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It's also important to remember that the alien life cycle was going to be different: people were going to be transmuted into eggs. In that context, the idea of the alien consuming and adopting aspects of a human isn't as far out of left field
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# ? May 13, 2016 16:56 |
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# ? Jun 12, 2024 07:46 |
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chitoryu12 posted:That 10 years is probably the pivotal point for Fury Road being so good. If it was made on time in the early 2000s, it would have had none of the actors it ended up with and inferior technology to make it with. If Mad Max: Wasteland winds up being Beyond Thunderdome 2, I will be quite okay with that, tbh.
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# ? May 13, 2016 17:16 |
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Giving the Alien speech and an understanding of how human things work certainly makes it far less alien.
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# ? May 13, 2016 17:24 |
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One of the reasons I always felt JC's The Thing was the superior horror alien--giving it the ability to understand human speech does not make it any less alien.
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# ? May 13, 2016 17:32 |
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Yeah being able to mimic humans isn't necessarily humanizing, but that Alien treatment sounds like it wanted to eat Ripley's head so it could Single White Female her. Which would be scary / hilarious if it showed any prior indication of that motivation - like a scene where she catches the Alien wearing her clothes or making phonecalls to Earth pretending to be her.
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# ? May 13, 2016 18:03 |
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moths posted:like a scene where she catches the Alien wearing her clothes this sounds hilarious
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# ? May 13, 2016 18:21 |
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for a bunch of people so quick to poo poo on Cameron it's p funny that it's some kind of revelation that Scott's good ideas are entirely confined to effects and set designmoths posted:Yeah being able to mimic humans isn't necessarily humanizing, but that Alien treatment sounds like it wanted to eat Ripley's head so it could Single White Female her. lol
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# ? May 13, 2016 18:42 |
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Snak posted:It's also important to remember that the alien life cycle was going to be different: people were going to be transmuted into eggs. In that context, the idea of the alien consuming and adopting aspects of a human isn't as far out of left field It certainly would have been a very different movie and it's hard to imagine Giger's death nightmare forming a civilization, but keep in mind that a lot of these crazy ideas were very, very early on before they had a clue what the alien would look like.
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# ? May 13, 2016 19:25 |
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david_a posted:...it's hard to imagine Giger's death nightmare forming a civilization, but keep in mind that a lot of these crazy ideas were very, very early on before they had a clue what the alien would look like. I think it's a neat idea, though. The alien is, after all, symbolic of humanity's own darker instincts. It's basically an unstoppable eating and raping machine that poisons its environment to serve it. Like Immortan Joe.
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# ? May 13, 2016 19:29 |
For anyone who was interested in Uncharted 4, it has a nearly 20 minute gunfight and car chase sequence that's seemingly the closest any video game has come to replicating the feel of a Fury Road car chase. Obviously, minor spoilers for Uncharted 4 in this video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNKXsd76OEg
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# ? May 13, 2016 19:51 |
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That's more like ten minutes with lots of dying.
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# ? May 14, 2016 00:28 |
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i don't understand the whole LP phenomenon generally and I especially don't understand watching a random stranger who's incredibly bad at games gently caress up the same way over and over and over again
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# ? May 14, 2016 00:29 |
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chitoryu12 posted:For anyone who was interested in Uncharted 4, it has a nearly 20 minute gunfight and car chase sequence that's seemingly the closest any video game has come to replicating the feel of a Fury Road car chase. Obviously, minor spoilers for Uncharted 4 in this video. If Max spent the entire film getting machine gunned in the face by everybody and then walking it off, Fury Road would have been a very different film
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# ? May 14, 2016 00:44 |
It[/i]'s not that weird why it started, early LPs were either of obscure and hard to find games that the average person was highly unlikely to find normally or provided some sort of interesting commentary on the subject being played, with the occasional example of silly novelty where someone played a game with a weird and bizarre self-imposed gimmick. The "watch this guy get owned horribly" thing started out in the romhack community around poo poo like kaizo Mario where the entertainment came from someone who was explicitly really good at a game being horribly slayed by horseshit user mods, without the viewer having to actually get wrecked repeatedly to enjoy the content.
