Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

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I think Fury barely made it, with a cost of up to $180 million and earning around $380 million; that is, following Hollywood accounting, you add $100-200 million for marketing and then cut the revenues by 30-50 percent to cover the cut for theater owners and distributors.


That's why tent-poles need to earn at least 2.5 times their production cost, and investors are obviously never happy with break-even.


Meanwhile, one article reported that the franchise itself was not that profitable from the beginning, and likely because it's for a niche audience.


That said, I think the producers tried to buck that trend and reboot the franchise, and for a global audience that likely never heard of the first three movies, featuring A-listers and a lot of spectacle, and it still didn't do that well, especially for a film that essentially retold the first movie briefly and then rehashed the chase scene from the second movie and Bartertown from the third.



What's even worse for the series is that merchandising is little to non-existent



I think it's because it had been part of a niche market from the start:



https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/mo...sa-1235911133/


Observers note that Fury Road aside, the male-fueled Mad Max series has always catered to a somewhat niche audience. The first three films, starring Mel Gibson, grossed less than $70 million combined domestically.

“IP like Mad Max and Ghostbusters is old, and they have the fans they’re going to have,” says one theater chain executive. “If studios can budget to that, they might make some decent money.”

There was a video game, though:





Some also say that franchises like Fallout were partly inspired by this one.


In this case, what happened is that there were three movies, with the third one supposedly ending Max's story, and thus the franchise. After that, Miller wanted a fourth film, involving another "continuous chase scene," and still featuring Gibson but another character, to be played by Sigourney Weaver. (Side note: I think both are fonder of non-action genres, with Gibson coming from Shakespearean theater, and Weaver from Broadway, but are known more for sci-fi/action films). Coupled with that was a series of comic books featuring Max trying to make a new Interceptor, Furiosa and the Wives, Nux's story, another War Rig, and so on.



They probably figured that most who would be watching Fury had never seen the first three movies, which might explain praise for it even as many don't know that it essentially retells the first movie, borrows a combination of the Bartertown and and the oil well from the third and second movies, respectively (this time, replacing Auntie with Immortan, the "precious juice" with water, and the Tribe with the Wives), and then borrows the chase scene from the second movie using another Rig.


I think the plan after that was to retell Furiosa's story (reminds me of the Feral Kid from the second movie), and then do a prequel about Max, probably set between the first movie (where there's no wasteland, yet) and Max wandering in the wasteland (the second film).


With that, they should have probably focused on cheaper production, probably using more virtual sets (like Mandalorian), and maybe even towards streaming (like Prey) or a mini-series. The catch is that they'd need to find new actors with the potential for breakthrough performances, as getting A-listers would be too expensive. Given that plus the need to create more content, they'd also have to come up with much better writing, and probably similar to the content of the first three movies.



I keep jumping back and forth between a 7 and an 8. To an extent, the film feels like playing an expansion pack to a videogame I really like. A handful of the characters in Fury Road (Immortan Joe, Rictus Erectus, the War Boys) appear in this film, so it often seemed like the film was giving me more of the same. And I don't even mean this as a bad thing. I like expansion packs for this very reason as, even if they may not bring many new ideas to the table, they can at least remind me on what I love about the original product and give me more of it. Of course, this doesn't apply to every action set piece in the film as a couple in the middle blew my mind (by comparison, it took some time for me to gel with the first act), but I largely viewed the film as getting more of the same and enjoyed it on that front quite a bit. I did enjoy seeing more of Joe's compound though as, while not every facet of it shown in the film was necessary (I don't think the film needed to show Joe's wives being abused), it was nice to see more of the inner workings of it.
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But in a troubling and unexpected twist, far fewer females and younger male adults showed up than came out for Miller's Mad Max: Fury Road nine years ago.
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I keep jumping back and forth between a 7 and an 8. To an extent, the film feels like playing an expansion pack to a videogame I really like. A handful of the characters in Fury Road (Immortan Joe, Rictus Erectus, the War Boys) appear in this film, so it often seemed like the film was giving me more of the same. And I don't even mean this as a bad thing. I like expansion packs for this very reason as, even if they may not bring many new ideas to the table, they can at least remind me on what I love about the original product and give me more of it. Of course, this doesn't apply to every action set piece in the film as a couple in the middle blew my mind (by comparison, it took some time for me to gel with the first act), but I largely viewed the film as getting more of the same and enjoyed it on that front quite a bit. I did enjoy seeing more of Joe's compound though as, while not every facet of it shown in the film was necessary (I don't think the film needed to show Joe's wives being abused), it was nice to see more of the inner workings of it.
I pretty much on the same page as yourself, I gave it a 7.5. Its somewhat underwhelming in ways but also very satisfying in others. It did feel a little DLC.
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I just think it's a different movie.

