Still insane to believe we finally got our first official look at the film! The coming weeks should be good because with FURY ROAD at Comic-Con that usually means more media like more stills or posters.
Did you guys see what I meant about color correction/grading/timing? Take a look at the photos on the first page and then how they're published now.
Looks like EW must of done it then because the original photos weren't like that.
Man, when EW says the teaser trailer will drop in the "near future"...well that could mean anything from tomorrow, next week or next month! I wonder if they'll attach it with the WB/Village Roadshow flick Into the Storm which drops August 8th?
It seems director Neil Marshall (Doomsday) thinks Miller is ripping off some of his concepts.
Thoughts on the new Mad Max stills?
MARSHALL: Yeah, I thought they looked like Doomsday.
Is there any jealously or feelings of being ripped-off by the Charlize Theron character? Specifically with her robotic arm versus Rhona Mitra’s cyborg stylings?
MARSHALL: Just [Mitra’s] eye. So much of Doomsday is taken from the early Mad Max films. So I can hardly complain.
biolumen wrote:It seems director Neil Marshall (Doomsday) thinks Miller is ripping off some of his concepts.
Thoughts on the new Mad Max stills?
MARSHALL: Yeah, I thought they looked like Doomsday.
Is there any jealously or feelings of being ripped-off by the Charlize Theron character? Specifically with her robotic arm versus Rhona Mitra’s cyborg stylings?
MARSHALL: Just [Mitra’s] eye. So much of Doomsday is taken from the early Mad Max films. So I can hardly complain.
Doomsday was a complete Mad Max rip-off. There was even. a character named Miller. It ripped off a few movies. Rhona Mitra had a cyborg eye. I don't think a character that has a robotic arm is what I would call a rip-off. Anyone who thinks Miller ripped him off obviously hasn't seen the earlier Max films.
For Neil Marshall to claim that Fury Road is ripping off his movie is absurd. The original script for Mad Max 4 was written in 1997 by director George Miller and comic book writer Brendan McCarthy. It's taken Miller forever to get this made, about 15 years. It was originally the fourth installment in the Mel Gibson mythology.