Mad Max: Fury Road “Black And Chrome” Edition awaits you in Valhalla on December 6
All hail Warner Bros., your redeemer! It salutes you half-life War Boys, who will ride eternal, shiny and chrome, to Valhalla! And by Valhalla, we mean Amazon.com, or wherever it is you plunder digital media. ComingSoon is reporting that a special edition of Mad Max: Fury Road and a new Mad Max High Octane Collection box set will be available December 6, just in time to set your holiday decorations ablaze amid the fuming stench of gasoline and gunpowder.
The box set will be available on both Blu-ray and DVD, and will include all four films, including that one that started off pretty good with Master Blaster, but then got just plain silly when Max fell in with that tribe of misfit kids. The collection offers over five hours of bonus content, chief among them the Mad Max: Fury Road “Black And Chrome” Edition. Also available to purchase on its own, The “Black And Chrome” Edition presents Fury Road in dramatic black and white, which allows you to see the movie as it was always meant to be enjoyed–without children, who will be sent fleeing from the room at the sight of an old-timey black-and-white motion picture.
The Mad Max High Octane Collection will also offer these other treasures from the wastelands:
- NEW! *George Miller Introduction to the Mad Max Fury Road: Black And Chrome Edition–Special introductory piece by George Miller describing his vision.
- NEW! Road War—In 1982, the world was blindsided by George Miller’s masterpiece of apocalyptic destruction: The Road Warrior. For the first time ever George Miller, Terry Hayes and star Mel Gibson tell the story of the car-crushing production that redefined action cinema forever.
- Madness Of Max—The previously released Mad Max (1979) documentary is a feature-length documentary on the making of arguably the most influential movie of the past thirty years. With over forty cast-and-crew interviews, hundreds of behind-the-scenes photographs and never-before-seen film footage of the shoot, this is, without a doubt, the last word on Mad Max (1979). Interviews include: George Miller, Byron Kennedy, Mel Gibson, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Steve Bisley, Roger Ward, Joanne Samuel, David Eggby, Jon Dowding and many more. From the Producers to the Bike Designers to the Traffic Stoppers, this is the story of how Mad Max was made.