her first language, here are 12 things you probably don’t know about Charlize Theron.
    [Source: IMDb, People]

  • The New ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ Trailer Is Basically ‘Fast and Furious: Apocalypse Edition’ (VIDEO)

    mad max: fury road
    A new, bats–t insane trailer for “Mad Max: Fury Road” is here, and like the flick’s other teasers before it, it’s full of explosions, car chases, and creepy dudes in masks and chains — all seasoned with an apocalyptic flavor.

    This time around, the clip focuses more on the villains, led by Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne), who straps on a horrifying teeth-filled mask as he makes odd proclamations before screaming masses. He’s also consumed by the need to recapture a group of comely lasses who have escaped his clutches.

    Leading the charge against him are Charlize Theron and Tom Hardy, with the latter explaining what’s driving him to fight back.

    “As the world fell, each of us in our own way was broken,” he intones. “It was hard to know who was more crazy: me, or everyone else.”

    If we had to go out on a limb, we’d guess “everyone else,” but who are we to judge? In the world of “Fury Road,” it seems that insanity is the new black.

    “Mad Mad: Fury Road” is directed by original “Mad Max” mastermind George Miller. It’s due in theaters on May 15.

    Photo credit: YouTube

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