10 Best Aussie Road Rage Movies

The fury of Down Under.

€œAustralia lends itself to the road movie,€ reflects the author of a forthcoming new book on Aussie/Kiwi cult and genre movies. €œThe cities and the outback are so sparsely populated. The road-movie scenery is so much more iconic than any country I can think of.€ He might have added that the particular road movies the Antipodeans produced have often carried violent overtones €“ whether the brooding menace of murder committed in the desolate outback, or the post-apocalyptic pile-ups of the MAD MAX series. As Australia€™s Road Warrior returns to the screen (in May 2015), and Tom Hardy hits FURY ROAD, let€™s take a historical trip down those brooding byways that belie the laidback nature of our €˜ocker€™ cousins... Long-time contributor to THE DARK SIDE horror mag and co-producer of THE DEVIL€™S BUSINESS, Sean Hogan€™s modest-but-macabre 2012 indie feature, Jay Slater has set himself a mission down under. He€™s writing a book reviewing €œevery single horror, cult and softcore sex movie from the very first commercial Australian films to the present day€, principally because no one€™s taken such a completist approach before. But there€™s also a degree of personal obsession: €œWhen I was young I started watching Australian horror movies, aged ten, and they all had their own unique template: PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK, MAD MAX, they really drew me in, their individual sensibilities.€ So he€™s one of two writers joining us on our uneasy cinematic road trip to the outback €“ though he€™s unsure how much of a subgenre this really is. €œHow many road movies have the Australians made? Not that many. You€™ve got MAD MAX, you€™ve got STONE, MIDNITE SPARES, I€™m really hard pressed to think of any others.€ Our jovial disagreement is fuelled by the definition of a road movie itself. Is it a film focusing on car journeys, or is it an action movie crammed with car chases? From this viewer€™s point of view, the uniqueness of the Australian road movie is that it takes you somewhere remote, desolate and picturesque. Whether you follow the protagonist€™s physical journey all the way is a moot point, but it€™s taking you to territories you may never visit in your own life. And that applies psychologically too €“ for in what we€™ll glibly label the €˜road rage€™ movie, the rage is as integral as the road...
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Writer/editor/ghost-writer transfixed by crime, cinema and the serrated edges of popular culture. Those similarly afflicted are invited to make contact.