If it really was an "expansion pack" sort of installment, I honestly think it would have done better, but it really wasn't interested in hitting the peaks or consistency of Fury Road, let alone surpassing them. It was just far more interested in "being a prequel" than "being an over-the-top action movie".

I think one of the most glaring examples of Furiosa dropping the ball is that one scene where they describe the "40 Days War". How in the Australian hellscape can you cut away from the action in favor of a brief collage and narration over something like a war, an actual violent historical event in this universe between your two largest factions?



We could have got something like Helm's Deep, but instead we got a few seconds of stock footage of Doof Warrior, just to remind us that there's a better movie we could be watching.



Those folks in the Mad Max universe apparently have never heard of solar energy.



I'd watch it, but I'm not thrilled by the absence of Tom Hardy.
Very True, nobody can replace Tom "Venom" Hardy..



There is no other way for competitive, for-profit businesses to do business except to maximize profit. That's clear even in the business' corporate by-laws.
I think this is confusing publicly-traded companies (which are bound by shareholder fiduciary duty laws) with private companies (which are not), but it doesn't matter because this isn't what the dispute is about.

Here's where the switching took place: the claim is that producers don't need to make Hollywood tent-poles look expensive; they just need to make them "good". For starters, that makes no sense at all because such movies are expensive, and they look expensive.
Your position is that it's impossible for movies to look more expensive than they are?

That said, you're countering reality with your ideal view of the world.
Hooray, we're getting somewhere! Yes, sometimes people talk about what should be, either instead of or in addition to what currently is. I'm not sure why you feel that has be accompanied by the reminder that it is not currently like that, and even more confusingly, I'm not sure why that reminder would be phrased as a contradiction.

Nobody here is acting like a naïve child, imagining an implausible utopia because they don't know how the world works. Similarly, nobody here requires a tutorial on the financial side of filmmaking, let alone the incredibly simple and well-understood idea that people who invest money want to see a return on that money.

What do you see for these flicks? They contain lots of spectacle, are over two hours long, focus mostly on sci-fi and fantasy (which is what happens when you put in a lot of spectacle)
It's pretty weird to frame this as them "put[ting] in a lot of spectacle" as an initial act so that they end up with sci-fi or fantasy, rather than the causality flowing the other way. Nobody writes "and then the White House blows up" first in their screenplay and then figures out whether aliens or terrorists are the ones responsible, with the possible exception of whoever wrote White House Down I guess.

So, you insist that producers don't need to make them look expensive or even make them expensive
Nope. I'm saying that lots of moviegoers do not require spectacle to "get their money's worth." That's all. Nothing about this suggests that I (or anybody else in this thread) is unaware of basic marketplace dynamics. As it so happens I work for an economist, but I'm pretty sure I could break rocks with a sledgehammer for a living and still know all that.

and yet they do. Why do you think that's taking place, Yoda?
First, I would start by questioning the premise "and yet they do." You've reduced all of filmmaking to a binary. "They do" in the sense that it happens, sure, but not in the sense that it's the only way things ever happen.

Why do they sometimes (maybe often?) make them look expensive? Because they feel it reduces their financial risk. This is probably true in the aggregate, but sometimes it fails miserably, too. It is a messy, glamorous business with a lot of expensive, high-profile failures. It is famously fickle and fairly unpredictable. But none of this contradicts anything people in this thread are saying, that I can see.

Also, do you see different meanings of "good" emerging?
As you put it: bingo. Now you're asking the right question. But again, why phrase this like a contradiction or be so weirdly confrontational about it?

"Good" for the ones paying to make the movie means "profitable". Those are the investors.
Right!

"Good" for the producers is what makes the investors happy. Otherwise, the chances of not getting funding for future projects go up. That's why they spend a lot on marketing. That's why they put in a lot of CGI-drenched spectacle. That's why they usually go for the PG sweet spot unless the content needs otherwise. That's why they don't show tent-poles during dump months.
Right!

"Good" for the viewer means watching something that's entertaining, and given the fact that they have to pay a lot for tickets, and even more for watching shows on IMAX, etc., then they better look good.
Less right!

