Mad Max Cars

Mad Max Cars 7,9/10 7004 reviews

All Cars in 'Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior' (1981) 1955 Dodge C-Series. 1955 Hillman Husky Phase I. 1956 Ford Customline. 1959 Austin 4-60F 4-Ton FF. 1959 De Soto Firesweep. 1960 Mercedes-Benz 220 S W111. 1960 Morris Major Mk II. 1960 Volkswagen Delivery Van Typ 2 T1. 1964 Bedford CAL Mk III. So let's celebrate the automobile cast of Mad Max: Fury Road. The steel and metal actors who couldn't walk the red carpet, the supporting characters we most want in the sequel, these are the most insane cars from Mad Max: Fury Road! Photo: Mad Max: Fury Road/Warner Bros.

The Pursuit Special MFP Interceptor as it appeared in Mad MaxThe first car shown in the film with the title of Pursuit Special is a V8 coupe stolen by Nightrider (played by Vince Gil), an escaped cop killer, who dies in an accident that destroys the vehicle. The more famous Pursuit Special is a heavily modified, built on a vehicle originally assembled stock at the Ford plant in November 1973. is offered the black Pursuit Special, as an incentive to stay on the force as their top pursuit man after he reveals his desire to resign. Although Max turns the offer down, he later uses the black car to exact his revenge on an outlaw motorcycle gang who killed his wife and son.Origins The vehicle started out as a standard white 351 cu in (5.8 L) Australian built when in 1976, filmmakers and began preproduction on Mad Max. The movie's art director Jon Dowding designed the Interceptor and commissioned -based car customizers Graf-X International to modify the GT Falcon.

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Peter Arcadipane, Ray Beckerley, John Evans, and painter Rod Smythe transformed the car as specified for the film. Modifications The main modifications are the black paint scheme, roof and spoilers, wheel arch flares, and front nose cone and air-dam designed by Arcadipane (marketed as the 'Concorde' style). Also, eight individual exhaust side pipes were added (only two of them being functional, others appeared to be working because of the vibrations the first two created). The most famous feature of the car is a Weiand 6-71 supercharger protruding through the. The impressive looking supercharger, in reality, was nonfunctional; functional superchargers are typically driven constantly by the engine and cannot be switched on and off, as portrayed in the first two Mad Max films. Promotional use At the completion of filming, the producers could not pay all the creditors, so the black Interceptor was put up for sale.

The blower and side pipes were removed to make it suitable for use as a road vehicle. It was then used as a promotional car for the film, before finally being put up for sale. However the car did not sell and was passed on to part-time actor and motor mechanic Murray Smith, who was the head mechanic for the movie's production team, as payment for his services.Mad Max 2 ( The Road Warrior) In the meantime, the low-budget Australian film had gained worldwide success, prompting a sequel,. For the film, the Pursuit Special was reacquired by Kennedy and Miller.New modifications The rear wheels and side pipes were changed. For the second film, the original Weiand blower, which was removed and subsequently lost, was replaced. Unlike in the first film, this time the supercharger was functional (connected directly to the engine's ) and the effect of the blower being engaged or disengaged was created by placing the vehicle on a, and while in motion, the interceptor's engine was simply started or stopped.

The car was cosmetically modified for the new setting with the addition of a pair of large cylindrical fuel tanks fitted in the rear (requiring the back window and lid to be removed) and its general appearance was given a more used look by painting the vehicle in matte rather than gloss black, and the paint was scrubbed off to appear rusty. The front end was also modified by removing the. A duplicate car was also put together for the film. When the script required it to be destroyed by rolling down an embankment and eventually exploding, the duplicate interceptor was used, leaving the original vehicle intact. Disposal and restoration When production was completed, the intact Pursuit Special was sold to a in, along with other wrecks from the movie. The GT Falcon was then to another in and in the mid-1980s, the car was rescued by Bob Fursenko, who restored the interceptor by having a new nose cone and air dam fitted, but retaining the fuel tanks from Mad Max 2. Fursenko confirmed the vehicle's authenticity with Kennedy Miller.

It was subsequently shown widely in Australia before being sold by Fursenko and shipped to the in, where it stayed until its closure in 2011. It was then relocated to the in,. Mad Max: Fury Road While the Pursuit Special did not appear in, the vehicle returned for the fourth film in the franchise,. Miller stated, 'all the vehicles are kind of hybrid, cobbled together, from the wrecks of the past.'

