FURIOSA: A MAD MAX SAGA ★★★★ (MA) 148 minutes Talk about a hero’s journey. In all Australian cinema, no one has had a more extraordinary career than 79-year-old George Miller , who in his original Mad Max trilogy managed to build his own fantastical cinematic universe out of spare parts, back when the fashion for referring to film series as “franchises” was but a gleam in a merchandiser’s eye. Furiosa fills in the origin story of the character, now played in somewhat less commanding fashion by Anya Taylor-Joy.
Decades on, he capped that achievement with the 2015 blockbuster Mad Max: Fury Road , widely and rightly viewed as setting the bar for 21st-century action filmmaking. With Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga , he’s back in the wasteland once more, while returning home: where Fury Road’s locations were in Namibia, Furiosa was shot primarily around Broken Hill, reportedly the most expensive Australian production of all time. In another sense, this is a departure, the first Mad Max movie without Max as the reluctant hero.
Replacing him is the comparably surly Furiosa, introduced in Fury Road as a one-armed avenging angel incarnated by Charlize Theron, who often gave the impression Tom Hardy’s Max was the one along for the ride. A prequel, Furiosa fills in the origin story of the character, now played in somewhat less commanding fashion by the saucer-eyed Anya Taylor-Joy (and by child star Alyla Browne for much of the first hour). Abducted as a child from the matr.