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Mad Max: Fury Road had a lengthy gestation period. In 1987, George Miller had the idea of making a Mad Max movie that was "almost a continuous chase".[15] He got an idea for the plot in 1998 when he was walking across a street in Los Angeles, and about a year later, while travelling from Los Angeles to Australia, a story in which "violent marauders were fighting, not for oil or for material goods, but for human beings" coalesced.[citation needed] Miller said he worked with five storyboard artists to design the film in storyboard form before writing the screenplay, producing about 3,500 panels, which is almost the same as the number of shots as in the finished film, as he wanted the film to be almost a continuous chase, with relatively little dialogue, and to have the visuals come first.[16] The screenplay was written with Nico Lathouris and cult British comic creator Brendan McCarthy, who also designed many of the new characters and vehicles.[17]
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Miller said he did not feel he had to top the production design of the previous films in the series. Instead, he wanted the design to harken back to the earlier films and reflect the changes of the past 30 years. Colin Gibson, the production designer, said the filmmakers developed an internally consistent history to explain the film's look and justify its use of hot rods.[37] He designed the vehicles in the film, some of which were constructed as early as 2003,[38] and all of which were fully functional.[39] Of the 150 vehicles constructed, only 88 survived to the end of filming, with the others built to facilitate their intended method of destruction.[40] The War Rig, the film's most prominent vehicle, was made by combining a Tatra 815 and Chevrolet Fleetmaster and fusing a Volkswagen Beetle to the hull, among other modifications.[40][41] The cars were designed with an emphasis on detail and characterisation, and effort was made to show the various characters' attempts to recycle the remains of civilisation and their feelings of guilt and loss.[39]
According to Seale, "something like 50 or 60 percent of the film is not running at 24 frames a second, which is the traditional frame rate. It'll be running below 24 frames because George, if he couldn't understand what was happening in the shot, he slowed it down until you could ... Or if it was too well understood, he'd shorten it or he'd speed it up back towards 24. His manipulation of every shot in that movie is intense."[64] The Washington Post noted that the changing frame rate gives the film an "almost cartoonishly jerky" look.[65]
Producer Doug Mitchell confirmed in December 2015 that the black-and-white version of the film existed and could potentially see a future theatrical release.[101] In January 2016, Miller announced that the black-and-white version would appear on a later DVD release,[102] and it debuted as part of the Mad Max: High Octane anthology released in October 2016, with the black-and-white version of Fury Road called Mad Max: Black & Chrome. The Black & Chrome version was made without the involvement of cinematographer John Seale, but Seale said the idea was "beautifully dramatic" and he thought "the new version will emphasise" the actors' performances.[103]
Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph gave the film a full five stars and praised its acting, screenplay, choreography, stunts, humour, and direction, describing it as a "Krakatoan eruption of craziness".[116] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian awarded it four out of five stars and wrote that it is "extravagantly deranged, ear-splittingly cacophonous, and entirely over the top", a "bizarre convoy chase action-thriller in the post-apocalyptic desert".[117] Lindsay Bahr of the Associated Press described the film as "radically visionary".[118]
IGN reviewer Scott Collura gave the film 9.2 out of 10, writing: "the over-the-top stunts and eccentric characters and designs are all hugely important to Fury Road, as are the troubled figures like Max himself and Furiosa, but it's the overriding sense of the film's uniqueness, its striving to be something more than just another action movie, that is most impressive."[119] Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four out of four stars and wrote that Theron and Hardy are "one of the best action duos ever, in one of the best action movies".[81] Similarly, Rolling Stone's Peter Travers called the film "a new action classic", and gave particular praise to its editing, costumes, and soundtrack.[120] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote a mixed review, praising the cinematography and Theron's performance, but describing the film as a "long, dull chase".[121]
SYNOPSISIn a post-apocalyptic wasteland, a woman rebels against a tyrannical ruler in search for her homeland with the aid of a group of female prisoners, a psychotic worshiper, and a drifter named Max.Now you can download, watch and enjoy Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) full movie mp4, mkv, blueray in HD now!
Hello Backstory fans! We have a really great episode for you this week. We sit down and chat with actor Vernon Wells! If you've ever seen some of the Mad Max movies, Commando, or Weird Science, among others, Vernon will be instantly recognizable as portraying some of the most intense and potentially scary roles in these movies. We found him to be quite the opposite from his on screen personas though. We have a long talk with him about his intro to acting, and he reveals lots of interesting and funny stories about his long career. He has worked with many icons in the film industry through the years, and talks about their influence on him. From listening to his stories of working with Mel Gibson, his first meeting with Clint Eastwood, and much more, we get the sense that Vernon has remained grounded, and continues to enjoy acting, as well as helping the other actors and directors he works with currently perfect their craft. We chat about his many upcoming and current projects as well. Definitely a genuinely nice, charismatic, funny, and sweet man. Until in front of the camera, or until you poke the bear. We thank Vernon for his time and being such a great interview guest.
