The Mad Max films don't have continuity of story but they do have continuity of themes. In the first film, the world is starting to fall apart. In the second film, the world has fallen apart and people are fighting over the remains of resources. In the third film, a new society is being built from the ruins of the old world. In the fourth film, a fully fledged society with its own culture has been formed and rules the wasteland.
Mad Max is a undying wright who wanders the land, tortured by his memories of a world that's blown into the dust. He strives to bring justice to a world that's long gone Mad. Also his name might be Max, or maybe it's just about how hard he pushes the gas pedal.
@@sam4secretary I love the idea of Max acually being several dudes who got kinda mashed together in later retelling of events. And being included in stories he originally had no part of. Kind of a post-apocalypse King Arthur.
The first film was ahead of it's time by suggesting the world was suffering from environmental disaster. In the third reverted decades by suggesting it had suffered from nuclear war.
@@writerpatrickOil was relatively abundant and cheap in the mid-80s, when Mad Max franchise achieved mainstream popularity. But the Cold War had actually intensified since the first entry in the trilogy had been produced.
I 'member too, the time when there were good movies. There are exceptions like Dune 2 but we had stuff like that several times a year instead of maybe every half decade
Oh come on, the cars would have just turned after her. In Prometheus, the wheel (or whatever the hell it was, been ages) was rolling only one way. Charlize Theron wasn't carrying a kid either.
5:57 "the one goon from Ace Ventura 2" The ability of Bruce Spence to finagle roles in all the franchises is legendary. Lord of the Rings, Matrix Revolutions, Chronicles of Narnia, Star Wars Ep 3, Finding Nemo, Pirates of the Caribbean etc
Interesting how almost everyone's idea of what Mad Max is (people in leather and spikes chasing each other in giant vehicles across a post-apocalyptic wasteland) comes entirely from the second film. The first one is a slow burn action flick that for obvious budget reasons had a pretty muted aesthetic (still impressive what they managed to do with such limited funding but I admit it definitely gave me tonal whiplash seeing it after seeing The Road Warrior first) while the third one is more lost boys than Mad Max.
The first one is just such a great representation of what would happen in the beginning when society starts to break down. It's not an apocalyptic wasteland. Cops still exist, there's still people just living their lives, but gangs are forming and they are fighting for power. It's such a neat concept that is not really explored anywhere else. Sure the second one is what created the genre of post apocalyptic movies, but you have to give it to Miller for being such a visionary from the start.
@@vezokpirakaIIRC, it was originally supposed to take place in ordinary present day, Miller just didn't have the money for a lot of props and stuff. So he basically made it futuristic and dystopic after the fact. Only for the second movie did they really commit to that idea, with that prologue explaining what happened, etc. I love the first one. Great villains and real emotional stakes.
Except that situations were different. Bikers could have turned with her or run after her - in any case they would have caught up with her and still killed them. In Prometheus they literally could have avoided the object by turning either side
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 The constant overanalysing of fictional psychology, actions, events and physics is the only problem with Prometheus. It's a half decade old movie and people watching these satires are still obsessed with it. To debunk your expectations on what people do in panic situations, try searching for videos with real people making terrible decisions in panic situations on here. Was it a smart move to run the way they did? No. Was it ever implied it was a smart decision? No. Lastly. It's a horror fiction. The main ingredient in those is, people thinking they're smarter than they are, getting killed in expected ways. The comment section dwellers on these satire channels wouldn't make it past the opening credits in a horror flick. 😋
Road Warrior is the film everyone thinks of when they say "Mad Max", but Mad Max is the one they are talking about when they say it was made on a shoestring budget. Road Warrior had the highest budget of any film made in Oz at that time.
@@sir_john_hammond I'm equally amused that your comment had a 'Translate to English' option, and that it correctly turned "400,000 dollary doos?!" into "$400,000?!"