The leap in logic is right there, at the end: "they better look good." Many viewers do not care about this or, more importantly, do not take "look good" to mean "look super expensive" (your announced switch from one to the other is part of the issue). I want my movies to look good, but I don't particularly care how they do it, because what looks good in one context looks bad (or totally superfluous) in another. I would be really mad if I saw the trailers for Transformers and didn't see a lot of shiny robots punching each other, but I would be similarly mad if I went to see There Will Be Blood and got the same thing. But There Will Be Blood definitely "looks good." Do you think it looks bad? Do you think it would look better with overt CGI spectacle, thus proving it was expensive (it wasn't)? Would the people who saw it like it more? And so on.

Otherwise, he'll complain about having to pay $20 to watch a movie that's only an hour and ten minutes long, with only one action scene, cheap effects, and looks like a made-for-TV.
Some people do this. I regard them as mostly silly people, though, who apparently value the minutes in their lives so cheaply that they think of "it fills time" as a positive rather than a negative.

Lastly, you need to live in reality: it's not the viewer attempting to extract the most money from the producer but the other way round
Yep. But again, that's not how the argument started. It started with a specific quote, which I even reproduced for you: "want to get my money's worth." Do you not see the implication embedded in that statement, and how my distinction about not extracting money from producers is a direct response to it?

I wasn't referring to that
Then why did you post it in response to that quote? There is an expectation that if you quote something, and put something just below it, that's the thing you're responding to.

but to the claim that all those names referring to animators did not do any special effects.
Where was this said, exactly? Please produce a quote.

One argues that CGI is cheaper than practical effects because all you need to do is to manipulate digital elements from libraries, and probably capture them from reality, like filming and then digitizing scenes. But it turns out that CGI also involves large numbers of people working on various elements, which explains the long lists of digital workers in end credits.
"Cheaper" and "cheap" are not the same thing. CGI certainly can be expensive, but for many things--particularly, the kind of large-scale destruction that loud, tentpole blockbusters require--they remain considerably less expensive than, ya' know, actually blowing up buildings/planets/the multiverse.

In short, "most" does not have to do with special effects if all of those animators listed in the end credits were ghost employees, i.e., they don't exist. That means the CGI appeared miraculously.
I've read this like four times and I genuinely have no idea what you're trying to say, but nobody said CGI appeared ex nihilio. As a good rule of thumb, if somebody appears to be saying something insane like "CGI appears magically by itself!" the odds are good there's been a misunderstanding, since that's a bonkers position no one with a working brain would ever say.

"Most" had to do with budget. Check the quote I just produced: the word "most" is followed by the words "of the cost of an entire films production." Pretty straightforward.



I just think it's a different movie.

If it really was an "expansion pack" sort of installment, I honestly think it would have done better, but it really wasn't interested in hitting the peaks or consistency of Fury Road, let alone surpassing them. It was just far more interested in "being a prequel" than "being an over-the-top action movie".

I think one of the most glaring examples of Furiosa dropping the ball is that one scene where they describe the "40 Days War". How in the Australian hellscape can you cut away from the action in favor of a brief collage and narration over something like a war, an actual violent historical event in this universe between your two largest factions?



We could have got something like Helm's Deep, but instead we got a few seconds of stock footage of Doof Warrior, just to remind us that there's a better movie we could be watching.
Sounds like I enjoyed it more than you did, but it is the case that a handful of the action set pieces are characters are taken directly from Fury Road, so this is where I get expansion pack vibes. As noted, this isn't all the film is, but a decent chunk of the film IS made up of this. As for cutting away from the 40 day war, sure, it might've been nice to see that, but the film is chock full of action, so it's not like it doesn't have anything else to offer us in terms of action. Far from it.



I think this is confusing publicly-traded companies (which are bound by shareholder fiduciary duty laws) with private companies (which are not), but it doesn't matter because this isn't what the dispute is about.

It has less to do with trading shares than with corporate by-laws, which favor owners, and owners caring for returns, which is what happens even when they invest in government securities. Only fans live outside that reality.


Your position is that it's impossible for movies to look more expensive than they are?
My position is that they have to look expensive in order for viewers not to complain paying $20 a ticket to watch a tent-pole. Otherwise, the latter will go for cheaper streaming and bargain bins, and the former will be less inclined to get burned again in funding future projects.



Hooray, we're getting somewhere! Yes, sometimes people talk about what should be, either instead of or in addition to what currently is. I'm not sure why you feel that has be accompanied by the reminder that it is not currently like that, and even more confusingly, I'm not sure why that reminder would be phrased as a contradiction.
No, you're not getting anywhere. That's why you're still stuck with what you think should be because you can't live in what is. That's where the contradiction takes place.



