George Miller, the Oscar-winning director of 2015’s Mad Max: Fury Road says that it would be very painful to him if his films were released first on a streaming platform. Miller’s filmmaking career kicked off in 1979 with the release of Mad Max, the first entry in what was to become a landmark franchise. The film also introduced then-unknown actor Mel Gibson to audiences around the world. In the years since, Miller has found plenty of acclaim outside of the world of Mad Max.
There’s little arguing against the fact that the Mad Max films – and in particular Fury Road – are greatly enhanced by seeing them on the big screen. Fury Road’s spectacular visual storytelling may have been over the top at times, but it’s also exactly what made the film so engaging and fun to watch. In an era in which subscription streaming services have become the norm, a spectacle film like Fury Road wasstill able to convince people that the trip to the theater was a worthwhile one. Unfortunately, as if the cinematic release model wasn’t already suffering, the Covid-19 pandemic has made it difficult – even outright impossible at times – to see films in cinemas.
Related: The Real Reason The Original Mad Max Is Set In The Future
Miller stands by insisting on the need for audiences to experience his films in cinemas first and foremost. With his latest effort, the wild dramatic-fantasy Three Thousand Years of Longing, having recently premiered out of competition at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Miller spoke about the importance of the theatrical release. Like several of this summer’s bigger releases, Three Thousand Years of Longing will release exclusively in theaters. As he told Variety, a streaming release would have been “very painful” for him:
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