Current:Home > InvestMad Max 'Furiosa' review: New prequel is a snazzy action movie, but no 'Fury Road' -Profound Wealth Insights
Mad Max 'Furiosa' review: New prequel is a snazzy action movie, but no 'Fury Road'
View
Date:2025-04-19 04:28:04
Anyone who’s seen “Mad Max: Fury Road” doesn’t forget it. The movie is a unicorn of sorts, a pure and perfect action flick with post-apocalyptic hot rods, gorgeous demolition-derby carnage and demented confidence.
That’s a sky-high bar most movies fail to reach, including its inspired prequel “Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga” (★★★ out of four; rated R; in theaters Friday).
Director George Miller fleshes out the busy backstory of Charlize Theron’s “Fury Road” heroine, with the title role now played by Anya Taylor-Joy, for a decent origin tale that works better as a revenge thriller. Miller crafts an explosive, world-building epic charting new parts of the dystopian Wasteland he created with Mel Gibson in 1979’s “Mad Max,” this time letting Taylor-Joy and a charismatically evil Chris Hemsworth loose in a gnarly landscape full of revving engines and bizarre personalities.
Nine years ago, the last “Mad Max” introduced Furiosa as a weary soldier helping the imperious Immortan Joe’s runaway wives alongside Tom Hardy’s hard-luck antihero Max during a three-day odyssey of sandstorms and chaos. “Furiosa” leads right up to that movie by going way back, following its title character over 15 years from a traumatized young girl to an independent warrior queen.
Little Furiosa (Alyla Browne) lives in Green Place, a “land of abundance” with forests, fruit and nature. An act of kid mischief angers some motorcycle-riding goons, who capture Furiosa and take her to their ruthless and mercurial leader, Dementus (Hemsworth). Furiosa’s sharpshooting mom Mary (Charlee Fraser) rescues her daughter from this nomadic biker horde, but their escape is foiled and Dementus tortures and kills Mary, taking Furiosa as a prisoner.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Dementus is an ambitious creep as well, and he envies the expansive Citadel of warlord Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme). An invasion goes badly, yet Dementus becomes a power player in the Wasteland political system, using Furiosa as a trading chip in a deal with Joe. Things aren’t any better for her under the Immortan's guardianship, so Furiosa disguises herself and hides for years as a hardworking mute boy.
Taylor-Joy doesn’t even show up until an hour into “Furiosa,” and that’s when the plot, which starts in a meandering episodic fashion, kicks into overdrive. Furiosa proves herself a capable crew member on a War Rig driven by ace supply runner Praetorian Jack (Tom Burke), who becomes a trusted confidante (with definite Mad Max vibes). Her blood still boils when it comes to Dementus, and the struggle between him and Joe sets a violent, painful path for Furiosa to become the woman with a buzzcut and mechanical arm we know and love.
Few put together an action scene with jaw-dropping gunfights and white-knuckle crashes that energize all the senses like Miller. In “Furiosa,” foes fly in on parachutes and gliders to wage battle on endlessly cool vehicles, and the 79-year-old director creates breathtaking sequences out of Taylor-Joy taking cover from overwhelming flames and driving like a bat out of hell.
Well-suited for Miller’s signature brand of metal mayhem, she sports a laconic gumption matched only by Hemsworth’s scuzzy antagonism: Dementus is a buff, motormouthed weasel and, thanks to Hemsworth (plus a fake nose with its own area code), strangely magnetic and likable, tossing bon mots like "When things go bonkers, you have to adapt."
“Furiosa” weaves in some familiar faces, too, most of them ones only a mother could love. The “Fury Road” faithful get a return engagement seeing the pale War Boys and old pals like the Organic Mechanic and Doof Warrior are back, alongside new weirdos like Toe Jam and the History Man. (A couple of biker dudes even get their names from a popular motorcycle manufacturer.)
But the prequel is a conventionally structured, overlong 2½-hour movie and “Fury Road” was so special because it wasn’t: The last “Mad Max” essentially existed as a two-hour chase scene that threw us into the stressful lives of its protagonists, and we got to know them through their conflict rather than a bunch of exposition.
So “Furiosa” is no “Fury Road.” That’s OK. With Taylor-Joy behind the wheel and Hemsworth riding shotgun, it’s a groovy enough ride.
veryGood! (15)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- See inside the biggest Hamas tunnel Israel's military says it has found in Gaza
- More than 2,000 mine workers extend underground protest into second day in South Africa
- Anthony Edwards is a 'work in progress,' coach says. What we know about text fiasco
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- 170 nursing home residents displaced after largest facility in St. Louis closes suddenly
- Publishers association struggled to find willing recipient of Freedom to Publish Award
- Playing live, ‘Nutcracker’ musicians bring unseen signature to holiday staple
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Firefighters rescue a Georgia quarry worker who spent hours trapped and partially buried in gravel
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Teddi Mellencamp shares skin cancer update after immunotherapy treatment failed: 'I have faith'
- Pistons are woefully bad. Their rebuild is failing, their future looks bleak. What gives?
- Celine Dion's sister gives update on stiff-person syndrome, saying singer has no control of her muscles
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Former Haitian senator sentenced to life in prison in 2021 assassination of Haiti’s president
- Katie Holmes Reacts to Sweet Birthday Shoutout From Dawson's Creek Costar Mary-Margaret Humes
- Cocoa grown illegally in a Nigerian rainforest heads to companies that supply major chocolate makers
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Thailand’s LGBTQ+ community hopeful as marriage equality bill is set to be discussed in Parliament
With menthol cigarette ban delayed, these Americans will keep seeing the effects, data shows
Ex-gang leader seeking release from Las Vegas jail ahead of trial in 1996 killing of Tupac Shakur
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Marvel universe drops Jonathan Majors as Kang the Conqueror after conviction. Now what?
Power outage maps: Over 500,000 customers without power in Maine, Massachusetts
What we know about Texas’ new law that lets police arrest migrants who enter the US illegally