My explanation on the continuous errors is that each one is from someone's point of view (first one we have no idea, the other two are from children who grew up retelling the story) and different regions had different issues.
the first film is essentially a documentary from Max's point of view. The second film is all told in retrospect from an old Feral Kid (Feral Leader?). The third film can be considered told in retrospect from the woman with the short black hair, who is (re)telling the story to her kid and the rest of her tribe. I also feel that the perspective affects the storytelling: since the Feral Kid lived a rough life, *The Road Warrior* reflects that with it's more brutal "Cowboys and Indians" approach. Since the third film is being told by a mother to children, it fits that it has a softer, more Spielbergian look and feel.
Part of the reason Thunderdome was the way it was Byron Kennedy had died during pre-production so George Miller wasn't too into it, so Michael Ogilvie helped him direct. You can tell it was trying to be more commercial. Ironbar was basically Wile E. Coyote. But that Thunderdome sequence is great.
Another bad thing about that movie is they have the great Tina Turner but she's gone by the end of the first act and we don't see her again until there's like 15 minutes left. It becomes Mad Max meets the lost boys for a huge chunk of the movie.
You should all check out the Audiobook "Miller & Max". It tells the history of the Mad Max movies. Things like no permits for filming, building an actual Rocket car that came off its safety rails and taking the dystopian cars for a joyride in Sydney while drunk and high. Mel was going to be in Fury Road when they started writing it in the 90's I think it was.
I guess I'll start, with the 1958 Plymouth from "Christine". Not only does it harbor a murderous evil spirit that enjoys vehicular homicide, but it ALSO thinks like a jealous lover, gradually changes its owner's personality, can't be permanently stopped even by being compacted into a cube, AND just plain looks evil without any Hollywood modifications -- that's genuinely what the cars looked like when they were rolling out of Detroit by the hundreds.
@@cheatmagnet this is making fun of the trend of remaking tv/movies from the 80s and 90s. “Hey, remember the A-Team? Here’s a new one! Hey, remember Road House? Here’s a new one!”
Escape From New York and Road Warrior are IMO contemporary sister movies that both came out in 1981 and that together are the paradigm of virtually every modern, non-zombie dystopian and/or post-apocalyptic movie, show, or game. Escape From New York is NOT a Mad Max imitator, rip-off, or homage. They are equals in that regard. Death Race with Jason Statham, however, is a reboot of Death Race 2000 which came out several years before the first Mad Max movie. Though I'm sure Death Race reboot borrowed equally from Mad Max, it took its concept from Roger Corman and not George Miller. lol
Beyond Thunderdome turns into a Disney "Mad Max for kids" movie in the second half. Complete with slapstick antics. It's like the Apple Dumpling Gang in the wasteland. It's bizzare.
That is a perfect description of Beyond Thunderdome. It's like they got bored with the movie they were making and just decided on filming something else instead
It was hard to understand the kids. Made it hard to follow the 2nd half of the story. But that was also partly because it made no sense. One moment he goes to go rescue the kids that left, then he's like oh yeah let's rescue Master Blaster just because. I guess George Miller not being motivated with this one really shows.
This is one of those films that is more influential than people realize. So many filmmakers were inspired by Mad Max to make their own post apocalypse films
My favourite take is still that Max is a spirit of vengeance that roams the wasteland eternally, just showing up and helping out before fading away again. It's always the same guy over hundreds of years, but he's not really a person.
"Do you think this got him the Babe 2 gig?" - C'mon gang, you should know he wrote and produced the first Babe movie. Babe 2 was just him putting on the director hat too.
If it really was "Two Men Enter, One Man Leaves", wouldn't that mean the dead bodies of the losers would keep piling up in the Thunderdome, eventually making it unusable?
I remember a line, "Two men enter, one man leaves... then a little later, the other man leaves after being declared the winner." but I can't recall what it was from. Futurama maybe? 🙂
Here's a fun "inspired by..." Harry Bosch's dog, "Coltrane," was inspired by Max's dog. When they were looking for a feral dog to become Bosch's companion, they immediately thought of Max's dog and went to find one like it. He got to avoid his predecessor's fate too - when the dog looked like he might be done, Titus Welliver said all they got were furious emails saying if the dog died, that was it for them and the series. Coltrane survived...
