Thursday 11 June 2015

and the Road Warrior is now a woman! Mad Max Fury Road



Yes, it is true, the real mover of this fourth Mad Max movie is Charlize Theron's Furiosa Imperator, not Max, and that is fine. 

 Fury Road seems to me to be an extraordinarily well made futuristic road movie.  
I strongly recommend it to anyone who likes action movies and/or brilliant design and camera work.   This is not a CGI extravaganza, it was made without green-screens and computerized FX.   George Miller had, I read, 150 vehicles at his disposal, and boy does he dispose of them as they race across the Australian (actually Namibian) desert going there and back again.  

Charlize Theron  gives us a gritty and determined action-movie lead character, with depth, in the central role of Furiosa Imperator, a warrior and driver whose rebellion takes the form of rescuing pregnant concubines from the Citadel’s ruler, Immortan,  and  heading for the Green Land from which she was herself abducted as a child.    Tom Hardy as Mad Max is initially her unwilling and hapless passenger, but soon joins battle with her against the pursuing hordes.
They are both gifted performers.   There is not a lot of dialogue in this movie, but both actors know how to communicate without words.  Hardy provides a persuasive reincarnation of Max  and Charlize once more plays against her beautiful clothes-horse image.    I have long been a fan of both these actors and its good to see them together.   Nicolas Hoult as Nux provides a pleasing sub-plot.   Many of the characters are truly cartoonish, but others  have subtlety and development

At the start of the film Max is captured and taken to The Citadel where he becomes a walking blood-bank for Nux (Nicholas Hoult), a sick young warrior who does not  look as if he is going to get much older.   Hardy does not have the wild eyed insanity of Mel Gibson’s version, and almost under-plays his part.   Max  is haunted by the ghosts of the woman and girl-child he could not save in earlier Mad Max movies.   Now he is looking for redemption; but not  through violence.    He is certainly not looking for a fight.  Sometimes, however,  survival demands it of him.   For Furiosa and her pregnant female crew it is also a necessity.    All they can do is run, and when pursued, fight.
The cinematography is magnificent, directed by John Seale,  who came out of retirement for this project (as did Douglas Thrumbull for a very different movie, Terrence Malik’s The Tree of Life).   Seale once filmed the deserts of North Africa for The English Patient,  somehow making their graceful curves feminine and almost erotic.   Here he matches the visual imaginations of Miller and Brendan McCarthy (the co-writer and Design Consultant)  with great skill.   It has been made with enormous energy and focus by a veteran filmmaker who has modern rejected CGI and shown us once more the benefits of ‘straight’ film making.    The only CGI seems to be Furiosa’s proscetic arm and the magnificent desert storm through which she drives,  a maelstrom of sand and lightning.  
This is an amazingly visual and kinetic movie,  made with great  technical skill  as unrelenting in its power as the scores of amazing vehicles that hurtle across the post-apocalyptic desert.
Fury Road has been hailed by some - and denounced by others - as a feminist tract.  If it is feminist to assert that women should not be property, used as concubines or industrial-scale lactation producers (sic), then this is hardy an advance on Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale, and it is sad to see that in 2015 a film that in simply takes womankind seriously can be  seen as a tract, or a triumph.
I was not sure how feminist it was to introduce the escaping women as they stand,   scarcely clad in muslin and chastity belts, as tall, beautiful and sultry as models on a Vogue cover.  Actually three of these actors have been fashion models,   including of course Charlize.   But these images are countered by the courage and determination (most of them) later display.     And Furiosa is the real mover here, Max simply becomes her sidekick, and in one telling scene he quietly acquiesces to her markswoman skills when a vital pot shot has to be made.     We also meet the Vuvatini, matriarchal bikers,  fearsome survivors of the Green Place,  whose lives contrast so dramatically with those in The Citadel.  I am sure it was a joke to leave out the ‘l’ in Vuvatini.
But is it so remarkable to have a female lead in an action movie?    Thirty years ago Tina Turner played Aunty Entity in sole charge of Barter Town in Thunderdome.   She was not warrior, she too smart for that,   and in the same film Max is rescued by the female hunter and leader of the children’s oasis,  Savannah Nix (Nix/Nux?).     
Since then we have seen Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft, Salt and Mrs. Smith,  and many more battling females.    Maybe Theron’s role is only remarkable in a Mad Max movie because  Mad Max 1 and  2  have been hailed by so many (knuckle headed) men as  hyper-masculine narratives, even myths.   
Charlize Theron has remarked that “I think George didn't have a feminist agenda up his sleeve, and I think that's what makes the story even more powerful, especially how the women are represented in it.    I think when we use the word 'feminism' people get a little freaked out, it's like we're somehow, like, being put on a pedestal or anything like that. George has this innate understanding that women are just as complex and interesting as men, and he was really interested in discovering all of that.  I think through just his need and want for the truth he actually made an incredible feminist movie."  

