![]() ![]() Immersive Primal Wasteland Explore the gritty, dynamic world while braving the treacherous landscapes, hostile weather patterns and deadly gangs of marauders.Gamers must make difficult decisions as they work towards the goal of escaping The Wasteland Be Mad Max Become the iconic post-apocalyptic warrior, crafting and upgrading Max’s equipment and weapons to survive by combining melee combat, gunplay and tactical techniques. ![]() Pack your survival skills and journey in the "Plains of Silence" while next gen animation takes you into the world of Mad Max. ![]() Determine the enemies’ end by inflicting brutal destruction from which the Mad Max films have been known for. Set in a barren dessert wasteland, which is also the setting of the film, play as Max in a dangerous adventure in search of the Interceptor (Max’s treasured vehicle) stolen by a deadly gang of marauders. Teeth were ground out of anticipation in the movies, so now it’s time to be ‘in’ the action and kick some ass Max’s style! This post-apocalyptic third-person open-world combat video game developed by Avalanche Studious focuses on vehicular on road combat and emphasizes on a wide range of customization features for powerful warfare vehicles. Bob then built a sideshow out of his iconic machine, touring shopping centres and agricultural shows, charging punters for the pleasure of being in the presence of a rapidly growing cultural phenomenon.Mel Gibson’s famous Mad Max film series will be taking the chase down to consoles in Mad Max “Soul of Man”. The restoration included replacing the lost Concorde front but retaining the twin tanks fitted during Mad Max 2, making the car an amalgam of the most awesome aspects showcased in each film. It took super-fan Bob Fursenko to unravel the story, learn of the Interceptor’s whereabouts, buy it and give it a full resto at Franklin Side Crash in SA, as covered in the October-November 1985 issue of Street Machine. After a bit of coaxing, the 351 was brought to life, the usually quiet meadows and valleys of the Adelaide Hills resonating to the sound of a tired but alive Ford V8 and the area enveloped by smoke from the aged, concrete-compound tyres spinning furiously.Īlthough the car was known to some, the wider community speculated that it had been destroyed during the filming of Mad Max 2. Legend has it that one Christmas the owner got a few brews under his belt and decided to give the Interceptor some stick. It mattered not that the GT was fully loaded with 351ci V8, Top Loader, nine-inch, four-wheel disc brakes and traction bars from new, as it would be 30 years before these cars achieved any kind of tangible collector value.Įagle-eyed passers-by did occasionally notice the car eight dummy sidepipes sticking out from under the cover gave the game away. The coupe’s transformation from second-hand car to Road Warrior started in 1977, when the genuine JG66 XB Falcon GT was sent to Ray Beckerley at Graf-X International with a brief from the movie’s art director, Jon Dowding. From an Aussie perspective, the Interceptor surely stands as tall, having featured in both Kennedy-Miller Mad Max movies. The four-speed 390ci Dark Highland Green 1968 Mustang GT was standard aside from some mild tweaks, and was in original, shabby condition, meaning the record-setting sale price was entirely driven by its association with Bullitt. However, it’s easy to speculate that the recent AU$4.93 million sale of the Ford Mustang used in Steve McQueen’s car-chase classic Bullitt may have had some influence on Dezer’s decision to sell. The museum is in the process of shifting three hours north to Orlando, and for whatever reason, the Interceptor has to go. The collection was shipped across the Atlantic to Florida, where Dezer opened the Miami Auto Museum in 2012, with the Aussie coupe a popular attraction alongside other automotive pop culture icons such as an original Batmobile, a Back To The Future DeLorean DMC-12 and a Ferrari from Miami Vice made entirely of cocaine (unconfirmed). The Interceptor last changed hands in 2011 – albeit not publicly – when the complete inventory of the UK-based Cars Of The Stars museum was bought by real estate developer Michael Dezer. MORE Click here to help bring the Pursuit Special back to Australia! ![]()
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