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Shiny and Chrome
“It Was Horrible”: Inside Charlize Theron and Tom Hardys Mad Max Feud
In an excerpt from Kyle Buchanans Blood, Sweat & Chrome: The Wild and True
Story of Mad Max: Fury Road, cast and crew recall the feud that nearly derailed
the Oscar-winning film.
By [24]Kyle Buchanan
February 22, 2022
Image may contain Human Person Machine Tom Hardy Weapon and Weaponry
© Warner Bros/Everett Collection.
Save this story
Save this story
Mad Max: Fury Road was a critical and commercial triumph, grossing nearly $375
million worldwide and earning 10 Oscar nominations (with six wins). But its
path to the big screen was torturous and winding, as Kyle Buchanan shows in his
oral history Blood, Sweat and Chrome: The Wild and True Story of Mad Max: Fury
Road, out Tuesday. In the exclusive excerpt below, the films cast and crew
recall one of Fury Roads biggest hurdles: the bad blood between stars Charlize
Theron and Tom Hardy.
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley (“The Splendid Angharad”): It was very interesting to
sit in a truck for four months with Tom and Charlize, who have completely
different approaches to their craft.
Kelly Marcel (screenwriter and friend of Tom Hardy): Tom is very physical and
all over the place and would try very different things. Charlize is cerebral
and very consistent in the way that she approaches a character. Theyre both
powerhouses, but in their very different ways of working. Which, weirdly, is
why the film works: Its all pouring out on the screen.
George Miller (writer/director, Fury Road): The story is all about
self-preservation: If its an advantage to you to kill another character, then
you should do it and you dont think twice about it. I think that crept into
the actors.
P. J. Voeten (first assistant director, Fury Road): It seemed to implode in
preproduction. We werent even shooting and there seemed to be this animosity.
Petrina Hull (production and development executive, Kennedy Miller Mitchell
Films): And as we got into the shoot, those things became difficult.
P. J. Voeten: At some stage, the Wives didnt like Tom, and one day, they
didnt even disguise it: They were just yelling at each other in front of us.
Nicholas Hoult (“Nux”): It was a tense atmosphere at times. It was kind of like
youre on your summer holidays and the adults in the front of the car are
arguing.
Charlize Theron (“Furiosa”): Hes right, it was like two parents in the front
of the car. We were either fighting or we were icing each other—I dont know
which one is worse—and they had to deal with it in the back. It was horrible!
We should not have done that; we should have been better. I can own up to that.
Ricky Schamburg (first assistant camera, Fury Road): Tom is very provocative.
Charlize isnt. And it was a clash.
Image may contain Tom Hardy Human Person Military Military Uniform Army Armored
and Soldier
© Warner Bros/Everett Collection.
Richard Norton: (“The Prime Imperator”): Tom would want justification for every
bit of choreography, not just in the actual action but in the pre-setup of the
action and everything else. Charlize, her basic want is simple: I just want to
fucking kill him. Lets shoot it.
P. J. Voeten: The day that we were rehearsing the fight scene when they first
meet, you could see the tension in the air. It was unbelievable.
J. Houston Yang (editor, Open Road Entertainment): We get dailies sometimes for
specific sequences if we need to cut a shot longer, and some of that was the
chain-wrench fight by the tanker. And boy fucking howdy, was it clear that
those two people hated each other. They didnt want to touch each other, they
didnt want to look at each other, they wouldnt face each other if the camera
wasnt actively rolling.
Charlize Theron: I dont want to make excuses for bad behavior, but it was a
tough shoot. Now, I have a very clear perspective on what went down. I dont
think I had that clarity when we were making the movie. I was in survival mode;
I was really scared shitless.
George Miller: Many years ago, I had the privilege of working with Jack
Nicholson on Witches of Eastwick, where he was playing the devil. And he said,
“You know, we think as actors that we dont bring it home at night. We think we
just leave it in the trailer when we walk off set. But the truth is, if youre
doing your job properly, you do bring it home.” And that was one of the
dynamics that was happening in the film.
Charlize Theron: Because of my own fear, we were putting up walls to protect
ourselves instead of saying to each other, “Fuck, this is scary for you and
its scary for me, too. Lets be nice to each other.” We were functioning, in a
weird way, like our characters: Everything was about survival.
Mark Goellnicht (camera operator, Fury Road): Between Tom and Charlize, it was
literally the most contrast Ive ever seen between two actors.
Samantha McGrady (key second assistant director, Fury Road): Charlize is the
easiest person to deal with in terms of, Okay, were ready. Sometimes I would
just call her and say, “Were going to be ready in an hour,” and I knew she
would always get in the car, get her makeup on, and get on set.
Matt Taylor (stunt driver, Fury Road): And when youve got someone like Tom
whos a larrikin and is late and very Method in his performances, just in sheer
personality, there was always going to be a clash.
Tom Clapham (production runner, Fury Road): Tom was more in his trailer a lot
of the time and would come out for the takes—and sometimes not on time, either.
Youre like, Come on, its midnight and we want to go home.
Eventually, veteran producer Denise Di Novi was dispatched to Namibia to
mediate the conflict between the films two stars.
Charlize Theron: I dont want to rehash things, but it came out of a really bad
moment where things kind of came to blows between me and Tom.
Mark Goellnicht: I remember vividly the day. The call on set was eight oclock.
Charlize got there right at eight oclock, sat in the War Rig, knowing that
Toms never going to be there at eight even though they made a special request
for him to be there on time. He was notorious for never being on time in the
morning. If the call time was in the morning, forget it—he didnt show up.
Ricky Schamburg: Whether that was some kind of power play or not, I dont know,
but it felt deliberately provocative. If you ask me, he kind of knew that it
was really pissing Charlize off, because shes professional and she turns up
really early.
