Menu
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome Poster

Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome

Hold out for Mad Max. This is his greatest adventure.
1985 | 107m | English

(159909 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

Mad Max becomes a pawn in a decadent oasis of a technological society, and when exiled, becomes the deliverer of a colony of children.
Release Date: Jun 29, 1985
Director: George Ogilvie, George Miller
Writer: Terry Hayes, George Miller
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction
Keywords dictator, dwarf, arena, sandstorm, villain, post-apocalyptic future, dystopia, camel, australia, ex-cop, desert oasis, sequel, tribe, wasteland, desert, psychotic, adventurer, post nuclear, angry, frantic, grim, action hero, good versus evil, exuberant, forceful, harsh, ominous, urgent
Production Companies Kennedy Miller Productions
Box Office Revenue: $36,230,219
Budget: $10,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Mel Gibson Max Rockatansky
Tina Turner Aunty Entity
Helen Buday Savannah Nix
Bruce Spence Jedediah the Pilot
Angelo Rossitto Master
Adam Cockburn Jedediah Jr.
Frank Thring The Collector
Paul Larsson Blaster
Angry Anderson Ironbar
Robert Grubb Pig Killer
George Spartels Blackfinger
Edwin Hodgeman Dr. Dealgood
Bob Hornery Waterseller
Andrew Oh Ton Ton Tattoo
Ollie Hall Aunty's Guard
Lee Rice Aunty's Guard
Tushka Bergen Guardian
Tom Jennings Slake
Rebekah Elmaloglou Gatherer
Mark Spain Mr. Skyfish
Mark Kounnas Gekko
Justine Clarke Anna Goanna
Rod Zuanic Scrooloose
Shane Tickner Eddie
Name Job
Alison Barrett Casting
Michael Wood Special Effects Supervisor
Norma Moriceau Costume Design
Antonia Barnard Production Manager
Su Armstrong Executive In Charge Of Production
Anni Browning Art Direction
Roger Savage Sound Supervisor
Bruce Lamshed Sound Designer
Steve E. Andrews First Assistant Director
Stuart Freeman First Assistant Director
Chris Webb Second Assistant Director
Ian Kenny Second Assistant Director
Murray Robertson Third Assistant Director
Ian Freeman Third Assistant Director
Daphne Paris Script Supervisor
George Mannix Location Manager
Irvine G. McLaughlin Key Grip
Pat Nash Grip
Julie Frankham Seamstress
Rosalina Da Silva Makeup Artist
Helen Evans Makeup Artist
Elizabeth Ann Fardon Key Makeup Artist
Cheryl Newton Wigmaker
Martin O'Neill Set Decoration
Joe Spinelli Boom Operator
Lloyd Carrick Sound Recordist
Marcus D'Arcy Post Production Supervisor
Louise Innes First Assistant Editor
Claire O'Brien First Assistant Editor
Tim Jordan Dialogue Editor
Karin Whittington Dialogue Editor
Annabelle Sheehan Dialogue Editor
Frank Lipson Sound Effects Editor
Craig Carter Sound Effects Editor
Tim Chau Sound Effects Editor
Jim Sheldon Still Photographer
Steve Courtley Special Effects Coordinator
Billy Malcolm Key Scenic Artist
Ray Pedler Scenic Artist
Marijke Rikki van Gyen Stunts
Zenda Graves Stunts
Rangi Nikora Stunts
Ian Lind Stunts
Richard Francis-Bruce Editor
Dean Semler Director of Photography
George Ogilvie Director
Terry Hayes Screenplay
Maurice Jarre Original Music Composer
Graham 'Grace' Walker Production Design
Mike Fenton Casting
George Miller Director, Screenplay
Spike Cherrie Stunts
Scott J. Ateah Stunts
Tina Turner Songs
Grant Page Stunt Coordinator
Name Title
Steve Amezdroz Associate Producer
Marcus D'Arcy Associate Producer
Doug Mitchell Co-Producer
Terry Hayes Co-Producer
George Miller Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 40 47 29
2024 5 68 113 37
2024 6 80 165 51
2024 7 79 133 48
2024 8 43 57 32
2024 9 33 44 24
2024 10 32 61 21
2024 11 28 41 21
2024 12 29 39 20
2025 1 31 47 20
2025 2 21 35 4
2025 3 10 26 2
2025 4 5 8 3
2025 5 5 10 3
2025 6 5 7 4
2025 7 5 6 4
2025 8 4 6 3
2025 9 4 7 3
2025 10 5 6 5

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 293 718
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 441 743
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 679 816
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 77 628
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 267 761
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 466 745
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 571 876
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 246 628
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 298 728
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 379 784
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 223 703
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 366 740
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 802 939
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 978 981
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 221 628

Return to Top

Reviews

Charles Dance
8.0

**The best of the Mad Max films** High production values and a compelling story line make this the best of the series. This one doesn't rely on basic car smashes for the duration and instead gives us a moving and more thoughtful adventure. No campy men dressed for the _Blue Oyster_ bar in this ... one, thank goodness. _The Road Warrior_ (1981) is widely regarded as the best but I have to disagree. That film had a very one note narrative that verged on the bland and an overload of homoerotic imagery. This is a beautiful looking and entertaining film that does not have the shoddy and amateur vibe of the first two. _Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome_ is the film that the first should have been. - Charles Dance