Surprised that you didn't go into how Max is basically yet another Yojimbo after the first revenge film. After he got revenge he's just a ronin wandering into other people's stories. The gyro copter pilot and the oil town folk, Pig Killer and the feral kids, Furiosa and the wives.
You are right about the continuity. I am still very confused because in mad max2 The interceptor gets destroyed, so in mad max 3 he gets around without a car. And then in the new mad max movie, he has the interceptor back without any backstory
Fury road is set after the events of the mad max video game and in the game the character obtains parts, including a V8 engine, to rebuild the Interceptor.
This is why you need more science classes. Clean gas meaning no additives like alcohol etc. works and is good for about two yrs. The movie was made before all the additive regulations. It’s entirely possible they had plenty of gas that was still usable.
I rewatched The Road Warrior about 4 years ago having not seen them in a long time and it's still off the walls awesome. The coolest line in the movie, and probably the whole franchise is "Two days ago I saw a vehicle that could haul that tankah. You wanna get outta here? Talk to me."
0:43 When a stunt goes wrong and injures the stuntman, but looks so cool they keep it in the film. They brought back Wez to crash the kids' party in _Weird Science._
Mad Max was a very low-budget, but imaginative cult classic. Road Warrior was (and is) one of my all time favorite action films. Beyond Thunderdome was a big-budget disappointment that I so desperately wanted to love.
Greate video. Credit where credit is due, our editing and jokes were heavily inspired by you ❤🍿 *children who are basically just a gang of shaved evokes" is pure genious, P.S. thankls for promoting red nose, hero.
Mad Max is the best Australian documentary series ever.
Without even a single mention of those damn drop bears? Come on...
@@marcromain64 Well, there is a total of about zero trees on the Mad Max movies; so where would they drop from?
That's always been my comedy head canon. The rest of the world is normal. This is just Australia.
😅🤣😂🤣😂🤣😆😆😆
@@jeanackle Do you think these sneaky beasts care?
The Mad Max films don't have continuity of story but they do have continuity of themes. In the first film, the world is starting to fall apart. In the second film, the world has fallen apart and people are fighting over the remains of resources. In the third film, a new society is being built from the ruins of the old world. In the fourth film, a fully fledged society with its own culture has been formed and rules the wasteland.
Mad Max is a undying wright who wanders the land, tortured by his memories of a world that's blown into the dust. He strives to bring justice to a world that's long gone Mad. Also his name might be Max, or maybe it's just about how hard he pushes the gas pedal.
@@sam4secretary I love the idea of Max acually being several dudes who got kinda mashed together in later retelling of events. And being included in stories he originally had no part of.
Kind of a post-apocalypse King Arthur.
The first film was ahead of it's time by suggesting the world was suffering from environmental disaster. In the third reverted decades by suggesting it had suffered from nuclear war.
The first film was inspired by the oil crisis that had just happened in the 1970's.
@@writerpatrickOil was relatively abundant and cheap in the mid-80s, when Mad Max franchise achieved mainstream popularity. But the Cold War had actually intensified since the first entry in the trilogy had been produced.
the "modern cinema" line got me
Member!
That was the best part! That's gotta be how each Disney pitch meeting starts these days. 😂
I member!
I 'member too, the time when there were good movies.
There are exceptions like Dune 2 but we had stuff like that several times a year instead of maybe every half decade
It’s so accurate it’s scary 😂
Mad Max's wife: another proud graduate of the Prometheus School of Running Away from Things
To be fair, in that terrain turning to a side wouldn't have helped.
The film was from the late 70’s, she *founded* that school!
Oh come on, the cars would have just turned after her. In Prometheus, the wheel (or whatever the hell it was, been ages) was rolling only one way. Charlize Theron wasn't carrying a kid either.
Ding!
@@monmothma3358It was motorcycles that were chasing her, and they would have performed poorly in the sand alongside the road.
