Mad Max sequel to change filming location as Broken Hill loses apocalyptic feel
The long-delayed Mad Max sequel Fury Road will change its filming location for somewhere more apocalyptic. It was planning to film in and around the town of Broken Hill in New South Wales, but unseasonal heavy rains have brought the area to life in a way that doesn’t work for the production.
Broken Hill City Council said: “The red dirt is all but covered in a carpet of green, yellow and mauve. While this turn in environmental events has been welcomed by farmers, fishers and a parched local community that has waited ten years for the drought to break, the timing could not be worse for the filming of Fury Road.”
While this turn in environmental events has been welcomed by farmers, fishers and a parched local community that has waited ten years for the drought to break, the timing could not be worse for the filming of Fury Road.
Broken Hill City Council
The film production has a two-year lease at the Broken Hill Film Studios and was to become the facility’s first major project. According to the city council the lease will continue but the studios will be sub-leased to other productions too. The city is putting a brave face on the news, saying pre-production on the film contributed to around AUD2 million being fed into the local economy in 2010.
Industry reports suggest Namibia may be being considered as a replacement filming location, but nothing has yet been confirmed.
Related Posts
- Australian studio considers future as Mad Max films on location in Namibia
- Mad Max sequel boosts studio facility in New South Wales mining town
- Brad Pitt films England as Germany for World War 2 tank movie Fury
- Mad Max Fury Road films desert apocalypse on location in Namibia
- On location with Michael Brook, Manager of Screen Auckland
- Mad Max sequel switches filming locations from New South Wales to Namibia
- Texas Film Commission officially certifies Corpus Christi as a film friendly location
- Belgium’s best kept secret? TLG talks to Glenn Roggeman, CEO of AED Studios
Related posts:
Comments
Not Logged in
You must be logged in to post a comment
There are 5 comments