Furiosa (2024)
George Miller's new spinoff of the Mad Max series, serving as a prequel to 2015's Fury Road. Which is an interesting decision, as the Mad Max series has always made a point of not having any continuity. Seeing a movie directly related to another certainly feels like a break with tradition so one wonders what Miller's motivation might have been.
Furiosa is odd, particularly in relation to Fury Road. While what we're seeing is clearly the same world and the same characters, it has a very different feel than its continuation. The all Miller no Filler pacing of Fury Road made it come off like almost a single, uninterrupted, two hour action sequence that barely ever slows down and never for long. Furiosa, on the other hand, takes a much more deliberate approach, dedicates much more time to world building and setting up a plot that is much less simple and spans a much longer time than Fury Road.
In some ways, Furiosa is almost perfect to wash out the bad taste that Dune 2 left in my mouth. Feeling like a similar kind of movie, but done so much more compellingly. Much like Dune, it works on a larger than life scale and concerns itself with not only telling a story but creating a world but much unlike Dune it feels lively and vibrant, rather than cold and clinical. The odd characters and odd slang and odd cultures come off as natural and fascinating, rather than boring and stilted.
The story, as is, concerns the titular Furiosa, portrayed in Fury Road by Charlize Theron, here by Alyla Browne and Anya Taylor-Joy. Growing up in a peaceful Oasis in the post apocalyptic wasteland, she is abducted by followers of warlord Dementus. Her mother being killed, she runs with Dementus' crew, before defecting to rival warlord Immortan Joe where her quest for revenge and self liberation begins. It's not a tremendously complex story, although one with a lot more meat to it than Fury Road's, which effectively amounted to a single long, and very awesome, chase sequemce. Furiosa emphasises its backdrop of tribal wars and territorial disputes next to its more personal, more classical heroes journey story.
All of which is to say, while the action is similarly intense to that of Fury Road, it's spaced out a lot more. And where it's visual language is every bit the crunchy, heavy metal aussie desert opera that Fury Road was, it gets to breathe and rest now a lot more than it did in FR. All of which serves to make it perhaps a more effective post-apocalyptic adventure movie, but also perhaps to some a less effective action movie. It's very difficult for me to talk about it, because it has certainly more going on then Fury Road, but it isn't quite as outwardly fun. That said though, it's still a lot more fun than anything else I've seen in a while.
Chris Hemsworth contributes a lot to that, playing a somewhat more humanized take on the apocalyptic gang leader than most other Mad Max villains. Next to Immortan Joe, he comes off as someone way out of his depth, struggling to keep his crew together and hiding his lack of confidence behind cheesy jokes and smug smiles. Almost like a parody of the dashing, one liner spouting action heroes of something like a Marvel movie, playing one, of course, being what made Hemsworth famous. Less of an evil overlord and more of a wannabe, working rather well for his role as the antagonist being based on more of a personal grudge.
Despite that, though, Furiosa's scale feels large and mythical. Back in the days I glibly described Fury Road as "El Topo with monster trucks", although now I will say that Furiosa fits this description even better. The Mad Max movies always somewhat treated its own stories as embellished legends of a post-civilization mythos and Furiosa embodies that as well as any of them. Specifically the villains death brought to mind something you'd see in a Jodorowsky movie. All of which is to say, there's a reason Hideo Kojima always refers to George Miller as "god". Compared to his contemporaries, be they Ridley Scott or John Carpenter or even James Cameron, none of them managed to maintain this spotless a track record at this high an age. Of course all bets are off once the whole 6 hour uncut version of Rebel Moon will be released in August, but as is, Furiosa stands as 2024's best action movie by a country mile.