The vehicle only features briefly in the film; it is captured along with Max in the opening sequence, and is shown being repaired by a group of 's followers. It returns in the final battle, driven by one of the War Boys, only to be crushed between two larger vehicles.

When asked in an interview with if Fury Road is a or, George Miller implied that it may not be, saying that 'the films are loosely connected.' However, the to the film, for which Miller received a story credit, places it after Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.Story On screen, Pursuit Specials are unique, undercover police cruisers which also serve as interceptors. At the opening of the first movie in the series, the only Pursuit Special is a 1972 HQ model Holden Monaro, which is rusty and used. It is stolen by the Night Rider, a member of a motorcycle gang called the Zed Runners (also known as the Acolytes),while escaping police custody, and is later wrecked.Pursuit Special, when the term is used, generally refers to Max's more famous V8 Interceptor Pursuit Special, a 1973 Ford XB Falcon GT 351, commissioned at great expense by Police Commissioner Labatouche and the Main Force Patrol's (MFP) commander, Fifi Macaffee. Assembled by the MFP's mechanic, Barry, it features port exhaust pipes and a 'blower' supercharger (nonfunctional film props).

When Max's family is murdered by the gang, he steals the Pursuit Special from the MFP garage and goes on a vengeful rampage.In Mad Max 2, set roughly five years after the events of the previous film, the Pursuit Special has suffered from the effects of the desert: it loses the front end early in the first chase sequence of the film (as Max forcefully rear-ends a raider vehicle), the car is rusty, and the tires appear to be in a poor state. The car itself has been modified, presumably by Max: the rear window and the boot lid have been removed to make room for two huge fuel tanks. (With a capacity of over 150 L (40 US gal) of, these would have significantly improved the vehicle's endurance.) The car only appears at the beginning of the movie, where Max escapes a group of raiders, then rescues a mortally wounded member of an oil rig settlement; and then again later, when it is destroyed during Max's failed attempt to escape the settlement.The Pursuit Special returns in Mad Max: Fury Road. (The movie never explains its reappearance; however, the Fury Road comic series, set just before the movie, includes a story arc where Max gathers parts to rebuild the vehicle before the events of Fury Road.

) The car is shown very briefly in the movie, having been driven by Max before it is destroyed by Immortan Joe's men. It is then repaired by Joe's War Boys, taken back to bare metal, giving it a silver appearance. It is then redubbed the 'Razor Cola' and used as one of their vehicles.

It is destroyed by being crushed between two larger trucks.Mad Max 2015 (video game) In the 2015 video game, Immortan Joe's son, Scabrous Scrotus, is a warlord of Gastown (the settlement referred to in Fury Road). His men steals Pursuit Special from Max at the start at the game and dismantle it. Max spends time with Chumbucket building a replacement throughout the game known as 'the Magnum Opus', so he may cross the Plains of Silence, a barren stretch of salt flats that Max believes will relieve him of his nightmarish memories.

In the final battle of the game, the Opus, now on par with the Interceptor, is destroyed along with both Scrotus' Land Mover, and the designer/caretaker of the Opus, Chumbucket. Max thinks he is now without a car, only to have Scrotus emerge with Max's Interceptor. After dispatching the warlord, Max reclaims his car, returns the picture of his family to the dashboard, and drives off into the wasteland.See also.References.

Barton, Peter. Mad Max Movies. Peter Barton. Retrieved 9 July 2015. Crawford, John (30 June 2013). Driving & Life.

Retrieved 11 July 2015. Thompson, Rufus (14 June 2013). Car Design News. Archived from on 4 May 2015.

Retrieved 4 May 2015. Barton, Peter (18 May 2015). Street Machine Australia. Street Machine. Retrieved 11 July 2015. (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2016.

Affordable Webdesign. January 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2015. Affordable Webdesign. Retrieved 3 May 2015. Barton, Peter.

Peter Barton. Retrieved 4 May 2015. Performance Wholesale Australia. Retrieved 8 May 2015. Barton, Peter.

Mad Max Movies. Retrieved 8 May 2015. Affordable Webdesign. January 2009. Retrieved 9 May 2015.

Barton, Peter. Peter Barton. Retrieved 4 May 2015.

Farquhar, Peter (7 February 2015). Business Insider Australia.

Allure Media. Retrieved 4 May 2015. Barton, Peter (24 October 2014). Peter Barton.

