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The Road Warrior Movie Free Download Hd
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Roaming the highways of post-apocalyptic Australia, years after he avenged his wife and son and his partner who were murdered by the motorcycle gang led by the evil Toecutter. Burnt out former Australian policeman Max Rockatansky, now known as "The Road Warrior" searching for sources of fuel, stumbles upon a gasoline refinery home to a community of survivors who are struggling for survival and finds the community is being terrorized by a band of brutal motorcyclists led by The Humangus and his finest warrior, Wez, who bid to loot all the gasoline from the refinery for themselves. The community hires Max, as Max agrees to help the community transport the gasoline across the highway and fight for freedom, as they are pursued by the Humangus and his warriors.
In the post-apocalyptic Australian wasteland, a cynical drifter agrees to help a small, gasoline rich, community escape a band of bandits.
In the wake of the international success of Mad Max, the Hollywood machine was eager to make dollars out of its director and primary star. While George Miller is not remembered nearly as well as Mel Gibson, he is by a long road the better director. With car chase sequences that are equalled by few and surpassed by none, Mad Max 2 clearly shows why. Beginning with a narrative wrap-up (and explanation) of the events in the original film, Mad Max 2 soon shows that things have not improved since then. Things have become steadily worse. As fuel has become steadily more scarce, roving gangs have searched out any fuel source they can. You can see this difficulty when Max is trying to soak up the fuel from a crashed truck. After fighting off one gang of would-be thieves, he finds himself fighting and enslaving a somewhat eccentric helicopter pilot. The real fun begins when said helicopter pilot leads him out to a compound in the middle of the desert, where one small group has mastered refining fuel to the point where they have attracted the attention of some unsavoury types.
Max, never one to pass on exploiting a situation to his benefit, watches as the refiners try sending out scouts to find a truck that will haul their big tank of fuel. When one of the scouts is left for dead, Max brings him back to his friends, hoping to trade his life for some fuel. When this scout dies, Max finds himself without a leg to stand on, in the figurative sense, until their leader finds himself arguing with his people about their worsening situation. When he hears about how they need a truck to pull the tank, a light goes on above his head, and he proposes to them that he take some of their fuel back to the tanker he spotted at the beginning of the film, then drive the truck back to them in exchange for all the fuel he can carry in his old interceptor. When they take him up on the offer, he literally smashes his way through the barricade, collects his car, and drives off into the sunset.
It sounds like a pretty boring and straightforward plot so far, but wait, there is a lot more. When the bad guys intercept him and run him off the road, he finds himself badly broken. They kill his dog, but then they make the mistake of trying to rip off his fuel, which triggers the bomb set up in earlier chapters. Without his car and his dog, Max is left in the desert to die, until the eccentric helicopter pilot he has previous been so mean to rescues him and takes him back to the refiners' compound. Having a big change of heart, he volunteers to drive the massive tanker. The refiners are skeptical at first, but they divide their force in half, let the attackers go after their tanker, and send most of their non-combatants in the opposite direction. It still sounds very straightforward and non-layered, and it is, but what this amounts to is setup for around half an hour of the best car chases captured on film. The Blues Brothers and Ronin have scenes that compare well, but nothing compares for sheer cost-to-effect ratio.
Once this final scene with the truck and more cares than one can shake a stick at gets underway, mayhem ensues. Grapping hooks, crossbows, spears, and any other weapon you can imagine that does not require gunpowder is used. There are even a few shots with weapons that do require gunpowder. Some of the photography is not entirely stable, but this is soon forgotten as most of the shots are composed in a fashion that gives the eye a million things to do. Every shot is dynamic and brilliantly composed. It is little wonder that among cinematographers, one of the least celebrated professions in film-making, Dean Semler is legend. While Mad Max 2 did not set a record for profit like the original, one will never guess that it was made for a mere four million Australian dollars. That it made more than five times its budget in the USA, as an independent release, is certainly a testament to the film's entertainment value. Yes, there is a lot of exposition in search of a massive chase scene, but there is not a single moment in the film where one can rightly claim to be bored.
I gave Mad Max 2 a ten out of ten. It is probably the best thing I can ever recommend to car crash junkies, and stands as an excellent example of how one does not need to spend Africa's yearly food budget to make a good film. Finding the full, uncut version is a feat in itself, but a very rewarding one.
If you're just seeing "Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior" for the first time, it may seem familiar to you. That's because other movies have been taking ideas from it since its release. But only here will you find all the parts put together into one hell of a movie. Easily the best of the Mad Max movies, you can find texture, depth, and interesting thoughts if that's your fancy, or enjoy some of the coolest characters ever put together in one film, or you can just ignore that stuff and simply get your rocks off with some of the best action ever filmed. And although it is entirely unlike "Walkabout" and "Picnic at Hanging Rock" it contains the same ethereal quality of unexplained things happening just beyond the range of perception. I've found that even people who don't like action flicks often get swept up in the Mad Max movies, so if you're dubious it's worth taking the chance.
