Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
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Synopsis
Cast
- Anya Taylor-Joy
- Chris Hemsworth
- Daniel Webber
- Angus Sampson
- Tom Burke
- Nathan Jones
- Goran D. Kleut
- Lachy Hulme
- CJ. Bloomfield
- David Collins
Letterboxd User Reviews
- May 2, 2024
it’s furiOsa, not furioSA.
JesseMay 23, 2024never seen anyone act so nonchalant after getting their nipples ripped off
marianoMay 23, 2024The boys are all here: Scrotus, Toe Jam, Chumbucket, and of course, Pissboy
Bryan Espitia - May 24, 2024
Sickest damn revenge I've ever seen in a movie. Diabolical. Shoutout to that guy at the Cinemark who recognized me! I would say you made my day, but like, I watched Furiosa right after soooooo
James (Schaffrillas)May 15, 2024You can’t unkill the world. Charlize Theron’s Imperator Furiosa learned that lesson the hard way when she commandeered a rig full of Immortan Joe’s precious war brides and sped across the desert towards the matriarchal eden from which she was stolen as a child. She and her…
davidehrlichNov 3, 2024Chris Hemsworth in this movie is a lot like me if I smoked a bit too much of the Zaza
JoshuaPictures - May 28, 2024
It’s honestly unreasonable how much this rocks
Patrick WillemsMay 28, 2024There’s a really cool moment that I think is truly perfect. It takes place between 0:00:0 and 2:29:00.
George CarmiMay 24, 2024THE FEMININE AND THE FURIOUS.
Sydney🚀
Queue Community Reviews
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8.7 - Truly feels like an extension or true part 1 to Fury Road. Furiosa is the right character to delve into, and Anya Taylor-Joy does the character justice. It provided a lot more of the world context I was looking for from Fury Road , & I honestly enjoyed the story much more. Pretty much…
Visually this looked great, and has some really good action sequences. I thoroughly enjoyed the beginning, and found myself wanting to know more about where Furiosa came from, her mother, and the community they were part of. I did feel like there was very little character development, which…
Visually awesome and action packed. Storyline definitely wasn’t as good as fury road but it’s a good prequel. Chris Hemsworth was a funny villain but towards the end felt like the movie was being dragged. It was good don’t get me wrong, but not the “movie of the summer” 7.0/10
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Cannot go wrong with George Miller. The action, dialogue, characterisations, design, stunts, visuals, choreography, score, and camerawork are unbelievable as always. You'll end up asking yourself, "Is that real?", several times. Personally, Fury Road is in my top 10 of the greatest action movies of…
Damn this was fun. The aesthetic is so consistent with the prior movies, and Furiosa is developed from childhood through early adulthood. But it is Chris Hemsworth that steals the show. He’s a very different villain but one with such charm, dumbassness, and villainy that I can’t help but love and…
Lived up to hype & avoided worries. ATY & CH are amazing & Miller’s direction is flawless. Fleshes out locations & characters perfectly, along with context for FR. CG is good, action is fantastic & score is electric. It’s no FR, but its my fav film of the year rn (sorry Dune pt2)
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Decent movie. First 30ish minutes was really slow and boring to be fair but the rest was enjoyable. Some really entertaining fight scenes but that’s what heavily carried the movie. Plot was all around extremely average BUT it was a fun watch. 6.5/10
Furiosa traffics in pessimism and cruelty. It delivers a bleak and blunt commentary on the inevitability of war and suffering, pointing out humanity’s propensity for justifying self-extinction, be it religion, oil, water, revenge or empire.
Atom User Reviews
my goodness I loved it and I may go and watch it again in 4DX. this movie was so good....and the words were very few!!!
You definitely won't be bored with this once.
Metacritic
It harkens back to the more sprawling nature of the original Mad Max films, but it’s also a spiritual work that grapples with how humanity reacts to grief and loss— whether sorrow perverts you or makes you stronger—all while delivering on the visual spectacle you could hope for from Miller.
The film attests to George Miller’s enduring aptitude for utilizing the ridiculous to achieve the sublime.
For the first time in Miller’s now-five-film franchise, he seems to be falling shy of the immediacy he’s sustained, often deliriously, for an entire feature.