Mark Goellnicht: Gets to nine oclock, still no Tom. “Charlize, do you want to
get out of the War Rig and walk around, or do you want to . . .” “No, Im going
to stay here.” She was really going to make a point. She didnt go to the
bathroom, didnt do anything. She just sat in the War Rig.
Natascha Hopkins (stunt double, Fury Road): She was a new mom, and she just
wanted to get to set, work, and take care of her kid.
Mark Goellnicht: Eleven oclock. Shes now in the War Rig, sitting there with
her makeup on and a full costume for three hours. Tom turns up, and he walks
casually across the desert. She jumps out of the War Rig, and she starts
swearing her head off at him, saying, “Fine the fucking cunt a hundred thousand
dollars for every minute that hes held up this crew,” and “How disrespectful
you are!” She was right. Full rant. She screams it out. Its so loud, its so
windy—he mightve heard some of it, but he charged up to her up and went, “What
did you say to me?”
He was quite aggressive. She really felt threatened, and that was the turning
point, because then she said, “I want someone as protection.” She then had a
producer that was assigned to be with her all the time.
Image may contain Human Person Screen Electronics Monitor Display and Abbey Lee
Kershaw
© Warner Bros/Everett Collection.
Charlize Theron: It got to a place where it was kind of out of hand, and there
was a sense that maybe sending a woman producer down could maybe equalize some
of it, because I didnt feel safe.
Kelly Marcel: Theres something that you cant put your finger on unless you
are inside it and you know what went on there. It was a really intense,
intense, intense period in an intense, intense place. Family was made there,
and family loves and hates each other.
Charlize Theron: I kind of put my foot down. George then said, “Okay, well, if
Denise comes . . .” He was open to it and that kind of made me breathe a little
bit, because it felt like I would have another woman understanding what I was
up against.
P. J. Voeten: She was sent out to help try and smooth that relationship out. As
nice a lady as she was, nobody could really turn it around because it was that
entrenched. Whatever it was that they were going through wasnt going to get
fixed easily.
Charlize Theron: She was parked in the production office, and she was checking
in with me and we would talk. But when I was on set, I still felt pretty naked
and alone.
Kelly Marcel: Doug [Mitchell, producer of Fury Road] wouldnt let Denise
actually be on the set. Hes a bulldog, hes going to protect George no matter
what, at all costs. And you can send your producer, you can do whatever you
want, but if youve got Doug standing there, theres absolutely no point unless
he wants you there. He was never going to allow anybody to interrupt this
world, no matter how fraught the world was.
Charlize Theron: Looking back on where we are in the world now, given what
happened between me and Tom, it would have been smart for us to bring a female
producer in. You understand the needs of a director who wants to protect his
set, but when push comes to shove and things get out of hand, you have to be
able to think about that in a bigger sense. Thats where we could have done
better, if George trusted that nobody was going to come and fuck with his
vision but was just going to come and help mediate situations. I think he
didnt want any interference, and there were several weeks on that movie where
I wouldnt know what was going to come my way, and thats not necessarily a
nice thing to feel when youre on your job. It was a little bit like walking on
thin ice.
Image may contain Advertisement Poster Brochure Paper and Flyer
Buy Blood, Sweat & Chrome on [27]Amazon or [28]Bookshop.
George Miller: There are things that I feel disappointment with about the
process. Looking back, if I had to do it again, I would probably be more
mindful.
Tom Hardy (“Max”): In hindsight, I was in over my head in many ways. The
pressure on both of us was overwhelming at times. What she needed was a better,
perhaps more experienced partner in me. Thats something that cant be faked.
Id like to think that now that Im older and uglier, I could rise to that
occasion.
Mark Goellnicht: That scene where you see Tom with Charlize on the bike and all
the Vuvalini and the Wives behind, intermingled—that scene was probably the
biggest change in seeing Tom really soften to Charlize in real life. We were
all unprepared for how he performed that, and then I walked off and Charlize
was walking back, and I said, “Geez, Charlize, that was amazing. Did a light
switch go off? He was great.” She was quite taken aback by it, too. But it was
great because thats when you can see that Max and Furiosa really are a team.
The day we shot that, I got such goose bumps. You really felt this change in
their mood. Just the way that they were talking to each other when they were
off camera, I went, What the fuck? Who gave them molly? They were really civil
and nice. He was a different person by the end—a lot easier to deal with, a lot
more cooperative, more compassionate. Hes such a Method actor that I think he
took the arc in the literal sense.
Petrina Hull: Overall, the feeling of their relationship did mirror the arc of
the characters, and that they had that prickly thing of two people trying to
understand each other and clashing and then somehow learning a mutual sort of
respect, ultimately. Thats what Max and Furiosa come to in the end: Its a
version of love where you can only really get to regard. Its not touchy-feely.
Iain Smith (executive producer, Fury Road): I think that the tension between
them actually underscored the love that existed between the two of them within
the movie, and that sometimes happens. The worst thing is indifference, and
believe you me, there was no indifference between the two of them.
Kelly Marcel: I dont know anyone that didnt lose their temper on that set,
including myself. It was fraught and frantic, and you had this overbearing
pressure the whole time that you were going to get shut down. You had a studio
out in L.A. who did not understand what was being made, and the people who were
there on the ground couldnt really tell them what was being made, either.
Chris OHara (on-set second assistant director, Fury Road): People have written
things about Tom and Charlizes relationship. It was just two people trying to
do the best job they could.
Adapted from [29]Blood, Sweat & Chrome: The Wild and True Story of Mad Max:
Fury Road, by Kyle Buchanan. Copyright © Kyle Buchanan 2022. Reprinted with
permission from William Morrow, a division of HarperCollins Publishers.
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