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# ? May 14, 2016 00:50 |
Unfortunately the game is so new that there's really no good videos out there that just show that one scene.
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# ? May 14, 2016 01:53 |
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chitoryu12 posted:For anyone who was interested in Uncharted 4, it has a nearly 20 minute gunfight and car chase sequence that's seemingly the closest any video game has come to replicating the feel of a Fury Road car chase.
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# ? May 14, 2016 07:56 |
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david_a posted:no its the best. Max, Tank Girl, and Dredd team up to fight psychic androids on the moon. After their getaway spaceship is vaporized, they have to escape from Luna... with the help of Snake Plissken. MMAgCh posted:And the brief appearance of the Sydney Opera House at the end of Beyond Thunderdome, of course. Alhazred posted:And the boomerang the Feral Kid throws. The Transavia Airtruk was also wholly Australian phenomenon. I believe the bulk of the production line was used in Australia or New Zealand. As much as the joke about Chinese dropships landing in the Outback, it's an ideal notion. The idea that the West has fallen into failed state disarray and retreated to anarchic atavism, while new superpowers like united Africa or China or South America isn't new in science fiction, but would be a novel approach in post-apocalyptic media. I've joked that climatic battle in The Postman should have been interrupted by Chinese peacekeepers. The fall of the Roman Empire lead to the Dark Ages in Europe, but in the rest of the world, you had the Byzantine Empire that would later evolve into the Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Golden Age coming out of Baghdad, China still churned along even after being invaded by Mongols, Japan continued to grow and unify in isolation, the ascendancy of the Benin and Somali Empires in Africa, etc.
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# ? May 14, 2016 09:28 |
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On the other hand, it takes a global economy and shittons of oil to make any sort of post industrial country survive, much less a country with a billion people. Also, the reason the Mad Max movies are so good precisely because they're so simple and self contained. Starting a dumb expanded universe just so you can know 'what happened elsewhere' is missing the point.
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# ? May 14, 2016 15:42 |
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I'm not sure why nerds think China is so likely to survive/thrive considering they're staring post apocalyptia right in the face with constant civil unrest, a tanking economy, and one of the worst water shortages in recorded history looming. Like, if you asked me to rank major powers in order of closeness to Mad Maxing the gently caress out, I'd put China at number 1 no question. Prokhor Zakharov fucked around with this message at 17:24 on May 14, 2016 |
# ? May 14, 2016 17:17 |
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If any nation was going to survive a Mad Max apocalypse I'd go with somewhere small, sane, and remote. So Iceland, I guess.
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# ? May 14, 2016 18:54 |
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Mantis42 posted:On the other hand, it takes a global economy and shittons of oil to make any sort of post industrial country survive, much less a country with a billion people. Also, the reason the Mad Max movies are so good precisely because they're so simple and self contained. Starting a dumb expanded universe just so you can know 'what happened elsewhere' is missing the point. "Elsewhere" should only exist as a MacGuffin.
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# ? May 14, 2016 19:05 |
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I could see a sequel going in lots of different directions. I've often wondered what probably happened right after the events of Fury Road. For example, maybe Furiosia dies of her wounds, lionizing her as some martyr to stand up for all the downtrodden people in the Citadel. Max has already moved on, but there's this huge power vacuum in the area because all the major warlords are dead. Who picks up the pieces? a post-post apocalyptic situation. I'd have it where Max just happens to come back ten years later, gets another car stolen/broken/etc again and has to navigate the new situation to be on his way. In the meantime the local people just traded one Cargo Cult for another, maybe he tries to use the fact that he helped Furiosa free the wives in the past to give him leverage toward getting supplies, but the whole legend of what happened on the Fury Road has elevated him and Furiosa's deeds to the point they don't believe this raggedy man could have possibly been the same guy. It would be a great exploration of how legends of people become so much grander than the people themselves, and how people are prone to making the same dumb mistakes and creating a circular follow-the-leader when it comes to trying to form some rudimentary form of government.