Retrieved 3 May 2015. Kilday, Gregg (12 May 2015). The Hollywood Reporter (Daily). Los Angeles, CA.

Retrieved 13 May 2015. Mad Max Movies. Mad Max Movies. Retrieved 17 January 2016. Mad Max Movies. Mad Max Movies. Retrieved 17 January 2016.

Elliott, Hannah (12 May 2015). Bloomberg Business. Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved 11 July 2015.External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to.

– The most comprehensive Mad Max site online. Includes extensive information on the vehicles used in all three movies. – Displays a comprehensive list of all known Mad Max Replicas in the world. – An extensive look into a Mad Max Pursuit Special replica project that spanned nearly 5 years.

– Home to the original Mad Max movie, maintained by members of the cast and crew. Home of the original Pursuit Special.

Mad Max: Fury Road did the impossible and didn't sacrifice cool cars and practical effects in the process. It brought back a franchise that hasn't had an installment in 30 years, without much backstory - both diehards and new fans alike were ecstatic. It did so with a new lead (Tom Hardy) in the hugely iconic role, without anyone batting an eye, including Mel Gibson himself. And it did all of this as a single, grueling, maddening two hour chase film. The entire movie is a chase. One. Chase. Which means that the only characters more important than Max and Furiousa (the scene stealing Charlize Theron) are the cars. And boy did the automobiles of Mad Max deliver.

These cars had to not only live up to the expectations of the Wasteland Weekend Warriors who've been watching, breathing, and living the Mad Max world for decades, but they also had to be awesome enough to bring new fans into the fold. They had to be practical because they ACTUALLY did all the things they do in the movie. That's right, all those jumps, chases, turns, and flips were all practical - no CGI for director George Miller. Even the music coming out of the Doof Warrior's speakers was practical.

So let's celebrate the automobile cast of Mad Max: Fury Road. The steel and metal actors who couldn't walk the red carpet, the supporting characters we most want in the sequel, these are the most insane cars from Mad Max: Fury Road!
The Gigahorse
Not one, but two 1959 Cadillac DeVilles are piggyback mounted on top of a monster truck chassis with two meter high double truck tires in the rear and powered by twin V16 engines. Can you even handle this power? As an added bonus, it comes with a whaler's harpoon and mounted flamethrower.


Head production designer and art director Colin Gibson says the tail of the 1959 Cadillac stood out to him as something exceptionally beautiful and worth salvaging. “In a world where nobody had one of anything, it seemed a fait accompli that he would have a pair of 1959 coupe DeVilles,” Gibson says. “We spent two months making them operational.”

Is this fascinating?
Big Foot
This giant (nearly seven foot tall), customized, 1940s-era Fargo truck with a supercharged V8 engine (with even more massive tires) is briefly driven by Warlord's son during the chase in Mad Max: Fury Road.

The 66-inch, all-terrain tires and heavy axles are taken from a military supertanker. It's got a whopping four feet of suspension and 600 cubic inches of displacement underneath!


It features not just a roof mounted, high powered, belt-driven machine gun, but also a harpoon gun!
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The Doof Wagon

This insane vehicle is one part military (a repurposed 8 x 8 M.A.N. missile-carrier with a supercharged V8 engine) and two parts full rock star stadium. It features enough speakers to fill an arena as well as that now iconic flame throwing double necked guitar on bungee cords! And that's just the front! On the back are four drummers who pound their hearts out on resonators built from industrial air conditioning ducts.

Warner Brothers calls it a “sonic carmageddon.” It's meant to rally the troops in the same way drummers who marched alongside soldiers in ancient battles did. When marching becomes driving, so too must the drummer change.

The craziest thing about this truck is that it WORKS. This thing not only drives, but really plays music. That's right, all of the sound coming out of the Doof Wagon in the movie was actually bumping from those speakers. It was all practical - director George Miller wouldn't accept anything less.
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The War Pig

The War Pig is made from a mix between a Czechoslovakian Tatra T815 and a Chevy Fleetmaster. It's effectively a six-wheel-drive 18-wheeler powered with twin V8 engines. It also has a VW Beetle and Pick up Truck cabin shells mounted on it as protective mobile forts.

In the film it's as much a set piece as a vehicle as most of the film takes place ON it. It has enough horse power to tow a fuel pod and haul @$$ through the desert away from Immortan Joe's whole brigade.

Furiosa has the engines set up with a set of kill switches that must be flipped in a certain order, or the War Pig stalls after a few yards.
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