Mad Max 2 1981 Movie on Netflix
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Mad Max 2 1981 Movie on Netflix
Filmteam
Coordination art Department : Myrna Jayquan
Stunt coordinator : Edmond Staƫl
Script layout :Electra Jonel
Pictures : Yoland Shannen
Co-Produzent : Tatsuya Oleynik
Executive producer : Aheed Harris
Director of supervisory art : Elmo Yves
Produce : Jobert Baird
Manufacturer : Evellin Blane
Actress : Azai Chase
Max Rockatansky returns as the heroic loner who drives the dusty roads of a postapocalyptic Australian Outback in an unending search for gasoline. Arrayed against him and the other scraggly defendants of a fuel-depot encampment are the bizarre warriors commanded by the charismatic Lord Humungus, a violent leader whose scruples are as barren as the surrounding landscape.
7.4
1827
Mad Max 2 1981 Google Docs | |
Time | 194 minute |
Release | 1981-12-24 |
Kuality | WMV 1080p Blu-ray |
Categories | Adventure, Action, Thriller, Science Fiction |
language | English |
castname | Mayeul G. Feydeau, Ellis Q. Serafin, Caitlin A. Erla |
Mad Max 2 1981 Movie on Netflix
Film kurz
Spent : $611,031,119
Income : $971,692,013
Categorie : Kommunismus - initiativ Klassische Verzweiflung , Schrecken - Verletzung , Kommunismus - Bondage , Horror - Documenteur Schwarz
Production Country : Armenien
Production : OmegaVision Pictures
The last of the V8 Interceptors and the battle for gasoline!
It's post nuclear war Australia and the precious commodity is gasoline, all the varying degrees of survivors pursue it in anyway they can.
Director George Miller is here armed with considerably more cash than was available for the first cult hit offering in the series, and boy does it show as we get more destruction, even more outlandish stunts, and a fully realised apocalyptic vision of the future. It's incredible to note that there is no CGI here, this is pure raw stunt work, the film plays out as a standard good versus evil tale, but it's the realisation of the crash bang wallop sequences that lift it to being one of the most important sci-fi action movies of modern times.
The baddies are a seething mass of leather, masks, and mohawks, they scowl as they rape pillage and plunder anything in their path, they will stop at nothing to get the craved gasoline that is so important in this world. The good guys are joined by the road warrior himself, Mad Max Rockatansky, a former police officer who turned to being the angry lone warrior of the road after his wife and child were murdered. Can these honest folk survive the onslaught of the crazed plunderers?
Well it's high octane entertainment finding out, and the pace is relentless. The direction is first rate, the scenes are put together brilliantly, and the sound is incredible for those with home cinema. Whilst the film may be guilty of having little to no dialogue for the most part, it really isn't needed as it's all in the action, so strap yourself in and enjoy the ride.
Brilliant film that is still a benchmark for the genre. 9/10
***Fighting for fuel in the post-apocalyptic wasteland of the Outback***
In the years after a global holocaust, an ex-lawman (Mel Gibson) in remote Australia befriends people at a refinery compound and helps them escape a band of ruthless punk bikers who want their resources. Bruce Spence plays the Gyro Captain while Vernon Wells is on hand as a subordinate leader of the bikers.
"The Road Warrior,” aka “Mad Max 2” (1981) shows a grim, bleak, brutal future, but it's too comic booky and sometimes goofy to truly disturb because it screams exaggeration. A truly disturbing movie debuted fifteen years earlier, “The Wild Angels” (1966), which is shocking because it’s realistic rather than cartoonish. But “The Wild Angels” was an outlaw biker drama whereas “Mad Max 2” is an action-packed adventure. There’s a lot of motorhead thrills if that trips your trigger.
The movie’s an Australian production and avant-garde bordering on surrealism. The protagonist is aloof and laconic while the antagonists are bizarre, even psycho, which makes sense in that people would become a little mad in a desperate post-apocalyptic environment. It’s a strangely detached film about cartoonish people surviving in the wastelands of Australia, but the characters and images are often iconic; and there IS some human interest, like the Gyro Captain’s developing relationship with the cute blonde, the so-called Captain’s Girl (Arkie Whitley). Meanwhile Virginia Hey is striking as the Warrior Woman.
The film runs 1 hour, 34 minutes and was shot in the Outback of New South Wales, Australia.
GRADE: B
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