As for the possibilities in Hardy’s future, he says of the rumored Mad Max: The Wasteland George Miller project, “I don’t think that’s happening.”
…That’s not exactly what you would call a definitive ‘no’. If anything, I think that biggest issue would be that he, much like Charlize Theron, would just be too old for a prequel that takes place between Mad Max and Mad Max: Fury Road, and way too old for something that takes place before the original Mad Mad.
Also, Furiosa was fantastic.
I don’t really mind…
Maybe I’m the only one, but I wasn’t enamored by his take on Max. Fury Road is an absolutely fantastic movie and is easily in my top-10 right now, but I credit that much more to George Miller, Charlize, and Nicholas Hoult. Max seemed like almost an afterthought.
I think I need to watch Fury Road again, because seriously, I didn’t like it. Too cliché, too predictable.
Furiosa’s flop seems to have put an end to that franchise
I’m kind of surprised it was considered a flop, it was just as good as Fury Road. It even did a little bit better job at filling out the world and solidifying the characters than FR. It was actually more than just one long chase (as cool as that is) but still had plenty of action and vehicle antics etc. Critic and audience scores are also high.
I think it’s maybe more a reflection of the cinema landscape as a whole or something. Theaters aren’t dead, but I do think they peaked maybe in terms of the insanely inflated box office numbers that have set unrealistic industry expectations for “success”.
I agree with this. I pass by a theater regularly and my spouse and I just haven’t seen any need to go. Personally, I blame their marketing teams. All the trailers are the same, they either give away the whole story or they don’t tell us anything about the story. It’s all action scenes, they all blend together, and just blech. So I don’t go to the theater anymore.
Then the theaters are gross now, people are rude, staff have just given up, it’s not a fun experience for me anymore. Even Dune 2 I just waited until it was out and watched it at home, and had a much better experience.
So I agree, theaters aren’t dead, but they have fallen into a rut of corporate complacency and aren’t trying hard enough to get out of it.
I do early matinees and avoid a lot of the worst aspects of the theater experience. Far fewer people, tickets are like $6 and when you get out you still have the rest of the day.
I did make an exception for Dune to see it in iMax and it was worth it, though that might just be lucking out with a decent crowd where people are respectful of eachother’s experience. The baseline of respect people have for strangers hasn’t fully bounced back since the pandemic, sadly.