Nobody here is acting like a naïve child, imagining an implausible utopia because they don't know how the world works. Similarly, nobody here requires a tutorial on the financial side of filmmaking, let alone the incredibly simple and well-understood idea that people who invest money want to see a return on that money.
What I gave is the way that world works. You're the one insisting on some "plausible utopia". Not only do you need "a tutorial on the financial side of filmmaking," you even need one on how business works. In your incredibly ridiculous world, the idea that not only do investors want "a return on that money" but the best returns is beyond your view. Grow up.


It's pretty weird to frame this as them "put[ting] in a lot of spectacle" as an initial act so that they end up with sci-fi or fantasy, rather than the causality flowing the other way. Nobody writes "and then the White House blows up" first in their screenplay and then figures out whether aliens or terrorists are the ones responsible, with the possible exception of whoever wrote White House Down I guess
Your reading comprehension is pathetic. I didn't argue that one ends up with the other.


Nope. I'm saying that lots of moviegoers do not require spectacle to "get their money's worth." That's all. Nothing about this suggests that I (or anybody else in this thread) is unaware of basic marketplace dynamics. As it so happens I work for an economist, but I'm pretty sure I could break rocks with a sledgehammer for a living and still know all that.
See, that's what I mean by someone who lives in a fantasy world. Moviegoers don't require that, and yet Hollywood producers make spectacles that way.


Stop fantasizing. Also, stop claiming that you're an economist or otherwise because (a) everything you've said so far goes against that claim, and (b) you can't prove that claim anyway as this forum is based on anonymity.


Add to that your lack of reading comprehension, and you have bigger problems.


First, I would start by questioning the premise "and yet they do." You've reduced all of filmmaking to a binary. "They do" in the sense that it happens, sure, but not in the sense that it's the only way things ever happen.
That's what you should have done in the first place? And yet you didn't because you can't.




Why do they sometimes (maybe often?) make them look expensive? Because they feel it reduces their financial risk. This is probably true in the aggregate, but sometimes it fails miserably, too. It is a messy, glamorous business with a lot of expensive, high-profile failures. It is famously fickle and fairly unpredictable. But none of this contradicts anything people in this thread are saying, that I can see.

Now, you're admitting that I'm right by figuring out why they make tent-poles look expensive! You can't even think about this issue properly!


As you put it: bingo. Now you're asking the right question. But again, why phrase this like a contradiction or be so weirdly confrontational about it?
Because you kept giving la-la land remarks, like claiming that producers don't try to make movies look expensive, and viewers don't need the same.



Right!


Right!
Shooting yourself in the foot again.




Less right!

The leap in logic is right there, at the end: "they better look good." Many viewers do not care about this or, more importantly, do not take "look good" to mean "look super expensive" (your announced switch from one to the other is part of the issue). I want my movies to look good, but I don't particularly care how they do it, because what looks good in one context looks bad (or totally superfluous) in another. I would be really mad if I saw the trailers for Transformers and didn't see a lot of shiny robots punching each other, but I would be similarly mad if I went to see There Will Be Blood and got the same thing. But There Will Be Blood definitely "looks good." Do you think it looks bad? Do you think it would look better with overt CGI spectacle, thus proving it was expensive (it wasn't)? Would the people who saw it like it more? And so on.
Back again to your fantasy world. Many viewers don't care, and yet tent-poles show movies that way. And we're back to your previous point.


You really need to work on your argumentative skills, too.


Wait: There Will be Blood is a tent-pole? You must be joking.




Some people do this. I regard them as mostly silly people, though, who apparently value the minutes in their lives so cheaply that they think of "it fills time" as a positive rather than a negative.
Welcome to reality. Now, guess what investors and producers do in light of that.




Yep. But again, that's not how the argument started. It started with a specific quote, which I even reproduced for you: "want to get my money's worth." Do you not see the implication embedded in that statement, and how my distinction about not extracting money from producers is a direct response to it?
If I'm going to pay $25 dollars per ticket plus overpriced snacks plus parking plus lunch or dinner, and for a family, with a total cost equivalent to buying a new hard drive, then I better get something that doesn't look like the first Mad Max movie


There's no leap of logic here. You're simply that naive.




Then why did you post it in response to that quote? There is an expectation that if you quote something, and put something just below it, that's the thing you're responding to.


Where was this said, exactly? Please produce a quote.