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Film Editor Margaret Sixel was given over 480 hours of footage to create MAD MAX: FURY ROAD. The final edit ran 120 minutes and consisted of 2700 individual shots. That's 2700 consecutive decisions that must flow smoothly and immerse the viewer. 2700 decisions that must guide and reveal the story in a clear and concise manner. One bad cut can ruin a moment, a scene or the whole film.\nOne of the many reasons MAD MAX: FURY ROAD is so successful as an action film is the editing style. By using "Eye Trace" and "Crosshair Framing" techniques during the shooting, the editor could keep the important visual information vital in one spot...the Center of the Frame. Because almost every shot was center framed, comprehending the action requires no hunting of each new shot for the point of interest. The viewer doesn't need 3 or 4 frames to figure out where to look. It's like watching an old hand-drawn flip book whiz by. It's always in the same spot!","uploaded_on":"2015-05-30 15:24:04","uploaded_on_relative":"7 years ago","uploaded_on_full":"Saturday, May 30, 2015 at 3:24 PM EST","is_spatial":false,"is_hdr":false,"is_dolby_vision":false,"privacy":"is_public":true,"type":"anybody","description":"Public","duration":"raw":95,"formatted":"01:35","is_liked":false,"is_unavailable":false,"likes_url":"\/129314425\/likes","is_live":false,"unlisted_hash":null},"owner":"id":9322014,"display_name":"Vashi Nedomansky ACE","has_advanced_stats":true,"is_pro_lapsed":false,"is_paid":true,"badge":null,"portrait":"src":"https:\/\/i.vimeocdn.com\/portrait\/21335535_75x75","src_2x":"https:\/\/i.vimeocdn.com\/portrait\/21335535_150x150","is_mod":false,"url":"\/vashi","verified":true,"is_following":false,"is_available_for_hire":true,"ondemand":null,"brand_channel":null,"api_url":"api.vimeo.com","jwt":"eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJleHAiOjE2NzU5NzI5MjAsInVzZXJfaWQiOm51bGwsImFwcF9pZCI6NTg0NzksInNjb3BlcyI6InB1YmxpYyBzdGF0cyIsInRlYW1fdXNlcl9pZCI6bnVsbH0.0napTGsFXWd32bSZ8cGakdZJefl4rMWsv2OMzVwu_40","chat":null,"cur_user":null,"status":"state":"ready","copyright_status":"is_blocked":false,"content_block_status":"is_blocked":false,"message":"Video is not rated. Log in to watch.","continuous_play_enabled":false,"allowBypass":false,"requireLogin":true,"possibleOfcomBlock":true,"player":"config_url":"https:\/\/player.vimeo.com\/video\/129314425\/config?autopause=1&byline=0&collections=1&context=Vimeo%5CController%5CClipController.main&default_to_hd=1&h=fd5aaf4f29&outro=nothing&portrait=0&share=1&speed=1&title=0&watch_trailer=0&s=d08c3abd9392a5e7f2ad21fcf42751ee135df1d9_1675987316","player_url":"player.vimeo.com","dimensions":"height":540,"width":960,"poster":"url":"https:\/\/i.vimeocdn.com\/video\/520757158-16bead30a9cead542fd4326074e15f36c07aa9d44ca983edf50f8f3844d7640c-d?mw=2000&mh=1080&q=70","share_enabled":true,"send_to_wipster_enabled":false,"thumbnail":"src":"https:\/\/i.vimeocdn.com\/video\/520757158-16bead30a9cead542fd4326074e15f36c07aa9d44ca983edf50f8f3844d7640c-d_190x107","src_2x":"https:\/\/i.vimeocdn.com\/video\/520757158-16bead30a9cead542fd4326074e15f36c07aa9d44ca983edf50f8f3844d7640c-d_380x214","width":190,"height":107,"id":520757158,"ads":"house_ads_enabled":false,"third_party_ads_enabled":false,"content_rating":"type":"unrated","message":"Not Yet Rated","description":"","content_advertisement_warning":null,"notifications":[],"categories_config":"categories":["name":"Filmmaking & Photography","url":"\/categories\/instructionals\/filmmaking\/videos","name":"Instructionals","url":"\/categories\/instructionals"],"total_categories":2,"music_track":null,"cc_license":"by-nc-nd","google_app_id":"599168806697-1vailf0v6ai0j09va1hga0krnd0n3tlq.apps.googleusercontent.com","credits":"total_credits":"raw":0,"formatted":"0","displayed_credits":[],"stream":"id":null,"pos":0,"collection_adder":"enabled":true,"recaptcha_site_key":"6LeRCLwSAAAAAOJ1ba_xqd3NBOlV5P_XRWJVEPdw","clip_stats":"enabled":false,"download_config":[],"has_review_modes":false,"data_layer":"clip_id":129314425,"page_path":"\/129314425","creator_id":9322014,"creator_user_type":"pro","video_categories":"Filmmaking & Photography,Instructionals","privacy":"anybody","staff_pick":"no","user_id":null,"page_type":"Video","pref_tips":"file_transfer_tour_point":"key":"vstpft","value":false}; // Autoplay test for onsite referrals to clip page (function () &)autoplay=1(&()); if (typeof window.vimeo === 'undefined' typeof window.vimeo.clips === 'undefined') ; window.vimeo.clips = window.vimeo.clips Please enable JavaScript to experience Vimeo in all of its glory. 2ff7e9595c
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