5:57 "the one goon from Ace Ventura 2"
The ability of Bruce Spence to finagle roles in all the franchises is legendary. Lord of the Rings, Matrix Revolutions, Chronicles of Narnia, Star Wars Ep 3, Finding Nemo, Pirates of the Caribbean etc
I noticed a gyrocoptor or powered hang glider in the Furiosa trailer... secretly hoping Bruce Spence is flying it!
He used to live in my suburb in Sydney. Nice bloke apparently, and was lucky enough to look like he belonged in multiple fantasy franchises.
The train man! I knew I recognized him.
Amd played different roles in consecutive Max movies.
There are like a dozen Transformers movies; Bruce has gotta be in one of them somehow.
Interesting how almost everyone's idea of what Mad Max is (people in leather and spikes chasing each other in giant vehicles across a post-apocalyptic wasteland) comes entirely from the second film. The first one is a slow burn action flick that for obvious budget reasons had a pretty muted aesthetic (still impressive what they managed to do with such limited funding but I admit it definitely gave me tonal whiplash seeing it after seeing The Road Warrior first) while the third one is more lost boys than Mad Max.
The first one is just such a great representation of what would happen in the beginning when society starts to break down. It's not an apocalyptic wasteland. Cops still exist, there's still people just living their lives, but gangs are forming and they are fighting for power. It's such a neat concept that is not really explored anywhere else.
Sure the second one is what created the genre of post apocalyptic movies, but you have to give it to Miller for being such a visionary from the start.
@@vezokpiraka That's why I really like the first movie while I almost forgot what was third about
it's like Terminator 1&2, the first one is proof of concept. Second one is "ok we got it, here's all the money you need"! :D
@@vezokpirakaIIRC, it was originally supposed to take place in ordinary present day, Miller just didn't have the money for a lot of props and stuff. So he basically made it futuristic and dystopic after the fact. Only for the second movie did they really commit to that idea, with that prologue explaining what happened, etc.
I love the first one. Great villains and real emotional stakes.
Spikes weren’t even really a thing until the Italian and Filipino directors got involved.
"When his wife forgets how turn left or right".
"Its a common problem" -
Charlize Theron in Prometheus
She turned left! That means she's safe right? Right? The gang can touch her anymore now that's she's on the grass right?
@@Edax_Royeaux Obviously yes. The screen rant analysis of that is, if she runs off screen, the villains can't find her! That is how science works.
Also Rickon Stark
Except that situations were different. Bikers could have turned with her or run after her - in any case they would have caught up with her and still killed them. In Prometheus they literally could have avoided the object by turning either side
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 The constant overanalysing of fictional psychology, actions, events and physics is the only problem with Prometheus. It's a half decade old movie and people watching these satires are still obsessed with it.
To debunk your expectations on what people do in panic situations, try searching for videos with real people making terrible decisions in panic situations on here. Was it a smart move to run the way they did? No. Was it ever implied it was a smart decision? No. Lastly. It's a horror fiction. The main ingredient in those is, people thinking they're smarter than they are, getting killed in expected ways. The comment section dwellers on these satire channels wouldn't make it past the opening credits in a horror flick. 😋
Road Warrior is the film everyone thinks of when they say "Mad Max", but Mad Max is the one they are talking about when they say it was made on a shoestring budget.
Road Warrior had the highest budget of any film made in Oz at that time.
amazing that the original Mad Max costs were around 400 k dollars and managed to earn like 100 million. No wonder they keep making them.
@@richardmh1987 400,000 dollary doos?!
@@sir_john_hammond I'm equally amused that your comment had a 'Translate to English' option, and that it correctly turned "400,000 dollary doos?!" into "$400,000?!"
@@akaaoi hahahah amazing
@@akaaoi Sometimes, Google gets things right.
Say: "Oh what a day! What a Lovely Day!"
Witnessed
Also say: “Do you have it in you to make it epic?”
"Who runs Barter town? MASTER BLASTER!"