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# ? May 14, 2016 20:15 |
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so, all the bits of Beyond Thunderdome everyone wishes never happened? tbh after three movies of Max is the lone wanderer > Max finds a tribe and learns to care about people again > tribe is saved, Max wanders off to become the lone wanderer again I'd kinda like them to finish off his story in some kind of satisfactory way, whether that's him finding a home again for good or whatever. There's a lot of things you can do with the kind of mythical Hobbesian wasteland the movies are set in and all its crazyass characters, but there's a limit to the range of stories you can tell with Max specifically, and Fury Road was the last remake of the Road Warrior I see us ever needing. A Wizard of Goatse fucked around with this message at 20:36 on May 14, 2016 |
# ? May 14, 2016 20:27 |
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A Wizard of Goatse posted:so, all the bits of Beyond Thunderdome everyone wishes never happened? Maybe he takes a heel turn and turns into the next Immortan Joe? He's certainly cynical/antisocial enough.
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# ? May 14, 2016 20:40 |
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he doesn't exactly have the social skills, and his recurring thing is that he's not actually ruthless enough to thrive in the waste the way the teeming mobs of leather gangsters do. That'd be a pretty fundamental shift from the character that's been in the movies, you might as well just make a film about a younger Joe (I'd totally watch a film about a younger Joe, I want to see lots of Mad Max movies that aren't about Max)
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# ? May 14, 2016 20:46 |
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Panfilo posted:I could see a sequel going in lots of different directions. I've often wondered what probably happened right after the events of Fury Road. I hope you've got a good imagination cause with the way Miller structures sequels you're never gonna find out.
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# ? May 14, 2016 20:58 |
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Max is a cipher. Every movie is always going to be built around the structure of the lone wanderer encountering some people, being reluctant to help them, eventually securing a better life for them and then melting off into the wasteland again. It's a very old trope from storytelling. Even the Man With No Name in the Eastwood films seems old now, but it dates all the way back to the idea of ronin or knights errant, probably further back than that. It's also a neat little explanation for the reboot - for why Max is a different actor and why the events of the four films don't make chronological sense. You can think of Max as being a sort of legend of the wasteland, with all kinds of different heroes being mapped onto him as an icon. Which is why I wouldn't want to see a sequel which is anything other than Max in his Interceptor again, encountering an entirely new location and set of characters. Furiosa, the wives, the Citadel - their story is over. You can think about the power vacuum and the adjustment of the Citadel into a more humane society, but is that really, actually, the kind of story you want to see in a sequel to Fury Road, which had such a brilliantly powerful yet simple story, built around a car chase? Of course not. On the other hand somebody further up wanted to see a Brotherhood-of-Steel style Chinese dropship so maybe you do.
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# ? May 15, 2016 01:51 |
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I remember reading or hearing an interview with Miller where he was talking about a gyrocopter sequence in Fury Road that was never shot. Expanding on something like that might be cool. I definitely agree the next one should move on from Furiosa and the citadel which will be a shame. I just hope Miller has another fantastic female character in him that wouldn't be a Furiosa clone.
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# ? May 15, 2016 02:00 |
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freebooter posted:Max is a cipher. Every movie is always going to be built around the structure of the lone wanderer encountering some people, being reluctant to help them, eventually securing a better life for them and then melting off into the wasteland again. It's a very old trope from storytelling. Even the Man With No Name in the Eastwood films seems old now, but it dates all the way back to the idea of ronin or knights errant, probably further back than that. Max isn't interchangeable with just every lone drifter in story history he's a much more narrowly defined character with really just one arc; he hasn't been given the flexibility to do a Yojimbo thing or temporarily ally with the Humungus to rob the gas rig then betray him. i don't even give a little bit of a poo poo about postapocalyptic canonicity or whatever there's just a limit to how many ways you can tell the same story in the same setting with the same themes, and I think with Fury Road we've seen the limit of what can be entertainingly done without bringing something new into the mix. Could be wrong and Miller's got something wild up his sleeve, but as it stands if they're gonna keep making Mad Max movies they gotta do something to keep it fresh and Max himself is the most restrictive and, really, inessential component to a Mad Max movie. Rebuilding civilization is probably not in the cards as that seems pretty thematically jarring and not what the movies are really about but there's plenty of different stories could be told about people preserving or recovering their humanity in the Hobbesian demolition derby hellscape in different ways from literally the exact same way Max has done it for three films. A Wizard of Goatse fucked around with this message at 02:36 on May 15, 2016 |
# ? May 15, 2016 02:31 |
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freebooter posted:Max is a cipher. Every movie is always going to be built around the structure of the lone wanderer encountering some people, being reluctant to help them, eventually securing a better life for them and then melting off into the wasteland again. It's a very old trope from storytelling. Even the Man With No Name in the Eastwood films seems old now, but it dates all the way back to the idea of ronin or knights errant, probably further back than that. And they literally called him The Man With No Name in Thunderdome.
