Imperator Furiosa has a hell of a backstory to tell, and it isn't all sunshine and roses. Furiosa (played by Alyla Browne as a tyke) yields from the Green Place of Many Mothers as a prepubescent girl who is kidnapped by mutant-like bikers led by Warlord Dementus (Chris Hemsworth, truly phenomenal) of the Biker Horde. Furiosa's mother, a warrior in her own right (who isn't in this nihilistic Mad Max world), tries to save her and she's crucified as a result. The young Furiosa finds her path through the years as she's adopted by the pale and fearsome Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme), much to the chagrin of Dementus, and placed with Joe's many white-dressed breeder wives. Before long, one of Joe's musclebound sons tries to have his way with Furiosa and she escapes. Well, she's not found since she pretends to be a War Boy. Considering how tight security is in this fortress, I don't know how she managed to evade capture.
"Furiosa" sends us on a desert wasteland that looks more desolate in its saturated color grading than ever before, sharing its audacious visuals of copious sandy dunes, endless roads and blue-hued nighttime scenes with "Fury Road." Quite striking are the scenes inside the Green Place of Many Mothers, a sort of idyllic community of green grass, peach trees and agriculture. This serene place is desired by Dementus, Immortan Joe and many who perhaps want to rekindle the past prior to the nuclear apocalypse. Mostly we get visits to Bullet Farm, and the vast cavernous look of the Citadel with its share of more pale-faced fighters known as the War Boys who will die on command. This world is nasty, violence-prone and everyone gets their adrenaline rush from riding various vehicles and trucks that look ready to split apart before their wheels even touch the ground. Indianapolis 500 on overdrive. Gas is a commodity they can't do without yet vehicle parts are available everywhere.
As with any Mad Max film, there is plenty of visual and aural stimulation that will rock your seat back and forth and maybe burn your eyes off. I was never less than in awe at what director George Miller has crafted here and with previous Mad Max films - he takes you on a journey that is immersive and larger-than-life with unbelievable stunts that seem to cross a level never seen before. "Furiosa" is an elongated chase picture as well as a nifty character progress of what made Furiosa who she was, and Anya Taylor-Joy extraordinarily captures her presence as an emotionally wounded fighter who chooses action over words. Her big eyes strike a chord and say it all and she is a fitting precursor to Charlize Theron's adult Furiosa.
If "Furiosa" falters at all, it is that somehow it's too short for its own good which is surprising since it is 2 hours and 28 minutes long. Also, the movie is not quite as vividly intense in its high-octane action as "Fury Road" or "The Road Warrior" - Miller dials it back a bit which may benefit those who found "Fury Road" overloaded. A side character with Max's lone wolf reticence, Praetorian Jack (Tom Burke), is not given enough screen time. These are minor quibbles and we get ample amount of Furiosa shooting bullets and firing arrows with the marksmanship of an Annie Oakley (hey, what if she got to play Annie in a big-screen treatment?), not to mention the humorous asides from Hemsworth's Dementus. His final scene with Furiosa is as memorably confrontational in its acidly-written dialogue exchange as the Joker and Batman's confrontation in "The Dark Knight." This "Furiosa" roars with excitement that only George Miller can deliver.






