
Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981) is the antidote to the braincell-singing surplus of computer-generated imagery we see in today’s action/adventure movie. Every stunt, explosion, and facial scar is real, and the bad guy’s name is The Humungus.
It took broken limbs, an isolated production in New South Wales, Australia, and one take to roll over an 80,000-pound tanker to ignite this rustic wonder to legendary status.
Filmed in chronological order with dozens of stunt people and paramedics on set, The Road Warrior builds up to one of the most epic and dangerous chase scenes ever filmed.
Did I mention that absolutely no CGI was used in the making of this movie?
Although gasoline is the commodity of desire in this post-apocalyptic desert, Director George Miller’s movie runs on pure testosterone and an ostinato-driven score by Brian May. From my first viewing as a kid too young to my adulthood today, I appreciate every tangible/analog stroke of action-packed vision this number presents. From the mohawk hairdos to spiked shoulder pads to barbaric ferocities on wheels, the outcome is frightening, full of energy, and stripped down to the studs in technological feat.
Again, no CGI. Just machines, fuel, and guts.

I always thought of The Road Warrior as an otherworldly re-interpretation of the original Mad Max (1979); Mad Max Beyond the Thunderdome (1985) was my first PG-13 movie at the movie theatre, but it kind of lost me at the second half; Fury Road (2015) cheated a bit with the supplemental CGI effects and digital matte painting, but it was one hell of a ride; and, it looks like 5th Mad Max installment (aka The Wasteland) has been recently delayed in production.
In the 80s, my middle brother and I were unhealthily obsessed with anything Mad Max, and it resulted in the naming of our two cats, “Max” and “Helicopter Man” (after the “Gyro Captain” without a name). It took quite a lot of explaining whenever people asked us what our cats’ names were. I recall my dad fake-yelling, “The gaaaaaaate! We go in! We go in!”
At a bare-bones, primitive-cinematic level, The Road Warrior is not only the superior of the series but my favorite action/adventure in general. To go even further, I think the chase scene in the end matches up to anything Bullitt (1968), The French Connection (1971), or Vanishing Point (1971).

Before virtual cinematography and computer simulation took off in the 90s, you had body-sacrificing stunts, pyrotechnics, bizarro costumes, insane, nitrous-boosted vehicles, and the record button. This technically minimalistic but primally executed action/adventure novelty earns its place in my Top Ten.
Reely Bernie Faves:
5. The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
6. The Godfather Part II (1974)
8. Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
10. Nosferatu (1922)
11. Pollock (2000)
12. Kicking and Screaming (1995)
13. Jaws (1975)
14. Fargo (1996)
16. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
20. The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
23. King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
24. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
25. Bambi (1942)
26. The Paradise Lost Trilogy (1996-2011)
27. Psycho (1960)
29. Swingers (1996)
30. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
31. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
32. Smoke (1995)
33. Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)
35. Edward Scissorhands (1990)
37. 1917 (2019)
42. If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)
43. The Greatest Showman (2017)
44. National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983)
45. The Florida Project (2017)
Amadeus is my bet for the #1
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Hell, yes! 😀
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!!! You rock!!! You get it!!! Thank you 🙂
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😀
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I’m afraid I’ve only seen the latest instalment of Mad Max at the cinema which I enjoyed a lot. I’ve heard about the impact of ‘Road Warrior’ and I wish I had seen it especially based on your review.
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Another one for the next life. It’s not a popular choice at all, but it is in my life. I always refer to The Road Warrior when people ask what action/adventure movies were like before CGI. They were better, I tell them 😉
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Although Fury Road is what I saw in theaters and truly took Mad Max to another level for me, I can’t argue that Road Warrior is superior for being the original well executed, high adrenaline, action-packed work of pure practical cinematic madness. Another one of the greatest sequels of all time!
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I really enjoyed them both. I just give mad props to Road Warrior for being the trailblazer and doing it without CGI. I could see all the places where Fury Road implemented visual effects, but the stunts were still very impressive! That electric/fire guitar guy…wow.
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It’s an impressive series all around. Even the weakest installment has a lot going for it.
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I saw this a long time ago….those movies are great…I’ve seen the first two. LOVE your mom’s comment!
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I figured you’d like these—I mean, your name’s in the title! Great pure action. Yeah, Dad snuck in a lot of unapproved flicks when Mom was out of town. No regrets.
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LOL…many many people have called me that through the years!
I did the same thing! Bailey was 15 when I showed him Clockwork Orange
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Love it! I snuck a viewing of Clockwork when I was 15 too. My dad introduced me to Creepshow, Road Warrior, and Commando a little before that, haha!
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Oh I loved Creepshow as well! I also liked Talkes from the Darkside the Movie. Debbie Harry is really good in that.
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Once again, another movie your dad introduced you and your younger brother to when, obviously, I was out of town! I did love those two cats, though 🙂 ….. xoxo
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Love you, Mom! Yeah, you were visiting your sisters out east. Great cats. 🙂
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