"Cheaper" and "cheap" are not the same thing. CGI certainly can be expensive, but for many things--particularly, the kind of large-scale destruction that loud, tentpole blockbusters require--they remain considerably less expensive than, ya' know, actually blowing up buildings/planets/the multiverse.

Good grief. Look up "practical effects", genius. In this light, look up reasons why costs went up for Fury. Look up words like "Africa" and "delays".


I've read this like four times and I genuinely have no idea what you're trying to say, but nobody said CGI appeared ex nihilio. As a good rule of thumb, if somebody appears to be saying something insane like "CGI appears magically by itself!" the odds are good there's been a misunderstanding, since that's a bonkers position no one with a working brain would ever say.

"Most" had to do with budget. Check the quote I just produced: the word "most" is followed by the words "of the cost of an entire films production." Pretty straightforward.
If you want to see what a bonkers argument looks like, check out:



they remain considerably less expensive than, ya' know, actually blowing up buildings/planets/the multiverse



I just think it's a different movie.

If it really was an "expansion pack" sort of installment, I honestly think it would have done better, but it really wasn't interested in hitting the peaks or consistency of Fury Road, let alone surpassing them. It was just far more interested in "being a prequel" than "being an over-the-top action movie".

I think one of the most glaring examples of Furiosa dropping the ball is that one scene where they describe the "40 Days War". How in the Australian hellscape can you cut away from the action in favor of a brief collage and narration over something like a war, an actual violent historical event in this universe between your two largest factions?



We could have got something like Helm's Deep, but instead we got a few seconds of stock footage of Doof Warrior, just to remind us that there's a better movie we could be watching.

I think this should be added to my previous points: many are probably looking at movies in the same way as video games, if not amusement park rides. That is, they need to have set pieces, spectacle, etc., with improvements on those and not just the equivalent of DLCs.


We saw the result of that in Fury, which reminds me of the Mad Max game, but to avoid things like delays and having to shoot in places like Africa, they had to bring in more CGI, and with that CGI shots, like a motorbike moving weirdly across the dunes and those that look like cut scenes from video games:





My position is that they have to look expensive in order for viewers not to complain paying $20 a ticket to watch a tent-pole. Otherwise, the latter will go for cheaper streaming and bargain bins, and the former will be less inclined to get burned again in funding future projects.
And are "expensive" and "look expensive" the same thing? I asked this before but you've conspicuously ignored it, along with a few other direct questions (more on that below).

No, you're not getting anywhere. That's why you're still stuck with what you think should be because you can't live in what is. That's where the contradiction takes place.
Your logic is backwards. The only person who can discuss what "should be" is someone who first recognizes and lives in what "is." Recognizing what "is" is literally a logical prerequisite for suggesting a "should" in the first place.

You're the one insisting on some "plausible utopia". Not only do you need "a tutorial on the financial side of filmmaking," you even need one on how business works. In your incredibly ridiculous world, the idea that not only do investors want "a return on that money" but the best returns is beyond your view. Grow up.
Where do I say that they don't want the best returns? Nowhere. I defy you to produce a direct quote where I say otherwise. And when you realize you can't, I expect a mea culpa. What I expect I'll get is more handwavey stuff featuring the word "reality" over and over, but at that point the failure to produce on such a simple request will speak for itself.

I didn't argue that one ends up with the other.
You didn't mean to, but you said it backwards. Here, look:
focus mostly on sci-fi and fantasy (which is what happens when you put in a lot of spectacle)
The phrase "is what happens when" implies a flow of causality where the following clause ("put a lot of spectacle in") precedes the previous clause ("sci-fi and fantasy").

Obviously I know what you were trying to say, I mention it only because it's a particularly clear example of how sloppy and unconsidered these responses have been.

See, that's what I mean by someone who lives in a fantasy world. Moviegoers don't require that, and yet Hollywood producers make spectacles that way.
Oh, so your position is that if producers do a thing in aggregate, it's ipso facto rational in all circumstances?

Stop fantasizing.
I know you think these little asides make you appear more confident, but they actually do the opposite: they reek of insecurity. Good arguments speak for themselves. Bad arguments need little wingman sentences like this trying to hype them up. This faux tough talk is the argumentative equivalent of a blowfish making itself larger to try to scare off predators.

stop claiming that you're an economist
Stop claiming I'm claiming I'm an economist.

