Encoded deep within us is something that responds to symbolism. When presented with certain images we experience a response so primal we may not even be aware of it, or, if we are, why. Folklorists and anthropologists have their theories, but I don’t think we’ll ever find the true source. But the symbols are there, and we can identify them.
Despite everything, they remain.
A lone man with pain in his heart, the open road, and a dog is his only friend. All he wants is his freedom to live or die, move or stay, on his own terms. Alone. That's his right. But eventually something infringes on his rights, forcing him to restore order to the world. What movie am I talking about? At least three I can think of off the top of my head.
Four if you remove the dog from the start (the dog always gets taken out eventually– poor dog).
Yesterday I watched Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior for the first time. Like every dude of my vintage, I’ve seen Mad Max: Fury Road several times, and in many ways it’s a remake of The Road Warrior, a fact I couldn’t miss. For sheer spectacle, Fury Road is the superior film. But The Road Warrior is more stripped down, both in story and action. There’s none of the feminist agenda in the story that may add something good, though is often too heavy-handed.
The Road Warrior brings justice, not equality.
When we meet Max, he’s going somewhere. Where? Doesn’t matter. It’s just him and his dog, and all they want is to be left alone. That’s his right. But other people force themselves into his life, and when he witnesses acts of brutality against a group of innocents he’s forced to get involved. Max is the only man for the job and he knows it. After his work is done, like John Wayne in The Searchers, he returns to the wilderness. He has no place in society.
The way the story is told is iffy. But the symbols still speak.