![]() ![]() All Joe needs is heirs, but the ruination of the world makes that difficult. The fat man takes over a nearby oil refinery and becomes known as the People-Eater, ruler of Gas Town. Kalashnikov becomes the Bullet Farmer, remaking a lead mine into an arms plant for Immortan Joe's army. Joe becomes the absolute ruler of the stone towers and their aquifer, which becomes known as The Citadel. After everyone has given up and believes him dead, Joe emerges victorious over the place's defenders, thus gaining his reputation as immortal. Aided by his right-hand man, Major Kalashnikov, and an unnamed "fat man," Joe invades a well-guarded tower of rock which sits over a huge natural aquifer. As told in the Mad Max: Fury Road prequel comic by George Miller, Nico Lathouris, and Mark Sexton, Immortan Joe was once a military veteran named Colonel Joe Moore, who became the leader of a gang of raiders after the collapse of civilization. The settlers got all their gasoline out on their bus! After a wreck kills both Wez and Humungus, it turns out that the tanker was full of sand. ![]() Left unguarded, the other settlers are free to escape to the North, unpursued. When the tanker is attached, Max drives it out himself, with Humungus and the Marauders in pursuit. With the help of the Gyro Captain, Max returns with a semi truck. When Humungus offers to let the peaceful settlers go if they give him all of their fuel, Max makes them a better deal: He'll procure a truck that can haul their oil tanker if they'll refuel his car and let him go on his way. However, Max befriends the unsocialized Feral Kid (Emil Minty) and soon wins over more of the local population. Max soon gains entry to the compound, but the leader Papagallo (Mike Preston) wants nothing to do with him. Production designer Collin Gibson fought this idea for a while, but he realized that they could've come from a bus full of brass instruments that was ran over.The Gyro Captain leads Max to the aforementioned oil refinery compound, which is under siege by the Marauders, the much larger gang that Wez belongs to, which is led by the masked Humungus (Kjell Nilsson). It was George Miller's idea to add trumpets and tubas to the vehicle.The flamethrower on the guitar is real and functional, controlled from a whammy bar. were installed, even though the actual sound of that guitar is not used in the movie and not all speakers were wired to function as well. He ordered the design team to make the guitar functional, so real guitar pickups, strings etc. The design of the guitar is built around a bedpan, which Miller loved, but he was surprised the guitar did not actually work. The Doof Warrior's stage is made of Holden FJ front end. A wall of functional speakers transmits the sound from The Doof Warrior's guitar, which - along with the Doof Warrior himself - is also suspended on bungee cords. īuilding air ducts were used as sound tunnels, which amplify the sound of four massive drums. Like the 5-, 7- and 10-ton classes, some of the vehicles have a Rotzler winch. It is a 15 ton class vehicle modified with a wider track of 2,900 mm, that serves as carrier and launcher systems of the Roland and Patriot weapon systems.The four-axle truck is powered by a Deutz 8-cylinder Diesel engine with 360 hp, turbocharger and intercooler. The vehicle is based on a MAN LKW 15 t mil gl KAT I A1 (8x8). Through a combination of varying tempo and flame sequences, the Doof Wagon and its guitarist are able to not only motivate the War Boys for battle, but relay orders to the armada. The Doof Warrior swings from a bungee cord mounted to the front as he shreds metal while flames are thrown from a double-necked electric guitar/bass. It has a supercharged V8 engine with a mobile stage, a wall of speakers and sub-woofers, and air conditioning ducts out of a building meant to drive home the beat of the accompanying Taiko drummers. Possibly the most feverishly insane contraption of them all, Warner Brothers dubbed it a “sonic carmageddon.” This speaker-stacked, guitar-thrashed monstrosity was meant to rally the troops in the way drummers marched with soldiers in ancient battles. Refined Doof Wagon design by Peter Pound circa 2010 Description ![]()
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