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
3.0

Max Rockatansky and the Goonie feral gang. Even allowing for my unabashed love of the first two films in the franchise, and sweeping away any sort of biased leanings I might of had for the character of Max, I just can't bring myself to rate at average this cartoonery waste of space that so nearly ... soils what had gone before it. Gone is the rugged nasty streak that brought feeling to the character Mad Max Rockatansky, gone is the impacting feeling of desolation in an apocalyptic world, and more crucially, gone is director George Miller's passion for the franchise. The dreadful score matches the cartoon heart of the film, it seems that the makers didn't really know what to do with the amount of cash given to make this third instalment. Sure the stunts are spot on (to be expected by now), and of course Miller manages to paint a barren desert landscape by purely lifting from what he has done before. Yet he clearly struggled for fresh ideas with the action since "The Road Warrior's" crowning glory of the Petrol Tanker pursuit is replicated here, only he uses a train instead!!. It's just a very poor show that may have seemed like an ambitious turn of events back in the mid 1980s, but when viewing the three films together now, Thunderdome just comes across as a director losing his edgy approach whilst sadly getting caught between the mix of comedy and fantasy action. And the truth is that neither of those genre slants would have worked singularly, in the context of this series, anyway. I give the film 3/10 purely for one real good Thunderdome fight sequence, while the stunt men here deserve some credit at the very least. But this is the third time I have tried to like this film, and as glutton for punishment as I undoubtedly am, I wont be trying again, ever.

May 16, 2024
Wuchak
6.0

_**Bizarre comic book post-nuclear adventure in the Outback with Mel Gibson and Tina Turner**_ In post-apocalyptic Australia, Mad Max (Mel Gibson) travels to Bartertown in the Outback run by Aunty Entity (Tina Turner) & her associate The Collector (Frank Thring). Max accepts a deal to take out Ma ... sterBlaster, who runs the town’s methane production underground, but ends up exiled to the deadly desert where he meets… (watch the movie and see). “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” (1985) is the third in George Miller’s franchise after “Mad Max” (1979) and “The Road Warrior” (1981). The fourth installment, “Fury Road,” didn’t surface until 2015 (meanwhile Miller has announced a fifth entry, “The Wasteland”). All of these films were rated R except “Beyond Thunderdome,” which turns off some devotees. I could care less since the amount of gore, violence, sex and cussing don’t determine the quality of a film, except maybe to teenagers. Like the previous two films, “Beyond Thunderdome” combines the austere life-or-death situation with a cartoonish vibe, so it’s difficult to take it too seriously, as can be done with the first two Planet of the Apes flicks (1968 & 1971). This campy air always turned me off to these movies, but if you can accept it they can be enjoyed on their level of semi-believable fantasy. You just have to be willing to enter into their weird world. Most fans object to the kids in the desert angle, but this section only lasts 25 freakin’ minutes before tying back into what took place in the first act. Besides, Savannah (Helen Buday) is cute and has nice legs. The departure from a paradisal oasis in exchange for Bartertown seems nonsensical, but it’s figurative of leaving the utopia of youth to the ugly real world and challenges thereof. The verbiage is odd, basic and guttural so don’t look for fascinating dialogues. Meanwhile the storytelling isn’t very compelling. Nevertheless, the movie’s iconic to the 80s and has its points of interest, like its all-around bizarreness, the desolate landscapes, the laconic hero and cutie Savannah, not to mention Turner and her songs (“We Don't Need Another Hero”). The film runs 1 hour, 47 minutes, and was shot in Australia. GRADE: B-

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
6.0

The wandering "Max" (Mel Gibson) finds himself in the brutal "Bartertown" ruled either by "Aunty Entity" (Tina Turner) or "Master" (Angelo Rossitto) depending on whether or not you needed electricity! The former, and her devious cohort "The Collector" (the always reliable Frank Thring) concoct a pla ... n by which they can use the ingenuity of "Max" to sort out this power struggle once and for all. That goes to plan, to a certain extent, but when that sense of decency still within our hero causes him to defy his new boss, he is consigned to the "gulag" whereupon he alights upon some youngsters who believe him a god capable of flying them to safety. When he tries to point out that they have the wrong man, dissent amongst these children leads him, and them, back for a final confrontation with the "Aunty". Tina Turner was very much at the top of her musical renaissance when this was made, and had she featured a little more then perhaps we could have better developed the sense of menace here. As it is, she doesn't and once we end up in feral kindergarten territory, the story just becomes predicable and really rather dull. "We Don't Need Another Hero" tops it all off well, but much of the rest of this is pretty unremarkable and may well sound the death knell for this now well spent anti-hero.

Jun 24, 2022
r96sk
7.0

Feels like a watered down version of <em>'Mad Max'</em>, albeit one that is still worth watching. <em>'Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome'</em> turns out to be a problematic title, given the most entertaining moments happen at the Thunderdome - so when events move away from said location, it isn't quite ... as interesting. I didn't really like the <em>'Peter Pan'</em> Lost Boys-esque parts, not that what's produced is bad it just isn't what I want to see from this franchise, personally. Mel Gibson is good value as the lead once more, while it is noteworthy to see one Tina Turner in a big supporting role. Yet again, though, I didn't get that much off the cast performances. I'm sounding like a broken record, I know, but it's very much the action that keeps these movies ticking over. The weakest of the series, for me. Here's hoping <em>'Mad Max: Fury Road'</em> is the best one, which - based on murmurs down the years - I am led to believe that it is; with Tom Hardy as the main man, I imagine that I will enjoy that 2015 flick - fingers crossed!

May 26, 2024