Mad Max Fury Road is full of names: weird, inventive, evocative names. But it also uses them brilliantly. Thereâs so much information packed into what names are spoken, when and how.
Names and titles are a classic way of revealing hierarchy. Joe is named repeatedly, and each time it shows his relationship with the person naming him. Nuxâs âImmortan! Immortan Joe!â is all about his godlike status. The Organic Mechanicâs âJoeâ is deliberately casual, not actively disrespectful but certainly not worshipful.Â
Then thereâs the ongoing tension in what Joe calls Angharad: âSplendidâ most of the time, reverting to her proper name at moments of stress, when he really needs her to listen. In the canyon scene, he goes from âSplendid, thatâs my child, my propertyâ when heâs trying to rebuke her to âAngharad! Get out!â when he realises sheâs at risk of hitting the rock. Â Itâs implied that she rejects âSplendidâ â certainly the other wives only ever call her Angharad. (More generally, the wives use each otherâs names simply, to get each otherâs attention: I donât get any sense of hierarchy from it.)
Other names are hardly ever spoken. Furiosa doesnât call the wives anything. Charlize Theron has said this was because she is trying not to get emotionally attached.
On screen, Furiosa explicitly uses names to form connections. When she asks for Maxâs name, itâs a deliberate attempt to achieve emotional engagement, because she needs him on side. And itâs rare for her: not only does she not name the wives, she doesnât use the war rig crewâs names, either. In a movie that keeps its dialogue sparse, every word counts - and every omitted word counts, too.
Within the Citadel hierarchy, war boys donât get named by anyone but each other. âIâve got a war boy, running on empty,â says the Organic Mechanic. An imperator later uses exactly the same phrasing to introduce Nux to Joe: âIâve got a war boy, says he was on the war rigâ. It suggests that, from the top of the Citadel hierarchy, war boys are seen as interchangeable. One describes Nux as if he were a machine; the other - âsays he was on the war rigâ - implies his lower status, framing his evidence as hearsay. Itâs clearly a huge honour for Joe to ask Nux his name. Itâs also the only time we see a Citadel full-life acknowledge a war boyâs name. Â
War boys in this film are both abusers and victims - terribly fragile, desperate for attention from the powerful class that exploits and uses them, not questioning its values. They go unnamed by their superiors, but they name each other as often as possible: âMorsov!â âSlit, whatâs happening?â Though Nux shouts âCrew, out of the way!â at Ace - maybe they donât know names beyond their own crews, or maybe he just doesnât recognise Ace from behind.
They use names to encourage each other. Just look at the way they all shout Morsovâs name before witnessing him. âWitness meâ is a plea for affirmation: see what Iâm doing, make it mean something. Witnessing is an act of performative masculinity - I liked @bookishandiâs post on witnessing Nuxâs death. But itâs also framed as an act of mutual support (which I think is why itâs taken off so much in fandom).  Morsovâs death - which is really the viewerâs introduction to âwitnessingâ as a concept - is part of a scene that shows us the war rig crew working smoothly together.
The exception is Slit, who tries to undermine his colleagues instead, shouting âMediocre, Morsov!â rather than âwitnessâ, or telling Nux that Joe wasnât looking at him, âHe was scanning the horizonâ. And of course Slit is the most insecure of the lot, begging for any scrap of attention: âI got the blood bagâs boot! Take me, I got his boot!â Â
Imperators, and others from the Citadelâs powerful classes, are clearly known by their names. âFuriosa, she took a lot of stuff from Immortan Joeâ, for instance. Thereâs no sense that war boys give this recognition to anyone not at the top of that hierarchy. The war boy who tells Nux about Furiosa talks about the wives as things - âstuffâ, âprize breedersâ. Nuxâs own reaction to the wives - âso shiny, so chromeâ - sees them as objects rather than people. And of course he goes on calling Max âblood bagâ, even when he thinks theyâre on the same side. Itâs not a conscoius insult; it clearly doesnât occur to him that Max might mind - any more than Nux minded the way the Organic Mechanic or the imperator talked about him.
Then thereâs the scene when Furiosa greets the Vuvalini. Hereâs what she says:
âI am one of the Vuvalini, the Many Mothers. My initiate mother was K.T. Concannon. I am the daughter of Mary Jobassa. My clan was Swaddle Dog.âÂ
This is a speech proving her identity, but how she does it is so revealing. She doesnât use her own name at all. Instead, itâs all about a web of relationships, of connections, the ways in which she belongs. (Sheâs also proving that she belongs by demonstrating knowledge of Vuvalini society.) She lists her initiate mother before her birth mother â her place in the community before her lineage. Her tenses are interesting, too. Her clan was Swaddle Dog â sheâs left, the clan may no longer exist, sheâs talking about the past. But when she talks about being Vuvalini, itâs âI amâ. Â Even though sheâs asking for recognition, it has none of the war boysâ neediness â sheâs naming what she is, how she chooses to see herself. Sheâs not seeking approval or affirmation.Â
And though the Vuvalini team work is smooth, they do it without shouting names â to the point where most of the Vuvalini characters donât have names at all (which is very unhelpful for fandom, George). Citadel naming is intensely hierarchical, about who does, and doesnât, get respect. Vuvalini naming is about community, identities built up through choices and relationships.
Of course, the filmâs most powerful naming scene has nothing to do with the Citadel or the Vuvalini: itâs Max telling Furiosa his name. (OH MY HEART.) Itâs the conclusion of Maxâs emotional arc, his return to being a human being: accepting a name, accepting his own identity. Crucially, he accepts it by sharing it. Throughout the film, names are meaningful because theyâre how people connect with each other. In the âMy name is Maxâ scene, we see Max choosing to do that. Engage to heal.Â