Just as John Carpenter seems to generate box-office smashes incidentally to his search for intriguing shades of blue, Miller is so enthused with his camera angles that the movie has ended before he's aware there's only 20 lines of dialogue in it and not a single character better defined than Max's mutt. [22 May 1982]
Half a decade after he killed the motorcycle gang that slew his wife and son. Max (Mel Gibson) a cynical and selfish wanderer whom aimlessly drives across the barren highways of Australia learns from a deranged pilot called The Gyro Captain (Bruce Spence) about a nearby petrol refinery which is besieged by a gang of savage warriors led by the masked Humungus (Kjell Nilsson) that wants the petrol from the refinery for themselves. Max manages to enter the petrol refinery and makes a deal with the leader of the refinery Pappagallo (Michael Preston) to find a truck, so the people running the refinery can safely transport the petrol across the highway whilst evading The Humungus and his warriors and so Pappagallo and his people can travel to a safe place, which in return, he'll be given petrol as payment and hit the road and move on. After, Max manages to find a truck and drives it back to the refinery, Max is injured in an ambush and is nursed back to health and a reluctant Max agrees to drive the truck and soon, Max, Pappagallo and his people are pursued across the highway by The Humungus and his warriors which becomes a high speed fight for survival as The Humungus and his warriors will stop at nothing to get to steal the petrol for themselves. No. In the US r-rated version some short plot scenes as well as some scenes of violence, which had to be cut in order to get an r-rating, are missing. This version has been released on DVD, Laserdisc and VHS in the USA. In early VHS times a few European releases (e.g. Germany and UK) as well as the Australian version offered the so called unrated-version. Later then, new re-releases based on the cut US-Master have been released in these countries which lead to the fact that the original unrated copies vanished more and more.
Until now only one version has been released on DVD and it's the r-rated-version. The reason for this, is the same as the later VHS re-release being only the r-rated version: The US-Master has been used for every DVD-print on the planet (although there are rumours that the first Japanese DVD had the unrated version).
But there is some light at the end of the tunnel: At least the new HD-releases (HD DVD and Blu-Ray) offer a slightly longer version. This version includes the scenes that had to be cut to achieve an r-rating. However it seems that even the HD-releases still lack the short plot scenes. According to director George Miller on the Blu-ray commentary track, costume designer Norma Moriceau was given very few limitations on how to design the film's unique outfits. Miller said he wanted the "clothing" of the future to look post-apocalyptic & pieced together from whatever the wearer could scrounge up from anywhere they happened to be. Moriceau had the idea of using American football shoulder pads & clothing she bought from sex shops (like Wez' seatless leather pants).
As far as Max's outfit goes, it is heavily modified from the original leather uniform he wore as one of the "Bronze" policemen in the first film. Each alteration has a unique origin:
* The sleeve of his jacket is missing since he had his arm run over in the first movie and medics would have cut the sleeve off rather than remove it by pulling it over the injured arm.
* His leg brace is due to his knee cap being shot through by Bubba Zanetti in the first movie.
* His spanner and tool harness is for running repairs on the V8.
* His driving gloves are missing the fingers on the index and middle finger on both hands, this may be so he can easily retrieve and load shotgun shells, it may also be due to wear and tear as the gloves have several more holes. Cutting the fingers off the gloves would be easier than repairing any holes. There's different ways of interpreting this. One argument is that he felt he owed them for patching him up and not leaving him to die in the desert. Another is that he is still as cynical and misanthropic as he was before his Interceptor was destroyed and realises that if he doesn't drive the tanker he'll be left behind to the mercy of the Humungus' Dogs of War. It's also possible that Max had long had a death wish and the only thing that kept him going was protecting his car and his dog and, having lost them, he decides he no longer has any reason to live and may as well go out in a blaze of glory, given the slim chances of the small crew that was riding & defending the tanker. Possibly he also wanted revenge on the Humungus gang for killing his dog and destroying his car, and the best revenge he could enact on them, besides killing as many of them as possible, was to make sure they didn't get the gas either, so that they too were left without getting what they wanted. His line "Believe me, I haven't got a choice" when asked why he wants to drive the truck leaves his motives ambiguous. Another interpretation is that since everything he had is gone ("got all I need here") referring to his vehicle, he had no choice but to drive the rig and hopefully get a new vehicle out of it. Because of his past, being with others is not an option.
However the voiceover at the beginning states that this was Max 'learning to live again'. Noticeably he saves the Feral Kid and spares the life of the Gyro Captain, ultimately he is the saviour for the settlers whom he realises are the hope for a new and better world. Whilst the original Mad Max featured the crumbling of civilization and Max's loss of humanity all of the sequels feature him regaining his humanity and restoring what was lost. However he does not go with the settlers in the end suggesting the process is still far from complete.
The theme of a burned-out loner helping out a rag-tag group of people is an old one in cinema. Some other movies to watch for similar themes include The Seven Samurai & Yojimbo by Akira Kurosawa, and also countless westerns. The novels of Mad Max 2 and 3 give some background to Max' history: in the 2nd book Max remembers his boss losing control of the MFP after Max's wife and son were killed as society fell apart further. In the 3rd novel it states that after the death of his family and his revenge on the Toecutter's gang "the world had finally blown itself to Hell a few weeks later it had seemed only fitting. He had taken off alone into the wastes and lived there ever since". An Australian Cattle Dog or "Blue Heeler", as it's known in its native land. The dog the producers got for the film was known simply as "Dog" and was retrieved at a local pound where he was scheduled to be euthanized the next day. The production's animal wrangler (trainer) found that the dog could be easily trained for the film. After the film was done, it found a home on a local ranch. "THE VERMIN HAVE INHERITED THE EARTH". It was likely painted on there by someone who thought of marauders like Wez & the Humungus to be the vermin of the world following the apocalypse, the type of thugs who rape & kill for fuel. In the middle of the 80s Mad Max 2 got edited in a special version for TV. The first channel which aired this version was NBC, later the Australian Network 10 as well. This version is censored in nearly every scene containing violence but offers different camera angles and complete alternative scenes which are unique in this way. These scenes were re-inserted to the movie to enlarge him to its original runtime whereas some of these scenes would have been good for the original version as well. As most movie fans should know, Mel Gibson's appearance as The Road Warrior had to be softened in two scenes (arrow in the arm + boomerang in the head) in order to receive an R-Rating. The original version also features some more plot material. Papagallo's motivational speech is longer in three parts. a5c7b9f00b
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