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Dot in the Sky ([personal profile] dotinthesky) wrote2007-09-18 12:17 pm

Preaching to the Post-Apocalypse Lovers

Mad Max


I watched two films yesterday that fetishized leather and pain. The first one was Preaching to the Perverted, the story of a group of religious conservatives in Britain trying to bring down a S&M club. It was like an Eastenders episode dealing with buttplugs and pierced genitalia. The second film was Mad Max, a classic of the post-apocalypse genre which is full of leather men on bikes and cars fighting each other in the Australian Outback. For the first time in years of Mad Max re-runs, I saw the version featuring the original Ozzie accents rather than the American or Brasilian dubbed versions. There's something about the Ozzie accent that perfectly fits a crumbling civilization. :-P

The Mad Max trilogy is strangely allegorical and prophetic. Filmed in 1979, it could have easily dealt with nuclear war, or some other popular paranoia of the time, but it went for global warming and the power of petroleum instead (which I think is much more popular today than ever before). The first film lays the groundwork for the society coming apart: police turn vigilante when puny liberals destroy the justice system; marauding gangs take on nicknames and outfits that wouldn't be out of place in London's Torture Garden; and the Ballardesque setting hints at a society crumbling and self-imploding because of global warming/eco destruction. These themes are then further explored in episodes 2 & 3.

I haven't seen Tarantino's Death Proof yet, but the trailer - with its fast cars and seventies look - reminded me of Mad Max. Must be another movie Tarantino studied for inspiration. Actually, the first scene of Mad Max, with the insane couple causing havoc on the roads as they are chased by the police, reminded me of the couple in Pulp Fiction's diner. The midnight movie element is there.

There are some rumours that a new Mad Max movie is in production, but without Mel Gibson. In the meantime, it would be nice if a cinema in London held a showing of the three Mad Max movies, back to back. And it would also be nice if Mel Gibson wasn't such an asshole in real life; I hate feeling guilty for watching his films.

[identity profile] desayuno-ingles.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 12:27 pm (UTC)(link)
it would also be nice if Mel Gibson wasn't such an asshole in real life; I hate feeling guilty for watching his films.

Same here. I felt a sense of victory when I managed to procure a pirated version of Apocalypto for $1. It was like, I didn't even want to support him enough by renting it through Netflix. I really dug it, btw. Especially the scenes of the citizens in the Mayan city.

[identity profile] sallypointzero.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 12:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, too much information killed Gibson for me unhappily. I did enjoy the first Max film too.
Braveheart was bad enough but when he pounded his Nobility Through Suffering ethos to death (again) in The Passions of Christ I choked on it.

[identity profile] steer.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 12:44 pm (UTC)(link)

The Mad Max trilogy is strangely allegorical and prophetic


It foresaw a day when Mel Gibson would have bad hair and drive about swearing and upsetting people?

[identity profile] pixxers.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 12:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember watching Mad Max when I was a kid and during one (very inconsequential) scene, this big leather daddy got off his bike and I noticed that he had a pretty, girly little blonde boy riding with him instead of a girl. And I was filled with glee and joy.

[identity profile] amanda-mary.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 01:17 pm (UTC)(link)
And it would also be nice if Mel Gibson wasn't such an asshole in real life; I hate feeling guilty for watching his films.

Yep, yep. I really want to see The Year of Living Dangerously, because I'm getting into Peter Weir a bit and have never witnessed the infamous "Linda Hunt plays a Chinese man" performance. But I find it hard to look at him without picturing the phrase, "Jews are resopnsible for all the wars in the world," playing about his lips. Ugh.

Death Proof is a lot of fun, by the way.

[identity profile] moral-vacuum.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 08:46 pm (UTC)(link)
1) It's not "the themse are further explored in 2&3", it's "3 was a larger-budget version of 2, with added annoying children and some stunt casting".

2) It's probably OK to watch films where Gibson is simply a hired hand, and is not writer/director/producer. That way there's no subtext, just acting.

[identity profile] dilvsy.livejournal.com 2007-09-18 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Death Proof sucked. I don't know if it being lengthier, will improve it, but hopefully it does! (I like Tarantino, but this, and Jackie Brown, are the 2 films of his I liked least).
I am wondering when the hell Planet Terror will be released on dvd, as that was the better of the 2 films from the Grindhouse series.

And damn, you are making me want to watch Mad Max again, it's been decades!!!!!

[identity profile] naturalbornkaos.livejournal.com 2007-09-19 06:27 am (UTC)(link)
I love Preaching to the Perverted. I picked it up on DVD in New York earlier in the year and still haven't gotten round to rewatching it.

Mad Max 2 is the ultimate Mad Max movie. It's a work of true genius and almost wall to wall violence!

I am hopefully seeing Death Proof tonight. :D Did you know Tarantino's doing a personal appearance at HMV on Oxford Street at 1pm today?

[identity profile] sallypointzero.livejournal.com 2007-09-20 12:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Hellol...[livejournal.com profile] dragon_diaries is selling tickets (at group discount price) for 'The Masque.....' for Wed. 5th Dec. I've just snapped one up and she has 5 more!