Modérateur: Alegas
Mark Chopper a écrit:La mode des années 2010 consiste à faire des suites de merde qui permettent de réévaluer des purges.
In Brutal Legend: The Movie, Tom Hardy stars as Max, a slab of concrete who can't make up his mind on what accent he wants to have. In this installment, Max is the least complex character we've seen in any Mad Max film. But who cares because car-chase godking George Miller spoils us with SOME OF THE MOST AMAZING ACTION SEQUENCES I'VE SEEN IN ANY FILM!!!!!!!!! This is pure cinematic action bacchanal.
I want to preface this by saying that this movie worked phenomenally as a visual spectacle. But I'm not reviewing a visual spectacle. I'm reviewing a movie.
I truly believe that this film could have been made a lot better had the story just been thrown away in favor of 2 hours of action sequences. To be perfectly honest, the vapid, simple, and unintelligent story diminished the quality of the film as a whole. I cared for NO ONE, had zero emotional impact when any characters died, and completely dipped out of every scene that wasn't action-oriented. This was more spectacle, less movie. WHICH IS COMPLETELY FINE. However, if you're going to go down the "spectacle" route, don't let the mediocre story and characters take away from the final product.
To be fair to the film, I probably entered this with the wrong expectations (i.e., a solid story). Ultimately, Fury Road was balls-to-the-wall bonkers. The action kept me on the edge of my seat, then I was given a second to breath with a horribly scripted dialogue scene, then it was back to violence and explosions. This film will stay with me as a marvel of action cinema. Unfortunately, that's all it really is, and it has the potential to be so so so much more.
George Miller is still the king of choreographing vehicular action scenes.
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