Yes, I was under the impression that the timeline/continuity between films was a bit... fuzzy in Mad Max. I mean, the first film is in the early stages of the apocalypse, and has a twenty-something Max, right? Whereas Fury Road appears to take place more than twenty years after civilization collapsed, yet Max doesn't look like he's pushing 60. So unless Max is an immortal or something...Rocketboy1313 wrote:That is easy: The timeline of Mad Max is wrong and that disaster didn't happen in the 80's. Or it happened in the 2080's.SlackerinDeNile wrote: Care to explain this one? Given that Earth was presumably badly nuked in the eighties how did the human race create working, long distance space ships from the ashes and rubble?
I really like Phantom000's crossover theories.
All of the Mad Max movies have a Conan-esc, folkloric feel to them. Like they are half-remembered legends of a society further in the future.
Yeah, I've read that the films are supposed to be basically legends about Max, which may or may not be accurate.
Edit: Anyway, my reasoning goes something like this:
1. Fury Road in particular gives me a real Whedonesque vibe, between the feminist them and how much the War Boys remind me of Reavers at times.
2. The nature of the fall of Earth in both settings is compatible, from what we see in the opening of Serenity (though that could be just Alliance propaganda). Resource depletion accompanied by (and likely triggering) nuclear war. It also makes sense that not everyone could have been evacuated off of Earth That Was, sadly. Most likely the leadership, their families, and some of their top officials/servants/guards bailed out, along with the necessary crews for the ships and such, leaving the majority of humanity behind to struggle on in the ruins. Which fits thematically/stylistically with the Alliance being a government that is either unable or unwilling to help the outer worlds, except when its to impose their sense of order.
3. I recall a scene in Fury Road where they're looking up at an old satellite passing overhead in the desert, and wonder if their's anyone still out their using them. Its kind of fun to think that maybe their still are humans out their somewhere using that tech., at least in another system.