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Mad: Max Fury Road (2015)

Mad: Max Fury Road (2015)

FromCinema Spectator


Mad: Max Fury Road (2015)

FromCinema Spectator

ratings:
Length:
120 minutes
Released:
Jun 18, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In this long awaited review of George Miller's fuel-injected action opera, Cameron, Isaac, and Juzo revisit one of their all time favorites: Mad Max: Fury Road (2015). Ride for Valhalla with the hosts, and witness the shiny and chrome discussion of what makes this thrill ride so great. Tom Hardy takes up the mantle from Mel Gibson as the new Max Rockatansky, with Charlize Theron as co-star. What a lovely day!
 
Cinema Spectator is a movie podcast hosted by Isaac Ransom and Cameron Tuttle, with frequent appearances from film expert Juzo Greenwood. The show is executive produced by Darrin O’Neill and recorded & produced in the San Francisco Bay Area, CA. You can support the show at patreon.com/ecfsproductions. Follow us on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter under ECFS Productions (@ecfsproductions). Isaac and Cameron started recording podcasts with their first project, Everything Comes from Something (2018), and are now focusing on new weekly content for Cinema Spectator. Cameron Tuttle is a full-time professional cinematographer who majored at SFSU Film School to collaborate with corporate, private, and creative productions. Cameron is the expert. Isaac Ransom is a professional creative, digital marketer, and product manager working full-time. Isaac is the student. The podcast is a passion project between two longtime friends; we hope you can enjoy our project with the limited time we have! Thank you for your time, your generosity, and support.
Released:
Jun 18, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (99)

An ECFS Productions Original Podcast: Cinema Spectator is a film history podcast that takes away the pretense that usually comes along with learning about film. Each week, we tackle a "classic" of film history but do these films actually hold up for a modern audience? Can they entertain someone who grew up on Spider-Man reboots and Jim Carrey movies, or will they forever be relics of a bygone era?