Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga earned an extremely frustrating $172.8 million on a $168 million budget. Its failure came in spite of its quality, pedigree, and high-profile franchise legacy. Many speculators offered potential explanations for its poor performance, but its current streaming dominance eliminates some of them. Furiosa has been the primary example in the current discussion about the death of movie theaters. While its current streaming success is nice to see, the fact that it’s available at home is part of the problem.
Furiosa Finds Her Place of Abundance On HBO Max
Furiosa absolutely rules. It’s very different from Fury Road, but it maintains that project’s stunning imagery, jaw-dropping stunts, and brutal action set pieces. Anya Taylor-Joy picks up the torch from Charlize Theron, delivering a wholly different performance. The film follows her from her early days in the Green Place of Many Mothers to the grim days that made her into a warrior. Its biggest weakness is that it has to follow Mad Max: Fury Road. The 2015 epic stands as one of the best action films of the era, and Furiosa can’t hope to compete. It’s definitely a worthy follow-up, but the prequel lacks the pure non-stop, high-octane screaming speed. Furiosa might be the most emotionally impactful Mad Max movie in the bunch, but that may have been part of its undoing. The film deserved so much better, but people seem to know what went wrong.
No one needs to explain why Furiosa is doing great on Max. Tons of people wanted to see it, but most had to measure that desire against the struggles of the theater. The fact that Furiosa bombed prompted many to declare physical movie theaters a dead business, but they’re very much still around. Prequels have some negative implications, prompting many to blame the film’s position in the franchise. There’s also the obvious issue of releasing a movie with Mad Max in the title and no Mad Max in the story. It’s also worth noting that Fury Road didn’t actually do all that well. It’s an undisputed classic now, but the film lost $20-40 million at the box office. Some observers realized that Furiosa isn’t a massive four-quadrant blockbuster. That’s what makes its box office bomb status so miserable.
Yes, Furiosa is the fifth entry in the Mad Max saga, but it isn’t the IP-driven cash-in that makes it sound like. It’s the latest spark from a mad creative who maintains a firm hold on his vision. The fact that people knew that they could stay at home and stream Furiosa is one of the biggest contributors to its downfall. The film absolutely deserved better, but box-office money has always been a bad way to judge a piece of art. Furiosa deserves all the eyes she can get, and there’s no better place for her than a platform called Max.