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That’s a high compliment considering Miller also directed The Witches of Eastwick, wrote and directed Lorenzo’s Oil, wrote Babe, wrote and directed that film’s sequel, and created the Happy Feet franchise. He’s a versatile talent, but Mad Max will always be his greatest creation. But which of his five action packed movies is the best?
5) Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome

Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome is basically tied with the next entry as the “Worst” of the franchise. But they’re ranked low for different reasons.
The next entry feels like it has stakes. Not many stakes, but one event does establish a devastating degree of stakes. Thunderdome has no such event. It basically is to the Mad Max trilogy what the Ewoks were to the Star Wars original trilogy. It’s basically just Peter Pan in a desolated hellscape wasteland. There are highpoints, like Tina Turner’s work as Aunty Entity and Max’s fight against Master Blaster, but oftentimes its tone is so lightened from what was seen in The Road Warrior that we feel as if we’re watching films from two different, similar-looking universes. Choices were made in Beyond Thunderdome‘s construction that are pretty confusing, given how The Road Warrior was an influential financial success. Why deviate from what really, really worked?
4) Mad Max

In terms of budget to overall financial haul, the original Mad Max was by far the most profitable. In fact, it’s still considered one of the worthiest investments in film history. But man is it a different animal from the rest of the franchise. In other words, it doesn’t even really quite have the spirit seen in the other films. Even Thunderdome did a better job of capturing post-apocalyptic anarchy.
The original film does take place in a dystopian Australia that is going to hell thanks to an oil shortage, but it really doesn’t feel like a dystopia at all. There are occupied buildings everywhere, there’s still a police force, everything just feels kind of…normal. Sure, there’s a rabid motorcycle gang, but we’ve yet to reach the post-apocalyptic, deserted terrain vibe that has helped the franchise feel so unique. Furthermore, Max plays better as a loner. And, if he’s not going to be a loner, the script better go out of its way to make his wife and child stand out as important, not just as doomed catalysts for Max to turn, well, Mad.











