Gibson estimated that 85% of his vehicle parts were sourced in Australia, while he had to turn to the United Kingdom for larger parts (like trucks and rocket launchers) and the United States for a few hard-to-find pieces like the two 1959 Cadillac Coupe de Villes that made up Immortan Joe’s version of a presidential vehicle.
Why else would the War Boys salvage them?Īlthough most modern vehicles were excluded using these criteria, the team was still left with plenty of choices, and if you look closely at the cars in the movie you’ll recognise Australian classics like the Holden Monaro, HZ Ute, Kingswood, and FJ Ute and the Chrysler Valiant Charger. The vehicles had to have some ‘inherent beauty’.If it’s computerised it won’t be much use to you in a nuclear wasteland because you won’t be able to fix it (this also ruled out most cars built after the 1980s).If you (warrior of the post-apocalypse) are going into war you want pressed metal – not plastic and carbon fibre (this ruled out most cars built after the 1980s).The production design team began scouring the yards of amateur car restorers around Australia, looking for abandoned projects to salvage and convert into the Mad Max fleet (‘stealing passions from men’s backyards’, as Gibson put it). They also had to be actually capable of an interminable high-speed desert chase (yes, even the monstrous 18-wheel ‘War Rig’). CGI was not used for almost any of the stunts, so the cars had to look like what you’d expect to find in a battle after a nuclear apocalypse ‘45 years from next Wednesday’. In an interview with ABC Radio Sydney’s CJ Johnson last year, he revealed why his team went to extreme lengths for their fleet of vehicles to seem realistic. While Fury Road opens with the familiar ‘Interceptor’ driven by Max in the earlier instalments, Gibson designed and built around 150 new vehicles for the film. Colin might not be as famous as Mel (no relation between the two) but he is equally important to the world of Mad Max. In fact, the fantastical vehicles that feature in the majority of the film’s scenes were designed by an Australian production designer, Colin Gibson. And, of course, there’s what many consider to be the real highlight of the movie: the vehicles. But there’s still plenty about Fury Road that’s Australian – from George Miller himself (who directed and co-wrote it) to much of the supporting cast and the crew.
The popular and critical success of the film did a lot to silence any complaints that the series was becoming ‘too Hollywood’, which were possibly unfair in the first place – Namibia was only selected after it became apparent that the Broken Hill area had become far too green to represent a post-apocalyptic wasteland, and Mel Gibson might not have been as convincing a hardened road warrior as he was thirty years ago. In Fury Road, Englishman Tom Hardy replaced Gibson as Max Rockatansky and the desert of Namibia replaced Broken Hill as the setting. But while the first three instalments in the series were shot near Broken Hill and starred local talent Mel Gibson and a host of other Australian actors, the latest in the franchise appears at first glance far less home-grown. Get a copy and watch it (make sure the sound’s up) before you read ahead.Īsk a hundred people to name an Australian road film and at least ninety-nine will answer ‘ Mad Max’. Warning: if names like ‘the War Boys’ and ‘Imperator Furiosa’ mean nothing to you, you’ve obviously not seen ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’.
Written by Mick Bolognese | March 31st, 2016