"See you around, raggedy man"
My explanation on the continuous errors is that each one is from someone's point of view (first one we have no idea, the other two are from children who grew up retelling the story) and different regions had different issues.
the first film is essentially a documentary from Max's point of view. The second film is all told in retrospect from an old Feral Kid (Feral Leader?). The third film can be considered told in retrospect from the woman with the short black hair, who is (re)telling the story to her kid and the rest of her tribe. I also feel that the perspective affects the storytelling: since the Feral Kid lived a rough life, *The Road Warrior* reflects that with it's more brutal "Cowboys and Indians" approach. Since the third film is being told by a mother to children, it fits that it has a softer, more Spielbergian look and feel.
That's a really neat perspective! 👍
Road Warrior was by far the best of all the Mad Max movies. So iconic!
Best lines, best characters, best action sequences. Whole movie is just in the zone.
Two men enter, one man leaves
The outcome remains to be seen, press start
two men leave, one man also leaves, now there is no-one left except the tumblweed
Thunderdome! THUNDERDOME! THUNDERDOME
TWO MEN ENTER!
ONE MAN LEAVES!
Bust a deal. Face the wheel!
I can't believe you left a great line like "Bust a Deal, Face the Wheel" on the cutting room floor.
The true wasteland.
Part of the reason Thunderdome was the way it was Byron Kennedy had died during pre-production so George Miller wasn't too into it, so Michael Ogilvie helped him direct. You can tell it was trying to be more commercial. Ironbar was basically Wile E. Coyote. But that Thunderdome sequence is great.
Another bad thing about that movie is they have the great Tina Turner but she's gone by the end of the first act and we don't see her again until there's like 15 minutes left. It becomes Mad Max meets the lost boys for a huge chunk of the movie.
Sorta glad they did. Without thunderdome, some of us would have never heard of mad Max.
"HOBOCOP" lol 😆
i was not ready for that 😂
That one is from brooklyn nine nine
Chef's exquisite kiss! Cherry on top
_HOBOCOP With A Crossbow_
4:12 LMAO! "ONLY FETISH GEAR SURVIVED"
I mean, its usually sturdy and very well made......
"...an epic film where we'll see less fetish gear than a pride day parade" would have been a great line lol
I just wouldn't make it without my cotton-poly blends.
I'm grateful Mad Max also inspired the Borderlands franchise.
And don't forget, a proper Mad Max game in 2015 (there's also RAGE but no one likes to remember that, it's MEDIOCRE).
Another bad movie we can look forward to: Grannyland.
You should all check out the Audiobook "Miller & Max". It tells the history of the Mad Max movies. Things like no permits for filming, building an actual Rocket car that came off its safety rails and taking the dystopian cars for a joyride in Sydney while drunk and high. Mel was going to be in Fury Road when they started writing it in the 90's I think it was.
Mr. Krabs: Welcome to the Apocalypse Mr. Squidward. I hope you like leather.
-The Spongebob Movie: Sponge Out Of Water
I prefer suede
Just watched this movie, and just understood this line 😂😂😂❤
the original Mad Max will always be my favourite. But that's probably because I regularly drive through Clunes and my dad has Toecutter's bike.
Max's V8 Interceptor is one of the most badass, underrated movie cars and no one can tell me otherwise.
I mean we can. the question is whether you'll listen or care haha
@@ianism3
No one will care.
I guess I'll start, with the 1958 Plymouth from "Christine".
Not only does it harbor a murderous evil spirit that enjoys vehicular homicide, but it ALSO thinks like a jealous lover, gradually changes its owner's personality, can't be permanently stopped even by being compacted into a cube, AND just plain looks evil without any Hollywood modifications -- that's genuinely what the cars looked like when they were rolling out of Detroit by the hundreds.
@@stevenscott2136
One of the most is not the most.
Sure it's a nice car but what about Dodge M4S Interceptor from "The Wraith"?
A+! Will Poulter and Krang at home got me! Hilarious!
“Modern Cinema.”
Goddamn. Nailed it, but goddamn.
“Memba-this?” “Memba-this?” “Memba-this?”
