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    Explosive Moviemaking

    Explosive moviemaking: Visually stunning Mad Max return is worth the 3D price of admission

    Alex Bentley
    May 16, 2015 | 5:10 pm
    Explosive moviemaking: Visually stunning Mad Max return is worth the 3D price of admission
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    In Hollywood, especially in recent years, everything old is new again, with properties and franchises being revived years or even decades after they were last seen. Usually people who had little or nothing to do with the original films take on the new projects, but Mad Max: Fury Road was done by the same writer/director who brought the franchise to life in 1979, George Miller.

    Miller’s involvement is just the first of the positive signs for the new film. The second, as anyone who’s seen the film’s trailers can attest, is the approach Miller and his team took toward the stunts in the film. Instead of relying on CGI to do the heavy lifting, they took the old-fashioned approach of putting actors and stunt men and women in harm’s way for the film’s absolutely bonkers car chase scenes.

    It all adds up to what’s sure to be one of the most memorable movies of 2015, whether it’s considered to be one of the best or not. Set in a post-apocalyptic wasteland where a warlord, Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne), rules over a population desperate for water and gas, the film is a visual stunner virtually from beginning to end.

    It doesn’t really matter all that much if you have limited knowledge of the first three Mad Max films, the last of which was 30 years ago. All you really need to know is that Max Rockatansky (Tom Hardy, taking over the Mel Gibson role) is still a loner who speaks very little, and this time around he finds himself helping Furiosa (Charlize Theron), who has betrayed Immortan Joe and is on the run from him and his minions.

    Despite what you may hope or believe from the trailers, the film is not non-stop action, a fact that might be a disappointment for some. However, instead of using the film’s quieter moments to flesh out the background of key characters, Miller seems to prefer to let the visuals doing the talking, filling the screen with all manner of oddities.

    The lack of a complete story doesn’t really hold the film back, but it does make it less than it could have been. Still, when the rest of the movie is as inventive as it is, actual exposition can prove unnecessary. The details on everything from the costumes to the cars to the weapons are a sight to behold, each of them telling their own mini-story within the larger picture.

    The car chases – or, more accurately, the car crashes – are as over-the-top as advertised. Although there are times where CGI obviously comes into play, for the most part it’s plain to see that the stunts were done with practical effects and real people. The thrill factor is upped exponentially because of this decision, with one sequence, in which people high atop poles drop down on other vehicles, taking the cake.

    But it’s not just the stunts that are eye-popping. The cinematography by Oscar winner John Seale is for the ages, and is one of the few instances in which the use of 3D proves to be a real boon to the final product. Seale uses varying colors, wide angles and more to take in the full scope of the film’s desert setting, and there are times when your jaw will drop at how beautiful he makes it seem.

    Hardy is already well known for being a taciturn actor, which means that the role of Max fits him to a tee. Using few words and a mysterious yet alluring accent, Hardy makes Max into someone to be feared or trusted, depending on which side you’re on. Theron is the co-lead, and she grabs the opportunity for all it’s worth. She lives up to her character’s name in every way while still ensuring that Furiosa’s femininity never gets lost.

    Special note should also be made of Nicholas Hoult, who plays Lux, one of Immortan Joe’s zombie-esque minions. Not only does he get the line – “Oh, what a day! What a lovely day!” – that is already the movie quote of the summer, but he plays his role in such a creepy yet innocent way that he threatens to steal every scene he’s in.

    While Hollywood is rightly taken to task for remaking too many old movies instead of coming up with new ideas, Mad Max: Fury Road proves that there’s always an exception to every rule. Any movie fan worth his or her salt will walk away with glee from this visceral delight.

    Nicholas Hoult in Mad Max: Fury Road.

    Nicholas Hoult in Mad Max: Fury Road
    Photo by Jasin Boland Warner Bros. Pictures
    Nicholas Hoult in Mad Max: Fury Road.
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    Movie Review

    20-year-old YouTube horror creator's Backrooms is an auspicious debut

    Alex Bentley
    May 28, 2026 | 4:00 pm
    Chiwetel Ejiofor in Backrooms
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Chiwetel Ejiofor in Backrooms.

    YouTube has become such a big part of the culture that it was only a matter of time before content creators started making waves in big screen filmmaking. Interestingly, most of them have made their names in the horror genre, including Danny and Michael Philippou (Talk to Me, Bring Her Back), Mark "Markiplier" Fischbach (the recent Iron Lung), and now Kane Parsons with Backrooms.

    Set in 1990, the film centers on Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor), who owns a rundown furniture store in a nondescript city. He is divorced and seemingly depressed, two things that come up in his multiple sessions with his therapist, Mary (Renate Reinsve). Lately, he has taken to sleeping in the store instead of going home, which allows him to notice strange electrical activity when the lights are supposed to be turned off.

    When investigating the issues one night, he discovers a mysterious opening that leads to a completely different structure with a seemingly endless amount of rooms and corridors. Some of them are innocuous and some of them contain strange and creepy elements. With nothing else of interest in his life, Clark returns to the area night after night, eventually drawing in his employee, Kat (Lukita Maxwell), her boyfriend Bobby (Finn Bennett), and Mary.

    The 20-year-old Parsons, helped by a number of well-known producers, demonstrates an astonishing level of filmmaking prowess for a first-time feature filmmaker. There is no trace of amateurishness in the progression of the story or the visual style of the film. Whatever confusion arises comes from the plot itself, which is designed to raise way more questions than answers.

    Clark’s journey into the bewildering collection of rooms is full of intrigue instead of scares for most of the film, but when Parsons decides to amp things up, he really goes for it. The final third of the film contains some haunting imagery that defies description or explanation. It seems clear that Parsons’ preferred method of storytelling is to keep the audience off-balance, unable to predict what comes next.

    What he also seems to understand, however, is that you have to give the audience something to hold on to, and in this case it’s the backstories of Clark and Mary. Both seem to be living differing versions of pathetic, uninteresting lives, but things revealed in their sessions broaden the scope of their stories. The strange world they find seems to reflect their respective traumas, giving a tenuous connection to reality that keeps the film from becoming too frustrating.

    Ejiofor and Reinsve, both of whom are Oscar nominees, give the film an air of legitimacy that allows viewers to follow whatever odd roads Parsons wants to go down. Because it’s impossible to tell where the film is heading, the steady acting of Ejiofor and Reinsve is crucial in its success. Maxwell, Bennett, and Mark Duplass are good in brief appearances, but don’t appear enough to have a huge impact.

    The ambiguous nature of Backrooms lends it the possibility of becoming a franchise, as Parsons could seemingly take it in any direction he wanted and have it feel part of the larger whole. Given how well done this and other recent films by YouTubers have been, the melding of the two seemingly disparate mediums makes more sense than ever.

    ---

    Backrooms opens in theaters on May 29.

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