
Family friend May Swaisey (Sheila Florance) helps Max’s wife Jessie (Joanne Samuel) and child (Brendan Heath) to escape the Toecutter (Hugh Keays-Byrne) and his gang, but they soon catch up. Summary by Paul Byrnes
The scene uses iconic imagery – madonna and child, old lady with shotgun – to generate great emotional power and horror, without becoming explicit in its violence. Killing the mother and child, the worst of crimes, has Biblical overtones.
In the near future, in a collapsing society, Max Rockatansky (Mel Gibson) patrols the highway in a super-charged patrol car, the Interceptor, like a modern-day samurai. When a bikie gang declares war on him and his family, Max takes justice into his own hands.
The influence of Mad Max would be hard to overstate. Some would say it is the most influential movie ever made in Australia. The film had a profound effect on filmmakers and audiences around the world. It redefined the idea of what kinetic action cinema should be, along with audience expectations. It also threw a well-timed wrench at the polite veneer of much Australian cinema. The film was neither highbrow nor historical, as many Australian films of the 1970s were.
At the same time, Mad Max is profoundly local in its attitudes and origins. Dr George Miller grew up in Chinchilla in south-western Queensland. The hot, flat plains and 'a profound car culture’ had claimed the lives of several contemporaries before he left school. As a young doctor, he saw the impact of road carnage at close quarters, in casualty wards. The film has both a love of speed and an apocalyptic view of its effects. It also has an ambivalent, even jaundiced view of authority. There is no justice, only vengeance.
Mad Max was made for $380,000 raised from friends, so it was completely independent of the Australian film funding bodies. It was, in short, a piece of larrikin cinema – impolite, independent, and in a style not considered respectable. Miller was strongly influenced by silent cinema, particularly the techniques of comedians Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd. Mad Max was an experiment, he says, in making 'pure cinema’.
Critics compared Miller to the Japanese director Akira Kurosawa but Miller says he did not know who Kurosawa was at the time. When it was shown in the USA, the Australian voices were dubbed into American accents. The sound design by Roger Savage was particularly influential, the tones of different engines being used as a kind of music.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
This clip shows May Swaisey (Sheila Florance) forcing Toecutter (Hugh Keays-Byrne) and his gang into a shed at gunpoint, as Max Rockatansky’s wife Jessie (Joanne Samuel) and child (Brendan Heath) escape. May bolts the gang in and joins Jessie and the baby in the car. They drive off as the gang starts breaking down the shed door, eventually breaking through to get on their motorbikes in pursuit. The car breaks down and May tries to protect Jessie, firing the shotgun at the approaching gang as Jessie, carrying the baby, runs away barefoot down the centre of the long straight road. The gang passes May and the stationary car, leaving her unharmed. A tachometer on one of the bikes revs, Jessie falls, and the final shot is of a child’s shoe tumbling to the road in the wake of the gang, who disappear into the distance as the roar of their engines fade.
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