"At this point in the movie, we've got Furiosa, played by Anya Taylor-Joy and we've got Praetorian Jack, played by Tom Burke, arriving at Bullet Farm, where they're meant to pick up all these munitions and weapons for this battle. However, when they get to the Bullet Farm, there's something weird going on. […] There's a certain part of this sequence which has no music because the music would be redundant, so it's not scored. The score only arises when it informs us of what's happening between our two main characters. They have to respond in the moment like all Warriors do, and get out of this situation. And in the process, we find them relinquishing their own self-interest. One for the other. What follows is that through their actions, not their words and their promises to each other, but through their actions, that they actually are prepared to give of themselves entirely to the other. So in a way, it's kind of a love story in the middle of an action scene. That's always at the heart of every action sequence. It's not all the kinetics and the sound of it. It's all about an interaction of characters. It's character-driven and it's the interplay between them that we're most interested in."
─ George Miller | Anatomy of a Scene (x)
761 notes
·
View notes
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) dir. George Miller
412 notes
·
View notes
Ron Cobb’s ornithopter concept for Jodorowsky’s Dune
4K notes
·
View notes
DEATH STRANDING 2: ON THE BEACH (2025)
230 notes
·
View notes