😅💀
@@SoggyDonuts79 I 'member
outoftheloop can someone please explain
@@cheatmagnet this is making fun of the trend of remaking tv/movies from the 80s and 90s. “Hey, remember the A-Team? Here’s a new one! Hey, remember Road House? Here’s a new one!”
Ah yes the member berries being served with a ViewMaster!
The days when Mel Gibson had an Australian accent.
Didn't have the script to the 'Maccabees' then either.
that was brilliant. I remember seeing the first Mad Max on the ground at an old drive in the late 70s. There was nothing like it. Thanks George
"Children, who are basically a pack of shaved ewoks" is pure gold 🤣🤣🤣
5:57 HAY!!! that's the living legend that is Bruce Spence!!!! 🤬🤬🤬
One of the most memorable characters was that little boy with his boomerang - and I remember some fingers and a great skull dress 😂
We don’t need another hero, but we did need this Honest Trailer!
The commentary on Wez, "...in every sense of those words," is So brilliant. Legendary status.
Escape From New York and Road Warrior are IMO contemporary sister movies that both came out in 1981 and that together are the paradigm of virtually every modern, non-zombie dystopian and/or post-apocalyptic movie, show, or game. Escape From New York is NOT a Mad Max imitator, rip-off, or homage. They are equals in that regard.
Death Race with Jason Statham, however, is a reboot of Death Race 2000 which came out several years before the first Mad Max movie. Though I'm sure Death Race reboot borrowed equally from Mad Max, it took its concept from Roger Corman and not George Miller. lol
Beyond Thunderdome turns into a Disney "Mad Max for kids" movie in the second half. Complete with slapstick antics. It's like the Apple Dumpling Gang in the wasteland. It's bizzare.
Yeah I hadn't seen it until recently and was baffled by the weird lost boys/peter pan-ness of it
That is a perfect description of Beyond Thunderdome. It's like they got bored with the movie they were making and just decided on filming something else instead
It was hard to understand the kids. Made it hard to follow the 2nd half of the story. But that was also partly because it made no sense. One moment he goes to go rescue the kids that left, then he's like oh yeah let's rescue Master Blaster just because. I guess George Miller not being motivated with this one really shows.
"HoboCop" Brilliant
It really is
Uh EXCUSE ME, it should be UnhousedCop. /s
"polly cotton blends were the first victims of the wasteland ...only fetish gear survives" lol , I nearly died.
"Tom of Auckland" - Perfect joke most folks won't get.
Now somebody send an apology note to Will Poulter. 😂
Agreed that was truly inspired.
That’s where I chuckled 🤭
I was going to make the same comment. Classic.
Those who know, know! hee hee
This is one of those films that is more influential than people realize. So many filmmakers were inspired by Mad Max to make their own post apocalypse films
Yeah, I didn't know it started the whole genre...
In honor of Furiosa this Friday, please say: "Can't we all just get BEYOND Thunderdome?"
I'd rather follow the north star.
I thought it was “All we want is life BeyooooooOoond….Thunderdome🎶”?
But don't forget that in order for the quip to work, the Thunderdome mentioned has to be a non-specific Thunderdome; it can't be THE Thunderdome!
Yet you also say you don't want to know the way home...
@@whistlingsage9817 ok crow
My favourite take is still that Max is a spirit of vengeance that roams the wasteland eternally, just showing up and helping out before fading away again. It's always the same guy over hundreds of years, but he's not really a person.
So, High Plains Drifter.
@@adamh8876 Or the upside down version of Batman? So Batman sleeping I guess?
Frying Gosling made me chuckle.
I felt bad for Goose, he was a good dude.
It's perfect!
Not sure if the joke registered with everyone 🪿
Good man, that Goose. Too bad he had a crispy conclusion.
"Like Jack from State Farm."
Don't know why, but I burst out laughing there.
Please do an Honest Trailer for X-Men '97 (Season 1)
They might wait until the week Deadpool 3 cokes out.
ETA: that was a typo, but appropriate so it stays
Say: "I'm taking my balls and leaving." In your best Vincent Price impression.
