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Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) Review

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Furiosa:  A Mad Max Saga (2024) Review

While most of the Mad Max franchise has little in the way of plot and character development, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga is the rare exception.

Forty-five years ago George Miller (Lorenzo’s Oil) and Byron Kennedy (The Devil in Evening Dress) created a post-apocalyptic world where all manner of inhumane behavior ruled.  It was a vast wasteland where few controlled the limited available resources and survival of the fittest was the mantra.  Ruthlessness and lawlessness were abundant and the harsh desert climate swallowed all manner of people and creatures alive.  Starring Mel Gibson (Lethal Weapon), Mad Max was a box office success but divided critics.  This Memorial Day weekend the fifth installment in the franchise, Furious: A Mad Max Saga, will hit theaters.

In the Wasteland nothing grows.  All one can see is sand stretching out in all directions.  Besides a few pockets of colonies overseen by warlords, it is the emptiness of nothing.  However, there is a far-off region of abundance where the ground is lush and green and fruit grows on trees.  A young Furiosa (Alyla Browne; Three Thousand Years of Longing) lives there with her mother and her younger sister and is among the inhabitants who guard their paradise with their lives.  But when Furiosa is taken, her mother chases after the kidnappers to free her daughter and to keep the secret from getting out.  

Years later, working in disguise at the Citadel, Furiosa (Anya Taylor-Joy; The Queen’s Gambit) stows away on the gas tanker in hopes of finding and killing Dementus (Chris Hemsworth; Thor) whose gang killed her mother.  Found and taken by Praetorian Jack (Tom Burke; The Wonder), Furiosa plans her revenge but is caught in a war between Dementus, Immortal Joe (Lachy Hulme; Offspring), and The Bullet Farmer (Lee Perry; Happy Feet).  Determined she chases Dementus through the sand, exacts her vengeance, and escapes the Citadel with Joe’s wives.

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While most of the Mad Max franchise has little in the way of plot and character development, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga is the rare exception.  From the beginning, we understand why Furiosa is motivated to stay alive while watching the “politics” play out around her.  Miller and Kennedy’s script has human emotion surrounded by the usual anger and degradation found in the other Mad Max films.  However, there is still the usual action, explosions, and blood and gore that audiences have come to expect from these movies.  Miller, who also directs this latest installment, remains faithful to the franchise while still managing to come up with new and inventive ways to torture and blow up people and places.

What makes this movie even more interesting is the cast, specifically Taylor-Joy.  While Charlize Theron (Atomic Blonde) was simply a stone-cold bitch as the adult Furiosa in Mad Max: Fury Road, Taylor-Joy infuses the character with layer upon layer of experiences that shape her into the person she becomes.  From feeling the emotions that come with loss and grief to those prevalent when one is scared or brazen, etc., she is the whole package.  Hemsworth starts off the film as a leader but eventually deteriorates into a madman whose plan crumbles before his eyes.

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga has its good points but some bad ones as well.  For starters, it is too long.  You’ve seen one desert chase seen, you’ve pretty much seen them all so Miller could have trimmed a few minutes here and there and still had the same film.  The special effects are also less than stellar taking the audience out of the action on more than one occasion.  Luckily, many fans of the franchise won’t let those distractions bother them too much.

It seems after all these years and five films, we finally have an actual story intertwined with the action.  This development makes the movie better than most of the rest of the franchise and, especially for fans, makes it a worthwhile option for movie-going this holiday weekend.

Grade: B- 

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Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga images are courtesy of Warner Bros.. All Rights Reserved.

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Film reviews: ‘How to Make a Killing,’ ‘Pillion,’ and ‘Midwinter Break’

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Film reviews: ‘How to Make a Killing,’ ‘Pillion,’ and ‘Midwinter Break’

‘How to Make a Killing’

Directed by John Patton Ford (R)

★★

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Roll On 18 Wheeler: Errol Sack’s ‘TRUCKER’ (2026) – Movie Review – PopHorror

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Roll On 18 Wheeler: Errol Sack’s ‘TRUCKER’ (2026) – Movie Review – PopHorror

I am a sucker for all those straight-to-video slasher movies from the 90’s; there was just a certain point where you knew the acting was terrible, however, it made you fall in love. I can definitely remember scanning the video store sections for all the different horror movies I could. All those movies had laughable names and boom mics accidentally getting in the frame. Trucker seems like a child of all those old dreams, because it is.

