Mad Max: Fury Road
You know how you sometimes get those trilogies everyone loves, and the director wants to make a fourth one and somehow despite having decades to work out the plot it ends up feeling like they left it to the last three days before filming to even start writing the script? You know, like Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull?
Well, this is not one of those movies. This movie is amazing. This movie is what you want your action movies to be like but so very rarely end up receiving. George Miller has taken his three original Mad Max movies, rolled them into one movie, made it better than any of them, and yet somehow still made it possible for it to be seen as a fourth movie in the series instead of a simple do-over. The guy is a genius.
The majority of filming was done on location in Namibia as a stand-in for the Australian outback, but the majority of the actors are still Australian (albeit most of the main characters are not!). He even added in the calling of Australian crows to the sound effects, to keep it in line with the originals. There is plenty of CGI but unlike some movies which could be named, this is mostly used in combination with real effects in such a way that they blend together so well you don't even notice it is there. And where it is used in large quantity, it is usually done brilliantly (e.g. the monstrous sand-storm scene).
There are some nice touches as nods to the original movies like a girl with a little wind-up music toy (the one the Feral Kid had in Mad Max 2), the bad cartridges in Max's shotgun, and the main bad guy, Immortan Joe, is played by Hugh Keays-Byrne who also played the main bad guy Toecutter in the first Mad Max. The V8 Interceptor is also still Max's vehicle (although it was destroyed in Mad Max 2).
The actor choices are almost all great. Tom Hardy makes a brilliant Max Rockatansky, Charlize Theron is fantastic as Imperator Furiosa, Hugh Keays-Byrne is suitably freaky as Immortan Joe, Nicholas Hoult and Josh Helman look creepy as mutilated War Boys. Really the only choice I question is that of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley as The Splendid Agharad. I simply cannot imagine the thought process behind George Miller saying "hey, you know who would be great in my new Mad Max movie? That dopey chick from the third Transformers movie. She sure can act...."
Ten out of ten (despite the presence of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley).
Extra: I was just watching a video about the making of the movie, and they were originally supposed to be filming at Broken Hill in Australia, where the other three movies were filmed, but just before they started it began to rain torrentially, the first rain in the area in 15 years, and everything got swamped so they shifted to Namibia.