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How the ‘Furiosa’ War Rig Was Built

Members of the creative team explain what it took to turn the War Rig into “a beautiful chrome stage.”

Chrome and polished steel have some great qualities. They look sleek, sexy and powerful. Onscreen, they really pop.

But talk to the team that built the War Rig — the menacingly dazzling, steel-and-chrome 12-wheeler that carries a crucial action scene in “Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga” — and you’ll learn that these materials can at times be something else: a royal pain in the tailpipe.

“Metal gets hot in the Australian sun,” said Guy Norris, the movie’s action designer.

That became a challenge for the stunt performers, who, to execute the director George Miller’s vision, threw their bodies every which way around the tractor-trailer as it sped down a stretch of road near Hay, a rural town in southeastern Australia.

“They’d get blown up or shot and they’d fall,” Norris said. “And we had restraining cables on them, so they wouldn’t hit the ground, but they’d do a full fall, hit the side of the tanker and dangle.” Even worse: “they were all bare-chested.”

Shirtless skin. Sizzling metal. And surfaces so shiny, the crew’s reflection could often be seen in shots of the truck. This is how the team behind “Furiosa” created the War Rig, and how they worked with its idiosyncrasies.

Anya Taylor-Joy in action on the War Rig.Jasin Boland/Warner Bros.

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Source: Movies - nytimes.com


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‘Furiosa’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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