Geroge Miller's iconic Mad Max movie series now has a museum dedicated to it, which is being seen as a promotional move ahead of the release of Mad Max: Fury Road.

Mad Max: Fury Road To Be A "110-Minute Chase," More Like Mad Max 2

Movie Pilot revealed a host of pictures from the makeshift museum featuring was stautes of the characters, and a grungy, gritty feel with wrecked cars and trucks. The imagery is essentially borrowed from the second movie in the franchise, Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981).

The first look at Mad Max: Fury Road, which stars Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron, was revealed via Entertainment Weekly's July cover, the dark and gritty semblance of a ravaged place is effectively captured. The story gave away some more information about the sequel to the original (1980).

Mad Max: Fury Road To "Reinvigorate The Whole Live-Action" Genre Again

Both the original and the new adaptation have been directed by George Miller. Miller also stated that the movie will feature very little CGI with 80% of the reel capturing naturally executed stunts. But also stated that he was working on creating, "not just a physical experience, but an intense emotional one."

In the cover story interview with Entertainment Weekly Hardy added that the seven month shoot in the hot desert, which was completely dead and parched, was both taxing and rewarding.

"It was mental in a brilliant way," Hardy said. "You have no concrete, no coffee shops. We were in the middle of a sandpit."

The trailer for the movie was released at Comic Con.

The shoot took 116 days and featured very little dialogue and few digital effects.

Mad Max: Fury Road will hit theaters on May 15 2015.

Watch the trailer here:

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Mad Max: Fury Road, Movies