The World Of Furiosa & Mad Max Fury Road Explained

Anya Taylor-Joy as Furiosa looking concerned in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
Created by visionary filmmaker George Miller and producer Byron Kennedy, the Mad Max multimedia franchise began with 1979’s Mad Max — a film that followed its titular character as he navigated the harsh conditions of the Australian wasteland. In the wake of war, ecocide, and a shortage of resources, the country undergoes a devastating societal collapse that feeds human survivors’ most brutal impulses. The original film spawned the Mad Max movie series, which includes 1981’s Mad Max 2 (The Road Warrior), 1985’s Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, and 2015’s Mad Max: Fury Road, which revitalized the post-apocalyptic action franchise.

Max Rockatansky (Mel Gibson; Tom Hardy) remains the franchise’s central figure until Fury Road, which sees him sharing the screen with fellow hardened survivor Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron). The fifth Mad Max film, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, serves as a prequel, and stars Anya Taylor-Joy as its titular figure. However, despite marking a shift, Furiosa‘s cast of characters and notable places appear in other Mad Max entries. Packed with inventive world-building, over-the-top action set-pieces, and compelling lore, the world of Mad Max (and, in particular, Fury Road) only grows in scope in Miller’s Furiosa.

The Citadel

Immortan Joe’s Stronghold In Fury Road

The Citadel from Mad Max Fury Road

The stronghold of Immortan Joe, the Citadel figures into Furiosa‘s ending and is a key location in Fury Road. A natural formation, the Citadel is composed of a cluster of three rock towers that looms above an aquifer of fresh water. Using the rock as a channel, the inhabitants of the Citadel are able to irrigate a swathe of the Wasteland, making it a crucially important location in an otherwise barren world. For some time, it was Immortan Joe’s base of operations, but after the pseudo-religious cult leader died, it became a home for desert refugees. While Fury Road‘s Green Place is an idyllic oasis, the Citadel is a more realistic beacon of hope for Wasteland survivors.

Immortan Joe

The Pseudo-Religious Cult Leader Of The Citadel

 

Lachy Hulme as Immortan Joe in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
Hugh Keays-Byrne as Immortan Joe Adjusting His Face Mask In Mad Max Fury Road Immortan Joe and a group of bad men looking down in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga Charlize Theron as Furiosa and Immortan Joe in Mad Max Fury Road Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme) and Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) face to face in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

Before the apocalypse, the character known as Immortan Joe was Colonel Joseph Moore, a decorated military veteran and Australian Army hero. However, by the time Mad Max: Fury Road unfolds, Immortan Joe is a pseudo-religious cult leader of sorts who uses the Citadel as a stronghold. As a veteran of the Oil Wars and a hero of the Water Wars, Immortan Joe easily garnered a following of ruthless bikers who helped him terrorize other survivors of post-societal collapse. Eventually, the series’ brutal and antagonistic figure ends up achieving god-like status after he wins control of the Citadel’s aquifer.

Wasteland survivors travel far to reach the Citadel — a supposed refuge…

After claiming and rebuilding the aquifer into the Citadel stronghold, Immortan Joe becomes a figure of legend. Wasteland survivors travel far to reach the Citadel — a supposed refuge from the rest of the barren desert. However, Immortan Joe only accepts the healthy wanderers into his cult, forcing them to become Milk Mothers, Treadmill Rats, War Boys or Breeders. While Milk Mothers and Breeders, like Immortan Joe’s Five Wives, are enslaved by him, Immortan Joe’s soldiers are brainwashed into becoming fanatical soldiers. In Fury Road, Furiosa tries to free the wives from Immortan Joe’s grasp.

The War Boys

Immortan Joe’s Devout Followers

 

War Boys army in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga The War Boys army on the War Rig, a costume vehicle in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga Mad Max: Fury Road's Nux with the War Boys behind him.

Immortan Joe’s devout soldiers and fanatical servants, the War Boys are the Citadel’s paramilitary arm. Hand-picked when they’re young and malleable, the War Boys are indoctrinated into the cult of V8, taught to worship all things mechanical, and are led to believe that Immortan Joe is a god-like being, which makes them not only wildly loyal, but willing to die for their leader. Covered in white powder, the skeletal-looking War Boys seemingly all suffer from terminal diseases, which is partly why they’re willing to make big sacrifices, as seen in the ending of Mad Max: Fury Road.

Often, the inhabitants of Gas Town, who are allies of The Citadel, trade gas for clean water.

Gastown

An Abandoned Refinery That’s Allied With The Citadel

Gastown from the Mad Max franchise

First appearing in Mad Max: Fury RoadGas Town is a large structure built around an abandoned refinery that lies south of Immortan Joe’s Citadel. At the beginning of Fury Road, Imperator Furiosa is meant to visit Gas Town before she betrays Immortan Joe. As its name implies, Gas Town has an abundance of gasoline, which is incredibly valuable in the Wasteland. Often, the inhabitants of Gas Town, who are allies of The Citadel, trade gas for clean water. Notably, the people of Gas Town use 40-foot-high poles to see their enemies and mount vehicles during road wars.

Bullet Farm

The Fortress That Provides The Citadel With Ammo & Arms

Bullet Farm from the Mad Max saga

An abandoned lead mine, the Bullet Farm was transformed into an arms factory stocked with gunpowder, ammo, and arms in order to bolster The Citadel and Immortan Joe’s efforts in defeating the other Wasteland-roaming gangs and warlords. A quarry that’s sunk into a crater, the Bullet Farm was gifted to the aptly named Bullet Farmer by Immortan Joe after the farmer helped the cult leader destroy The Citadel’s former occupants. In FuriosaFury Road‘s prequel, the Bullet Farm is known as one of the three fortresses of the Wasteland, with the other two being The Citadel and Gas Town.

…the Green Place is a utopia that Furiosa struggles to return to throughout her life.

The Green Place

Furiosa’s Idyllic Home

Young Furiosa reaches for an apple in the Green Place in Furiosa A Mad Max Saga

Also known as the Place of Abundance, The Green Place is a fertile oasis that’s under the jurisdiction of the Vuvalini of Many Mothers. In fact, The Green Place is where Furiosa was raised before being kidnapped by the Warlord Dementus. A key setting in the beginning of Furiosa, the Green Place is a utopia that Furiosa struggles to return to throughout her life. In Fury Road, viewers find out what happened to Mad Max‘s Green Place: After Furiosa was taken, the soil of the Green Place became too contaminated to support crops, forcing the Vuvalini to move on.

Dementus & The Biker Gang

The Main Antagonists Of Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

 

Dr. Dementus in The Chariot, a custom vehicle in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga A group of bikers led by Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) holding a revolver in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth), using a megaphone leads a war cry while commanding an army of motorcyclists in the desert in Furiosa Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) at the front of his biker army in Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

The charismatic and boisterous Dementus, Chris Hemsworth’s Furiosa villain, is one of the Wasteland’s most brutal warlords — and that’s saying something. The leader of the Biker Horde, Dementus is carted around in a chariot made from motorcycles. Although he appears brazen and imposing, Dementus is actually a stubborn man-child who will throw a tantrum if he doesn’t get his way. To make matters worse, he foolishly believes himself to be Furiosa’s father figure when, in reality, she wants him dead. In his fight for control, Dementus relies on his Biker Horde, a ruthless group of loyal marauders.

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