Summary Of Mad Max: Fury Road

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Mad Max: Fury Road paints a society where the line between "machine" and "human" is aggressively blurred. The dependence on fossil fuels and the dehumanizing objectification of humans leads to exploitation of both people and the earth. Rob Nixon's Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor provides a deeper context of the resource curses and inequalities that may cause such a society, both in the film and in our own world today. In the world of Fury Road, both humans and the earth contain natural resources to be drained: oil to fuel machines and blood to fuel "half-life" humans. Rob Nixon describes the dependence on fossil fuels as "living on borrowed time." There's a brutal irony to the fact that oil itself is derived from the remains of once-alive organisms. The War Boys also depend on borrowed (stolen) time to survive, fueled by the blood of other humans. In addition to the basic necessities of food and water, humans in today's world often depend on medical technology for survival. Immortan …show more content…
Vertical inequalities between the rich and the poor, namely between Immortan Joe and his servants, are literally vertical: The lush greenery and Immortan Joe's spatially elevated position in the Citadel (which has "everything you need, as long as you're not afraid of heights") is in stark contrast to the rest of the town, particularly in the scene where he pours water to the scrambling citizens below. Horizontal inequality is represented by a wide expanse of desert spanning the horizon, a seemingly endless chasm between the citizens of the Citadel and the "resource-rich enclaves" beyond Fury

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