Sachys: um... Fury Road is #4 in the series - Beyond thunderdome was the pile of poo #3.
Breja: Umm.. Fury Road in the fourth one. The third one is Beyond Thunderdome.
Well, don't I look fucking stupid.
Okay, so searching back to when I saw Beyond Thunderdome (as a little kid on ABC; they seemed to have it on every Sunday night back then, as if somehow steel cage deathmatches in a post-apocalyptic future was their idea of quality family entertainment), I remember that while I didn't like it as much as The Road Warrior or Mad Max, it wasn't exactly a terrible movie. Maybe it says a lot about that film, that I instinctively think of Fury Road instead of Beyond Thunderdome as "The Third Mad Max Movie".
rampancy: Subtle? That movie is just about as subtle as a sledgehammer. When used on an A-bomb.
Well, umm, uh. Yeah. Okay, so "subtle" was a poor choice of words, but after watching the movie for a second time, I began to see that, while the movie wasn't exactly deserving of a spot on anyone's Best Films list, it didn't deserve all of the negative criticism that it got. I myself hated it until I read a very well thought-out defense of the movie arguing that it captured the original spirit of the book better than anyone ever thought.
The real travesty came out of all of the spinoffs and sequels that followed. I remember trying to watch one of the Starship Troopers CGI movies. It looked like a bad ripoff of one of Blizzard's StarCraft cinematics.
tinyE: Joking my ass, I was born and raised a few miles from The Duke's Hideout which was actually an abandoned train station that they refurbished a few years after the movie was made. Not long before I moved to Michigan I interviewed for a job in there.
The building where the Brain lives? I walked past those steps 40 times a year for ten years going to Cardinal games.
Life imitating art, indeed...
Hammercorps: Ah, I see. I did watch the whole thing. So, that also disqualifies The Hunger Games as well, right?
Well, Dark City doesn't really count as a dystopia for the main reason that the setting isn't what it first appears to be, either to us or to the characters. As for Hunger Games? I'd say that counts as a dystopia, though admittedly I haven't read the books or seen the movies (and don't have any interest in doing so, not that I hate them or anything). So for all I know it could all just be some M. Night Shamalyan-eseque "social experiment" in the present day or it could all be a dream in Katniss' head, or something.