Film Review
Mad Max is the best-known film
to come out of Australia and remains, to this date, the country's most
visually arresting offering in the action-thriller genre. The
blockbuster scale and quality of its now almost legendary action
sequences (which include some of the most spectacular car chases ever
shot) belie the fact that the film was made on a paltry budget
(of around 350,000 Australian dollars). The low production cost necessitated the use of real
locations, and it is this which gives the film its haunting dystopian
feel, a palpable sense of a society which is on the brink of falling
apart and descending into animal savagery. The dusty
weather-beaten farm buildings, the ominously silent small towns and the
endless expanse of flat Australian landscape all convey the impression
of a civilisation that is in a state of irreversible decline. An
appropriate backdrop for a brutal revenge thriller in which an honest
cop and family man is transformed into a soulless killing machine.
Remarkably,
Mad Max was
George Miller's first feature as a director. He and his
producer/co-screenwriter Byron Kennedy had previously collaborated on a
short film
Violence in the Cinema,
Part 1 eight years earlier, which Miller was prompted to make
whilst he was a medical doctor. Miller's main inspiration was the
classic American western and he adopts many of the motifs of the genre
(notably the tension-building long shot) to give his film maximum
visual impact. This was the first
Australian film to be shot with a widescreen anamorphic lens,
something which allows the forbidding landscape to become an essential
component of the narrative. Unable to
afford the luxury of a professional editing
suite, Miller and Kennedy edited the film on a home-made editing
machine in the latter's bedroom. Other cost cutting measures
include painting and re-painting cars, to create the illusion there
were more than there actually were, and issuing cheap vinyl outfits to
the actors playing the cops - the budget would only stretch to one
genuine leather outfit, which naturally went to Gibson.
The similarity with the classic western is most noticeable in the
on-going private feud between Max and his nemesis Toecutter, which
culminates in a final adrenalin-charged road duel, redolent of an
old-fashioned shoot out. Yet, unlike in most westerns, the
delineation between the good guy and bad guy is more thinly drawn, and
disappears altogether by the time we get to the final spine-chilling
shot of the victor. In the end, both Max and Toecutter seem
equally possessed by the psychotic need to kill, and the apparently
morally superior cop emerges as the more sadistic of the two.
Max's understandable need for justice drives him into the prohibited
zone, in more ways than one, and transforms him into a virtual carbon
copy of the monster he seeks to destroy.
Mad Max is more closely
aligned with the psycho-thriller horror films of the late 1970s, early
1980s than with the conventional crime-thriller genre. The film
has even been likened to a Gothic horror film, with Max and Toecutter
the latest incarnations of Van Hesling and Dracula, locked in mortal
combat in a classic tale of good versus evil. Certainly, the
sequences in which Toecutter's gang go after Max's wife and child and
savagely murder them has a striking resonance with the early American
slasher films. Miller and his cinematographer David Eggby invest
these sequences with maximum menace, skilfully using low angle shots
and subjective tracking shots to suggest an omnipresent lurking evil.
Much of the horror is suggested, rather than shown, and this is what
makes the film particularly nerve-wracking and viscerally shocking in
places. Whilst
Mad Max
is shot virtually entirely in the open, in the lush sunlit Australian
landscape, there is a darkly claustrophobic feel to it, which is
achieved through some truly inventive camerawork and editing.
Brian May's dramatic score, which swells to ludicrously operatic
proportions in some places, also imbues the film with a sense of barely
contained menace. If this is a horror film then the real threat
does not come from Toecutter but from Max's darker inner self,
something that has the power to transform a decent cop into a mindless
killer. This is more
Jekyll
and Hyde than
Dracula.
Mad Max is the film that
catapulted the unknown 23 year-old Australian actor Mel Gibson to
stardom. The actor had previously appeared in episodes of the
Australian TV soap
The Sullivans
but would soon become one of Hollywood's most bankable stars. Gibson
hardly needs to act in this
film. His presence - silent, brooding, intense - is enough to
define his character and contributes much to the subtly menacing aura
of the film. Gibson's contribution is perfectly complemented by
an equally arresting performance from Hugh Keays-Byrne, who is chilling
as the understated psychopath Toecutter. The fact that both
actors underplay their parts is probably what makes the film so
intensely gripping and disturbing. Little is revealed about
either of their characters and yet the subtle performances seem to say
everything about who they are and what makes them tick.
Once the film proved to be a hit in Australia,
Mad Max was given an international
release (although, bizarrely, it was dubbed by American actors for its
US screening). It wasn't until the 1981 release of its sequel -
Mad Max 2, aka
The Road Warrior - that the film
become a global hit, grossing over 100 million dollars and becoming one
of the most profitable films of all time. A second sequel
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985)
completed the trilogy, although rumours of a fourth film have persisted
for the past few decades. Will Max return? Only time will
tell.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the not too distant future, law and order has begun to breakdown
amid a worldwide oil shortage. A gang of bike-riding psychopaths
are terrorising south-east Australia, killing and looting with wild
abandon. The resources of the Federal police are stretched in
dealing with such outlaws but they finally succeed in arresting gang
member Nightrider. The killer manages to escape police custody
and a frantic road chase ensues, which ends with Nightrider being
burned alive when he crashes into a van. Another member of
the gang, Johnny, is picked up by officer Max Rockatansky, but is later
released through lack of evidence. Johnny is then coerced by the
gang's sadistic leader Toecutter into setting fire to an upturned
police car in which cop Jim Goose is trapped. When he sees
Goose's charred remains, Max decides he has had enough and is ready to
quit. His boss persuades him to take a vacation and so Max heads
off to the coast with his wife Jessie and their infant son.
Toecutter's gang happens to be in the vicinity and, after a standoff at
a remote farmhouse, they viciously run Jessie and her son down on a
deserted stretch of highway. Max has no better incentive
now to go after Toecutter and his gang and put an end to their reign of
terror. Max is mad, very mad, and he wants blood...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.