Please say with your epic voice:
"Get the scientists working on the tube technology, chop chop, let's go."
Make an Honest Trailer for X-Men ‘97
Oh yeah!!!
u guys gotta do the original DEATH RACE with Sylvester stallone now , that movie was amazingly hilarious😆
hilariously awful. 😆
I watched it for the 1st time last year, yr rt though it's so bad it''s acctually funny😁
We need a Bojack Horseman Honest Trailer goddamnit!
Up
Agreed...he made Mad Max movie trailer...nobody asked for that
"get ready for a masters course in depression"
“Do you hate yourself and also everyone else around you? You’ll LOVE BoJack Horseman!”
I watch these to be entertained not to be depressed
Remember this trilogy when you look at the night sky.
"Do you think this got him the Babe 2 gig?" - C'mon gang, you should know he wrote and produced the first Babe movie. Babe 2 was just him putting on the director hat too.
Yeah that line in this video quote:”his wife fatally forgot how to turn left or right”😆😂🤣👏🏻, and that is hilarious😆🤣😆👏🏻💯.
In memory of Roger Corman, do an Honest Trailer for Death Race 2000 (1975), the movie he produced.
"the" movie he produced. But I guess it is well-known and for his later work has lots of material that won't require blurry circles...
Give me the chills with the line "Welcome to PlayPaintChill. You just gained honor +2 for following us ! ".
The popularity of Mad Max shows why humans will still be Petrolheads even with the onset of Teslas and the like
Anyone who missed the Mad Max game a few years ago should definitely check it out.
First CinemaSins Mad Max now this
What a day! What a *LOVELY DAY!!*
The onely thing this day can get eni better is, wen the chanel awesome / nostalgia critic also do a video 😊
Witness me!!
‘The Nightrider! That is his name! Remember him when you look into the night sky!’ Bet movie quote ever! 💯
Dredd (2012) we have waited long enough
One of the most bizarre things I have ever seen in my life was a commercial for The Road Warrior.....on the History Channel.
When are we getting the knuckles (or wade) honest trailer?!
"Member this? Member this?" - Modern Cinema. 😂 Damn that cracked me up good.
If it really was "Two Men Enter, One Man Leaves", wouldn't that mean the dead bodies of the losers would keep piling up in the Thunderdome, eventually making it unusable?
Good point.
I remember a line, "Two men enter, one man leaves... then a little later, the other man leaves after being declared the winner." but I can't recall what it was from. Futurama maybe? 🙂
Don't forget about "a boy and his dog" we might not even have fallout without that
"Will Poulter" 😂💀 That's so wrong, but I commend you for going there
Here's a fun "inspired by..." Harry Bosch's dog, "Coltrane," was inspired by Max's dog. When they were looking for a feral dog to become Bosch's companion, they immediately thought of Max's dog and went to find one like it. He got to avoid his predecessor's fate too - when the dog looked like he might be done, Titus Welliver said all they got were furious emails saying if the dog died, that was it for them and the series. Coltrane survived...
"I deserve to be blown, before the jacuzzi" still beat Mel Gibson rant
Who said that jacuzzi quote?
@SoggyDonuts79 Mel in one of his phone calls to his Wife(ex/girlfriend/something) that she recorded I think to use for a divorce
@@SAMcGarvey1. Oh I see, you said “beat” not “best” Mel Gibson rant.
Jake from State Farm is gold, awesome joke. Been cracking at that one for a long time myself, thanks for including it
District 9… IS ONE MOVIE!!!(for now)
You guys really should do a trailer for every Hayao Miyazaki film.
Surprised that you didn't go into how Max is basically yet another Yojimbo after the first revenge film.
After he got revenge he's just a ronin wandering into other people's stories. The gyro copter pilot and the oil town folk, Pig Killer and the feral kids, Furiosa and the wives.
George was completely ignorant of Akira Kurosawa and his works until after Mad Max when that parallel was noticed by his Japanese audience.