I loved the movie, but am a little sad that Brendan McCarthy has not been given more credit by critics as its co-screenwriter and design consultant.    Brendan is a gifted comic book artist.    He lives just  down the coast from me and we have had a number of conversations over coffee in town.   He was quietly talking about this movie two years ago, and I think he was important in encouraging George Miller to resurrect the franchise.      I can easily imagine particular scenes, props or images  coming straight out of Brendan’s notebook.      For example,  Furiosa has an elaborate prosetic arm.    There is no back story to explain its presence, and it does not seem to contribute to the plot  - or action – in any meaningful way, but it really looks cool.   She also chooses to use dirty engine oil as makeup.    Maybe that was to compensate for, or jokily comment on, her fashion work with L’Oreal.    We also see people  moving on four stilt-like crutches as we pass through the Dead Crow Land, and that’s cool too, even if no explanation is given about how they can survive where  no-on else can.    During the  car/truck/ hybrid chases that make up 90% of the movie we see warriors, called Polecats,  perched at the top of counter balanced poles swinging across the escaping rig’s track to drop grenades into its cab.     A grenade launcher or a good throwing arm would have done the same job, but with much less visual interest.   I can so easily see it on the pages of a comic book - in fact if you go the Brendan's website you will.

 And there is so much more to enjoy.   The Doog  Warrior is strapped to front of one war-wagon playing a huge double necked guitar/flame-thrower.  The flames are not employed to attack anything, they are just there to look good.    Another truck has a battery of koto style drummers joining The Doog and augmenting the soundtrack (shades of the Wagner-blasting attack helicopters in  Apocalypse Now!).   

As it happens I loved the design of Mad Max; Beyond Thunderdome,  Brendan’s least favourite of the previous three,   and we are given a fleeting glimpse of a Thunderdome structure, and many of the boys and men in Fury Road look like Scrooloose from the earlier film;  topless, with whitened bodies, shaven heads and blackened eyes.      All of these elements are simply cool, and precisely fit the comic book visual aesthetic as well as that of the previous films.   

The Citadel, where Immortan controls the flow of the precious element, water, is deeply fascist.   Entirely male dominated (Furiosa’s exceptional role is never explained – why wasn’t she forced to become another concubine?)  Immortan appears like a demi-god and is worshipped by his henchmen and subjects.   The  Citadel’s style is a mix of the Nordic and the Nazi, with its own mythology  and salvation narrative of Death and Glory.    For the young men serving Immortan dying in battle will promise rebirth in Valhalla.    And who would not want to be reborn somewhere other than in this desolate landscape, living in a tumour ridden body.    When Max finds himself an unwilling passenger on the escaping rig Nux is still tethered to him by his blood line and has to go with him to keep alive, but all he wants to do is die.  When at one point Immortan glances in his direction Nux’s joy is complete.    God loves him and his eternal salvation is secure.  
  
By refusing to embrace CGI  Miller and his team have shown us that the traditional skills of great design, terrific sound, amazing camera work and dedicated stunt work can outdo the results of more modern GCI in the hands of a great Director. 

As the Ebert web-site review says “Fury Road is a challenge to a whole generation of action filmmakers, urging them to follow its audacious path into the genre’s future and, like Miller, try their hardest to create something new.”