#mad max furiosa
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sherpawhale · 7 months ago
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I think one of my favorite things about Fury Road and Furiosa is that you can actually fucking see the night scenes because they filmed in the day and basically just applied a blue filter
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finally some good fucking night food
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mura-hamlet · 7 months ago
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この2人の関係性が大好きです♡
I love the relationship between these two♡
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vertigoartgore · 7 months ago
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Mad Max: Fury Road's Furiosa by comic book artist Matteo Scalera.
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gzeidraws · 7 months ago
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Praetorian
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xalala · 7 months ago
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Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) dir. George Miller
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madder-than-max · 7 months ago
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praetorian jack was so real for falling in love with furiosa at first sight and immediately risking everything so she could find her way home because honestly same
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dr-paint · 6 months ago
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do you have it in you to make it epic?
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whereis-mypizza · 6 months ago
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troythecatfish · 7 months ago
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kylejamesfilm · 6 months ago
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Here is my Furiosa poster - inspired by the 1980 artwork for the original Mad Max!
I remember seeing this poster as a kid and thinking his pose was so cool (and kinda weird?) 
I just love the demented, chaotic, and beautiful world of Mad Max so much. Dementus’ “Six Foot” truck is one of my favorite vehicles of all time.
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chasing-caws · 6 months ago
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Tom Burke and Anya Taylor-Joy in make-up and costume smiling in the Valiant, for my furyjack mutuals <3 (God knows we need to see them happy)
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editfandom · 9 months ago
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Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, 2024
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thowawayuntilfurthernotice · 7 months ago
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One of the absolute worst things about the modern internet is people's unhealthy obsession with treating fictional characters like real people and real people like fictional characters.
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caughtthedarkness93 · 7 months ago
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Not to do more Furiosaposting (and SPOILERS AHEAD), but a couple more things I noticed on a second viewing:
• I think Dementus is being honest about how he lost his family when Furiosa confronts him about it, and that's a big point the film is making. Furiosa isn't like Dementus when she finally chases him down. But she recognizes that she could become like him - a vile, cruel warlord who uses his own pain as an excuse to run roughshod all over the wasteland, smashing everything in her path, using her pain as an excuse to take from others. By that point, she's already a part of Immortan Joe's war machine. She is already complicit. And he does say to her that killing him won't give her what she wants. She resists the idea, but ultimately, it sure seems like she realizes he's right. And ultimately, that leads to her big choice - make a positive change rather than simply trying to hurt the people who hurt you. Granted, she still does do plenty of hurting the people who hurt her (Nice face you got there, Joe, be a shame if something happened to it). But the big, real legacy she builds is taking the Citadel in the name of a greater cause than fueling Immortan's cult of cruelty.
• Praetorian Jack is also complicit, honestly. And it's something he seems to recognize. He outright says that he's looking for a righteous cause. There's a lot we don't know about this man. He tells us very little of his history, nor do we know why he chooses to ride for Immortan Joe. But we do know that after meeting Furiosa, he wants to do everything in his power to help her. She becomes his righteous cause. So the whole film, Furiosa is kind of pulled between those two directions - Dementus, and Jack. Do you defeat the pain you carry by throwing it back to the people who gave it to you? Or do you seek a righteous cause to build it into something positive?
• Perhaps one of my biggest takeaways is related to Jack's death. It's not until Dementus kills Jack that Furiosa gets really set on revenge. Like she clearly loathes Dementus before that. Her first time meeting him as an adult, she goes straight for her gun. The camera highlights their relationship a lot, and I'm pretty sure her vengeful drive towards him has its own musical motif - listen for that driving, distorted noise that you hear sometimes. But revenge doesn't become her biggest driver until after Jack dies. Even as she feels clear hate and rage towards this man, she's still set on getting home all that time. But when Jack dies, she goes out of her way to try to kill him. And, relatedly, when Jack dies, she loses the arm that has her star map tattoo on it. So to put it another way, when she chooses to commit to vengeance, she loses her way.
• We need to consider perspective and narrator here, as this isn't like Fury Road where it's from the point of view of Max, who was directly there. Because this film's opening shot isn't of Furiosa. It's of another character - it's of the History Man. The first line belongs to him - "As the world falls around us. How must we brave it's cruelties?" The closing narration is his as well. Something that sticks in my head more and more is Dementus' ultimate fate. What gets me about it is that it feels implausible. Not only for Furiosa as a character, but for the way the series usually handles injuries. So George Miller was a paramedic before he was a filmmaker. In fact, his work as a paramedic is what partly inspired the first Mad Max film and what funded it. And in these films, Miller has put his medical knowledge to use. The characters' injuries are usually handled in a realistic way, with a few flights of fancy for people to make it through frankly absurd car wrecks. You see this especially in Fury Road, which takes the time to establish that Max is a universal donor twice so it makes sense to have him give a blood transfusion to Furiosa at the end. It talks about the ultimate effects of her collapsed lung and how to treat it. The injuries in these films feel realistic in a way movie wounds often don't. Dementus' final fate does feel a little complicatedly cruel for someone as pragmatic as Furiosa, but what really gets me is how medically implausible it is. We're supposed to believe that Dementus has been stuck in the citadel with a peach tree growing out of him for five years without dying? I...kinda don't. Why does this matter? I think it signals that aspects of the story fall to unreliable narration. These films are campfire stories from a world that fell and rose again. Always have been. But this one has a more direct narrator. The History Man is telling this story. It is filtered through his perspective.
• And that adds another layer to things, considering Furiosa and the History Man's backgrounds. We see the History Man, we see a guy who is clearly horrified by Dementus' actions. When Furiosa's mom is getting executed, he cries. He tells Furiosa that she needs to make herself indispensable - likely because he feels that it's the best way to protect her. But he still does Dementus' bidding, often without question or argument. In a word, the thing that ultimately separates the History Man from Furiosa is that where he was complicit until the very end, Furiosa chose to rebel.
• And I guess if I had to boil it all down, I think there's a great big takeaway from this film. Don't seek hope. Become hope.
Man, I love this movie.
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lucybellwood · 2 months ago
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Happy Halloween, you animals
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arbutus-blossoms · 7 months ago
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Video Excerpt George Miller and Guy Norris calling this sequence of Furiosa and Jack a " Love Story "
" In the process, we find them, relinquishing their own self interest, one for the other.
What follows is, through their actions, not their words, their promises to each other, but through their actions, that they actually are prepared to give themselves entirely to the other.
So in a way, it's kinda a love story, in the middle of an action scene. "
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