Let’s get into the review.

Synopsis

When a group of reckless teens cause an accident swroe to never speak of it.  The father is reescued by a strange man. from the wreckage and nursed back to health by a mysterious old man. When the group agrees to visit the accident scene, they meet their match from a strange masked trucker and all his toys with revenge on his mind.

Roll on 18 Wheleer

Trucker is what you would imagine: a movie about a psychotic trucker chasing you. We have seen it many, many times. What makes the film so different is its homage to bad movies but good ideas. I don’t mean in a negative way. When you think of a slasher movie, it’s not very complicated; as a matter of fact, it takes five minutes to piece the film together. This is so simple and childlike, and I absolutely love it. Trucker gave us something a little different, not too gory, bad CGI fire, I mean, this is all we old schlock horror fans want. Trucker is the type of film that you expect from a Tubi Original, on speed. However, I would take this over any Tubi Original.

I found some parts that were definitely a shout-out to the slasher humor from all those movies. Another good point that made the film shine was the sets. I guess what I can say is the film is everything Joy Ride should have been. While most modern slashers are trying to recreate the 1980s, the film stands out with its love for those unloved 1990’s horror films. While most see Joyride, you are extremely mistaken, my friend; you will enjoy this film much more.

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In The End

In the end, I enjoyed the entire film. At first, I saw it listed as an action thriller; I was pleasantly surprised, and Trucker pulled at my heart strings, enveloping me in its comfort from a long-forgotten time in horror. It’s a nostalgic blast for me, thinking back to that time, my friends, my youth, and finding my new home. Horror fans are split down the middle: from serial-killer clowns (my side) to elevated horror, where an artist paints a forty-thousand-year-old demon that chases them around an upper-class studio apartment. I say that a lot, but it’s the best way to describe some things.

The entire movie had me cheering while all the people I hated suffered dire consequences for their actions. It’s the same old story done in a way that we rabid fans could drool over, and it worked. In all the bad in the world today, and my only hope for the future is the soon-to-end Terrifier franchise. However, the direction was a recipe to succeed with 40+ year old horror fans like me. I see the film as a hope for tomorrow, leading us into a new era.

Trucker is set to release on March 10th, 2026

 

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‘Scream 7’ Review: Ghostface Trades His Metallic Knife for Plastic in Bloody Embarrassing Slasher Sequel

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‘Scream 7’ Review: Ghostface Trades His Metallic Knife for Plastic in Bloody Embarrassing Slasher Sequel

It’s funny how this film is marketed as the first Scream movie in IMAX, yet it’s their sloppiest work to date. Williamson accomplishes two decent kills. My praise goes to the prosthetic team and gore above anything else. The filmmaking is amateurish, lacking any of the tension build and innovation in set pieces like the Radio Silence or Craven entries. Many slasher sequences consist of terribly spliced editing and incomprehensible camera movement. There was a person at my screening asking if one of the Ghostfaces was killed. I responded, “Yeah, they were shot in the head; you just couldn’t see it because the filmmaking is so damn unintelligible.” 

Really, Spyglass? This is the best you can do to “damage control” your series that was perfectly fine?

I’m getting comments from morons right now telling me that I’m biased for speaking “politically” about this movie. Fuck you! This poorly made, bland, and franchise-worst entry is a byproduct of political cowardice.

The production company was so adamant about silencing their outspoken star, who simply stated that she’s against the killing of Palestinian people by an evil totalitarian regime, that they deliberately fired her, conflating her comments to “anti-semintism,” when, and if you read what she said exactly, it wasn’t. Only to reconstruct the buildup made in her arc and settle on a nonsensical, manufactured, nostalgia-based slop fest to appeal to fans who lack genuine film taste in big 2026. To add insult to injury, this movie actively takes potshots at those predecessors, perhaps out of pettiness that Williamson didn’t pen them or a mean-spirited middle finger to the star the studio fired. Truly, fuck you. Take the Barrera aspect out of this, which is still impossible, and Scream 7 is a lazy, sloppy, ill-conceived, no-vision, enshittification of Scream and a bloody embarrassment to the franchise. It took a real, morally upright actress to make Ghostface’s knife go from metal to plastic. 

FINAL STATEMENT

You either die a Scream or live long enough to see yourself become a Stab.

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