
Out here, everything hurts.



mad max: fury road | 28 days later | 10 cloverfield lane: some of my favourite feminist-leaning apocalypse movies
[quote from Laurie Penny’s “Mad Max is a Feminist Playbook for Surviving Dystopia”]

Excited for the new madmaxmovie, so we made this unofficial animated gif movie poster for it out of handmade oil paintings. What a lovely day!


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Found Furiosa negotiating London traffic
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#okay but like #how did this interaction go #they’re both stuck in traffic #looking out the window #does Tom Hardy yell to this bus driver: FURIOSA! #it’s ME MAX #or does this awesome bus driver startle all her passengers by leaning out the window #and yelling HEY MAX IT’S ME FURIOSA #either way!!!! #look at her blowing kisses! #look at him all pleased #i love this so much [wildehack]
@bootycap this made me think of you

“Though I loved Snowpiercer, Fury Road is my preferred representation of what revolution can look like because it includes not only the oppressed, but the oppressors, recognizing that so many people have inside of them a mixture of both. Furiosa is a hero, but she has also been a villain. She is a victim and a victimizer. Though we don’t see it, she has presumably done terrible things to rise up the social ladder of this society and gain the respect and trust of Immortan Joe. But those actions do not totally define her, no more than her past as a child stolen from her home and forced into this system of oppression do.
Then there is Nux, who begins the movie as an agent of the patriarchal destruction, only to find freedom in the new kind of society Max, Furiosa, The Wives, and Many Mothers have created. This small group represents a different way of moving through the world, and it doesn’t just save the oppressed of Immortan Joe’s social order; it saves many of the oppressors, too. It saves those who are implicit in the system, which so many of us are. This is why I see so much hope in Fury Road.”
– Mad Max, Mr. Robot, and A New Kind of Superhero (via TV Feels)