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# ? May 15, 2016 05:41 |
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A Wizard of Goatse posted:Max himself is the most restrictive and, really, inessential component to a Mad Max movie. Those two things are opposites. Max is not restrictive at all, precisely because he's not essential. He's a framing device, a viewer surrogate. Fury Road isn't his story, it's the story of Furiosa and the wives and Nux and Joe. The next movie will be the story of a bunch of other people he stumbles across, and I'm sure it will be just as good. The only really fundamental ingredients of a Mad Max film are Max himself, and a post-apocalyptic society that revolves around cars.
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# ? May 15, 2016 14:07 |
Luminous Obscurity posted:If any nation was going to survive a Mad Max apocalypse I'd go with somewhere small, sane, and remote. So Iceland, I guess. Iceland is barely scraping by as it is though. If an apocalypse happened they would be back to bloodfeuds and human sacrificing in no time.
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# ? May 15, 2016 14:18 |
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Iceland would starve to death without anyone with which to sell cod.
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# ? May 15, 2016 15:19 |
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Joke's on us when some weirdo fruit loop island like Nova Scotia is the seat of global power after everyone else cannibalizes themselves.
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# ? May 15, 2016 15:30 |
A GLISTENING HODOR posted:Joke's on us when some weirdo fruit loop island like Nova Scotia is the seat of global power after everyone else cannibalizes themselves. The joke is pretty much always on Iceland.
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# ? May 15, 2016 15:57 |
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You know, something else that they could explore in a sequel (that would be much more general and applicable ) is the whole guzzoline crisis. I always remembered Mad Max movies as people fighting over Guzzoline. But in Fury Road water seemed much more critical. The only time guzzoline became relevant was when Furiosa was gonna barter the fuel pod for safe passage, and the People Eater complaining about how much guzzoline got spent. Of course we also don't know what Gastown's annual oil production is or anything like that. But it seemed like in Fury Road these resources were fairly stable, just isolated in the hands of the various warlords. An interesting sequel would be where they really focus on how scarce guzzoline is, how critical it is for survival, and the lengths people are going to go to get it.
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# ? May 15, 2016 18:13 |
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david_a posted:I was trying to understand where MrL_JaKiri was drawing the line with that statement. Editing? He does not have an editing credit on T1, T2, or The Abyss, for example. The ones he does have credits may be argued as the bloated ones - True Lies, Titanic, Avatar (and Strange Days, which he didn't direct but does seem way too long for what it was). Why cookie Rocket posted:What about Terminator? Or is that a "broken clock twice a day" thing in your opinion? I don't think it's a coincidence that his three best films (T1, T2, Aliens) are also the shortest, which are also ones where GAH was present and JC doesn't have an editing credit. Also hi Nefud what's the haps, you might like Mummy on the Orient Express
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# ? May 15, 2016 18:14 |
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MrL_JaKiri posted:GAH was present GAH?
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# ? May 15, 2016 18:41 |
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VideoTapir posted:GAH? Gale Anne Hurd
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# ? May 15, 2016 19:40 |
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# ? Jun 12, 2024 07:46 |
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Panfilo posted:You know, something else that they could explore in a sequel (that would be much more general and applicable ) is the whole guzzoline crisis. That's literally the second film you've described. If Lord Humongus got control of the pumping station/refinery, he would literally become king of the Wasteland and why Pappagallo was determined to have it destroyed than have it fall into his hands. It's also a bit of the third film, since Auntie Entity has made Bartertown a prime destination thanks to Master-Blaster's technique of refining methane from pig waste and the plot is largely forwarded by her scheme to get Master-Blaster (and Bartertown by it's extension) back under her control.
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# ? May 15, 2016 20:30 |