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Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road
Featured Concept Art And Production Design Sketches Created For Mad Max: Fury Road

Featured concept art and production design sketches created for Mad Max: Fury Road

1.) A vision of the opening scenes where Max Rockatansky is ambushed and taken prisoner by a gang of War Boys as he is taken to The Citadel.

2.) A glimpse of the battle-ready War Rig rolling out of the Citadel and driven by Imperator Furiosa as she secretly smuggles the Five Wives hidden in the tanker's cargo hold.

3.) An early rendering of Coma the Doof Warrior whose job is to rouse Immortan Joe's army of War Boys by shredding industrial-strength rock music blasting from a massive wall of speakers attached aboard the Doof Wagon.

4.) A wide-angle view of Immortan Joe's war parties chasing Furiosa into the massive sandstorm containing deadly tornadoes and lightning.

5.) A drawing depicting the introduction of the Five Wives, namely: the Splendid Angharad, Capable, The Dag, Toast the Knowing, and Cheedo the Fragile. Note a major difference: in the initial production sketches, the Wives are seen without clothes while bathing after the sandstorm and even Furiosa is among them while just being topless. In the final cut of the film, we see that the Wives are covered in diaphanous white fabric even while hosing themselves down with water and removing their chastity belts and Furiosa is instead seen making repairs to the War Rig rather than joining the Wives during their cleansing session.

6.) A look at the passengers of the War Rig reacting to the violent onslaught brought upon them by Immortan Joe and his allies.

7.) An early design of Immortan Joe flanked by his loyal band of War Boys bathed in moonlight. The final look of Immortan Joe sees the antagonist sporting a full head of long white hair with his breathing apparatus simplified into that of a lower section of an animal skull covering his mouth. The War Boys seen in the film have also seen major changes from the original design concept; doing away with tribal tattoos, studded leather ensembles, and straggly strands of hair in favor of a look defined by distressed utilitarian pants and boots and shirtless upper bodies with their skin slathered in white paint/clay and sporting black grease around their eyes and foreheads, along with variations of grotesque body modifications.


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On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin
On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin
On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin
On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin
On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin
On June 17, 2015, An Official Comic Prequel That Tells The Story Of Imperator Furiosa And The Five Wivesin

On June 17, 2015, an official comic prequel that tells the story of Imperator Furiosa and The Five Wives in the Citadel before the events of Fury Road will be released. The preview above reveals that prior to leading the supply run, Furiosa’s primary role as an Imperator seemed to be as the chief guard to the Wives held captive inside the Dome and had interactions with them before the great escape.

This is the second entry to the Mad Max: Fury Road prequel comic miniseries released by Vertigo following the first issue revolving around the characters of Nux and Immortan Joe. This issue is collaboratively written by George Miller, Nico Lathouris, and Mark Sexton with the cover art done by Tommy Lee Edwards and interior art done by Tristan Jones.


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