You know, I can understand how someone might get confused with a lot of back-and-forth, or when a lot of argumentative threads are flying around, but how you managed to mess up such a simple claim immediately, for absolutely no reason, is beyond me. Observe: first, here's me (I highlighted the relevant words since you apparently missed them the first time):
I work for an economist
And now here's you:
stop claiming that you're an economist
And now here's you again (this is the ironic part):
Your reading comprehension is pathetic
(a) everything you've said so far goes against that claim
Show me a quote. Show me a quote where I deny that investors want the highest returns.

you can't prove that claim anyway as this forum is based on anonymity.
I can, actually, because I am not anonymous on this forum, you are. My name's been all over this forum for decades. But as I already said, I don't need to work for an economist to know any of this, because most of what you're saying rests on the premise that nobody but you understands economic self-interest, which is a self-evidently absurd position that you haven't supported through anything more than repeated insistence.

Because you kept giving la-la land remarks, like claiming that producers don't try to make movies look expensive, and viewers don't need the same.
Nope. I said a) not all viewers need it and b) movies don't have to be expensive to look good. I'd say "go read the post again" but that would imply you read it the first time, which I'm not entirely sure of.

Back again to your fantasy world.
The fantasy world is the Internet Argument World where you think vapid swipes like this are going to impress people, or add anything to what you're saying. Their only value is as a signal to the rest of us, about how you think arguments work.

You really need to work on your argumentative skills, too.
That's what I'm doing. Today's work is filling in the elisions of a bad argument, which can be a lot of work (more than arguing with someone who's good at it, actually), but which I find kind of interesting anyway, God help me.

Wait: There Will be Blood is a tent-pole? You must be joking.
Nope, study the actual context of the quote. It's an example of how a film can look good without spectacle. You might have (definitely have) forgotten this, but the "tentpole" thing is something you added later as a sort of goalpost move. Originally you just said "the movies," and rather than make a simple clarification, you decided to just assume everybody else was stupid and take no responsibility for the confusion.

This is a hallmark of bad communication (and therefore, bad argumentation), by the way: a lack of empathy. The idea that people only know what you say and not what's in your head when you say it.

If I'm going to pay $25 dollars per ticket plus overpriced snacks plus parking plus lunch or dinner, and for a family, with a total cost equivalent to buying a new hard drive, then I better get something that doesn't look like the first Mad Max movie
Yeah plus what if they overcook your steak at dinner? Then you definitely expect, like, at least a cool kraken or something. Because when I take in art, I expect it to cover for whatever unrelated experiences I had that day.

Also, it is extremely funny to me that you're trying to lecture people on the simplest economic principle in the world, yet still complain about "overpriced snacks" as if they were not explicitly subsidizing ticket sales.

Also, "$25 dollars" is redundant.

There's no leap of logic here. You're simply that naive.
None of this responds to what it's quoting in any way. Here it is again, give it another go:
Yep. But again, that's not how the argument started. It started with a specific quote, which I even reproduced for you: "want to get my money's worth." Do you not see the implication embedded in that statement, and how my distinction about not extracting money from producers is a direct response to it?
Related: I notice the bit where I asked you why you responded to a quote when you weren't talking about it was also omitted from your reply. Are you just leaving out the things you don't have answers to?

Good grief. Look up "practical effects", genius.
Why would I look up the thing I was literally just describing to you? You have a strange habit of telling people not only things they already know, but things they were literally just talking about.

If you want to see what a bonkers argument looks like, check out:
Once again, you seem to have forgotten the context of the thing you're replying to. Which was: the cost of CGI relative to production as a whole. That's another bit you left out, by the way. The one where you got weirdly confused about crumbs talking about CGI and budgets and somehow talked yourself into the idea that he was saying CGI appeared out of nowhere.



Get outta here with your plot holes!
The residents of the Green Zone (?) knew they had some of the most valuable and desired stuff in the whole planet, yet did not bother setting up a defense perimeter of some sort, to ward off intruders

Furiosa's mother knew there weren't any defenses against intruders, yet allowed her daughter to go off without any accompanying adults to the areas where there could be dangerous intruders.

Furiosa's mother could have knocked out the lady in the tent who prevents them from getting away safely, but she didn't.

OK, that's enough for now



The residents of the Green Zone (?) knew they had some of the most valuable and desired stuff in the whole planet, yet did not bother setting up a defense perimeter of some sort, to ward off intruders

Furiosa's mother knew there weren't any defenses against intruders, yet allowed her daughter to go off without any accompanying adults to the areas where there could be dangerous intruders.

Furiosa's mother could have knocked out the lady in the tent who prevents them from getting away safely, but she didn't.

OK, that's enough for now
Instead of fighting, they should all utilize the power of friendship and work together.