You are right about the continuity. I am still very confused because in mad max2 The interceptor gets destroyed, so in mad max 3 he gets around without a car. And then in the new mad max movie, he has the interceptor back without any backstory
think of it like zelda games lol. same character, diff stories maybe
Fury road is set after the events of the mad max video game and in the game the character obtains parts, including a V8 engine, to rebuild the Interceptor.
@@Colin_
In the game you already start with the interceptor
@@pancakecookiecrumbles
Yeah I think thats best
Kinda Like the batman movies
"No sax before marriage"
These guys!! 😂😂😂
I still have my VHS copies of the original trilogy. In their large plastic cases too.
This is why you need more science classes. Clean gas meaning no additives like alcohol etc. works and is good for about two yrs. The movie was made before all the additive regulations. It’s entirely possible they had plenty of gas that was still usable.
Also yeah Mel has a temper but I’ve been surprised how people still support Alec Baldwin
They make their own gas from natural oil deposits. There's literally a place named "Gastown" in Fury Road.
@@stevenscott2136 Fury road doesn’t count
@@charleshetrick3152
But there was a Gas Town mentioned earlier, wasn't there?
@@stevenscott2136 The villains in The Road Warrior are trying to take over a literal oil refinery.
Love the running theme in these movies of Max being the only normal person left in Aussieland
Please say with your epic voice: "Never trust a big butt and a smile"
Please say "Violence isn't the answer, it's the question, and the answer is YES!"
With the Red Nose Day pre-roll, maybe do a Patch Adams Honest Trailer?
Right!
No!
A delightful Honest Trailer and my request read out- What a lovely day!
Mad max
1- the pre- apocalypse in the deadliest country
2 - the post apocalypse gets sexy
3 - the cocainealypse
I rewatched The Road Warrior about 4 years ago having not seen them in a long time and it's still off the walls awesome. The coolest line in the movie, and probably the whole franchise is "Two days ago I saw a vehicle that could haul that tankah. You wanna get outta here? Talk to me."
Please say “Get your mind out of my pants!”
0:43 When a stunt goes wrong and injures the stuntman, but looks so cool they keep it in the film.
They brought back Wez to crash the kids' party in _Weird Science._
If I were hanging out in a post apocalyptic setting, it would be Terminator, Matrix or Planet of the Apes.
I'm coming back for this now. You went back to the 70s for a part of this, so it isn't a reach to do Big Trouble in Little China!
Mad Max was a very low-budget, but imaginative cult classic. Road Warrior was (and is) one of my all time favorite action films. Beyond Thunderdome was a big-budget disappointment that I so desperately wanted to love.
I loved it anyway. So many fun ideas and characters.
So did they officially say they wouldn't do the the commentaries anymore or address it in anyway?
The Mad Max trilogy also inspired the tabletop game Car Wars, I believe.
It is more likely to be inspired by some of Roger Zelazny's stories, particularly Damnation Alley.
Do Xmen 97 next. Do your worst boys! BECAUSE IT WAS GLORIOUS!!!!!!!!
5:05 Escape from New York predates the Mad Max sequels.
Sequels, yes, but the original Mad Max came out before EFNY.
The first two Mad Max movies are among my all-time favourite movies.
"Modern Cinema" killed me
Mad Max is such a classic series, and Honest Trailers does a great job of poking fun at its over-the-top action scenes. Love it!
In honor of Bad Boys 4, can you do an Honest Trailer of I, Robot?
Greate video. Credit where credit is due, our editing and jokes were heavily inspired by you ❤🍿
*children who are basically just a gang of shaved evokes" is pure genious,
P.S. thankls for promoting red nose, hero.
Please say:
"The name's epic voice guy. Remember it!"
The Mad Max franchise started off in rural Australia and ended up on Arrakis
Please say "If Grace was water, then I'm swimming in an ocean"
Great job. Can you do Big Trouble in Little China?
Also, can you say "it ain't happening, like a load of bread."
Missed an opportunity to say 'Bluey!' for the dog
‘It’s my snake, I trained it, I’m gonna eat it’ ….surely one of the best lines EVER