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Looks like Simon Sharwood left some debris in place from his previous article.
BONKERS The insane vehicles of Mad Max Fury Road cruised past Vulture South When the Vulture South team popped out for lunch today, members of the local constabulary directed us away from our usual haunts. The reason? A promo for the new flick Mad Max: Fury Road had rolled into the nearby Sydney Opera House. Roads were blocked …
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Personally I thought it was all quite miraculous!...
While undeniably quite astonishingly abysmal, considering they were taken in the dark ("hoped the low light wouldn't make pics too horrid...") every shot appears to have been taken in full sunlight! Really quite incredible. Must have been one of them newfangled Microkia/Noksoft miracle phones wot Orwellski was raving so frothily about a while ago >;)
Not sure how "Vulture South's office at top right in the red circle." managed to find its way to the extreme top left corner of that snap though.
Not full sunlight by a long stretch. The Opera House forecourt has water on two sides and glare-making whiteish stone paving. Sydney today had low cloud and a stiff breeze. I tweaked the phone - a Galaxy S5 - as hard as I could, but the results weren't stellar. In my experience the S5's software usually does better. Trust me: the light was weird out there today.
This is a weird post-apocalyptic Australia which seems to have had several bulk freighters-worth of American big-block V8 cars imported, and all the myriads of Toyota landcruisers and Hilux pickups mysteriously disposed of. It also uses liquid hydrocarbons exclusively, which seeing as Australia doesn't have oil reserves worth speaking of is pretty bloody weird as well.
Much more realistic would be a horde of Toyota pickups, with producer gas units strapped onto the back of them burning wood to make a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide gas. This burns remarkably well in internal combustion engines, and lets you use them without relying on crude oil.
Granted, a sort of Max meets Steampunk look would be rather weird and you wouldn't expect the flashier vehicles to use this system, only the crummier workhorses of the fleet, but it would at least look a bit more realistic.
Google "Amadeus Basin oilfield." I stumbled upon it last year when driving from the West MacDonnell Ranges to Kings Canyon. There's a working oilfield out there. Not huge. But big enough that it's being exploited. And I can recommend a trip to the West Macs. Gorgeous country.
Is there some editorial direction or style-guide that states that one must use the term 'luvvies'?
Being a decidedly British (not to mention faintly disparaging) term it seems somewhat forced coming from an Australian writer, working out of an Australian office, and used in reference to Australians at an Australian event promoting an Australian film.
Or perhaps not; it's been a long day and I was late taking my medication this afternoon.
@Simon
Perhaps the fact that it sounds forced to me is that I only ever see it used in The Register - mostly by Mr. Orlowski - though it has been almost a decade since I worked anywhere close to media circles so that may be the greater part of it : )
Back to the story, I wish I knew this was happening - I work just up the road and wouldn't have minded a bit of a sticky-beak. Or, more honestly, I would have enjoyed muttering to myself that they've strayed too far from the originals while feeling very self-righteous about it.
YEAH! Australian words for Australian people!
a man said "deja vu" on neighbours the other day. NEIGHBOURS! this simply cannot go on with their hoity toity words
Let's grab a few of these cars and kick-start the revolution brother!
(Well you do, I'm not Australian but I'll watch and supervise)
I understand that when water is drained away through a plughole, the 'whirpool' goes in the opposite directions in the Northern and Southern hemispheres, due to the coriolis effect.
Does that also affect how people perceive left and right? Because to my Northern hemisphere eyes, in the first picture the ringed office is in the top left, not the top right as the caption currently says!
"I understand that when water is drained away through a plughole, the 'whirpool' goes in the opposite directions in the Northern and Southern hemispheres, due to the coriolis effect."
Sadly not - the coriolis effect is to weak to affect a bath or sink.
You can see the coriolis effect if you create a special (several meters in diameter) bath, ruthlessly protect it from drafts and any heat sources (to prevent covection currents) and leave it standing for several weeks to let any eddy currents die down. It isn't an exciting or easy experiment to perform.
Much better to use an ocean. My oceanography prof told us the water stack up in central America is about 1 foot. That's a huge amount of water.
Seems though that just about every experience I've had with water draining in the northern hemisphere is that it causes a clockwise rotation. Unless heavily influenced . . . but I lost all the data, the dog ate it, and my mom shredded some.
One of the odder features of the Mad Max universe is that despite the world being out of petrol, water and manners, the inhabitants still bother to put resources into customising vehicles for no good reason.
Are ... are you not familiar with people?
This would be near the top of my list for "most plausible features of the Mad Max films".