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Immortan Joe’s Real Name Reveals the Terrifying Reason He Rose to Power

Summary

  • Immortan Joe’s origin story in
    Mad Max Fury Road: Nux & Immortan Joe
    #1 reveals that he was a rogue military officer named Colonel Joe Morton, who took advantage of the collapse of civilization to turn himself into a tyrant.
  • Immortan Joe’s rise to power involved exploiting opportunities in the post-apocalyptic wasteland, using his military experience and his natural ruthless lack of care for humanity to propel himself to the status of ruler.
  • The prequel comic deepens fans’ understanding of the
    Fury Road
    film, while also telling a fascinating story in its own right, by showing the process of mythmaking, and how it is integral in shaping societies.



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Immortan Joe, the villain of Mad Max: Fury Roadis one of the most intense villains in cinematic history – something the film’s prequel tie-in comics double down on, in the process revealing the process by which a man becomes a tyrant, and a tyrant becomes a god-like figure to those he rules.


Mad Max Fury Road: Nux & Immortan Joe #1 recounts the duel backstories of these two pivotal characters from the movie: Nux, the former War Boy who finds redemption, and the one known as “Immortan”, the ghoulishly terrifying ruler of the wasteland, whom Nux served for most of his life.

Immortan Joe’s backstory covers his post-apocalyptic rise to power, revealing him to have been a rogue military officer, Colonel Joe Mortonwho seized the opportunity provided by worldwide conflagration and infrastructure collapse to elevate himself into a position of true supremacy.

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Mad Max: Fury Road’s happy ending secretly set up a dark new chapter, as Immortan Joe’s son finds a troubling ally who could conquer the Citadel.


Colonel Joe Morton Used The End Of Civilization To Become A Conqueror

The Ultimate Opportunist


Joe Morton’s military background, and his evident disregard for human life…led him to found a new social order based entirely around his own edification. In the process, the Colonel became more than just a ruler: he became immortal.

Released in conjunction with the film, Mad Max Fury Road: Nux & Immortan Joe #1 frames itself as a history. A future storyteller – literally embodying the past by being covered in tattoos preserving his account of the past – contrasts Nux’s redemption with Immortan Joe’s utter lack of repentance. The villain’s origin story exemplifies the thin, arbitrary line between civilization and barbarism; while Joe does eventually impose a form of order upon the chaos of the wasteland, he does so out of purely selfish, self-aggrandizing interests.


As readers learn, Colonel Joe Morton was a “veteran of the Oil Wars,” and even a “hero of the Water Wars,” that preceded armageddon. “The Colonel,” as he would initially be known by his followers, had access to manpower, weaponry, and resources that critically put him in a position to thrive in the brutal state of nature that society’s collapse reduced the Australian landscape to, in the Mad Max canon. As a ruthless and calculating leader, the Colonel was able to use the advantages at his disposal to forge himself into a despot.

Mad Max Fury Road: Nux & Immortan Joe #1 (2015)

Mad Max Fury Road: Nux & Immortan Joe one shot comic cover, War Boys racing into battle as Joe's face looms over them

  • Story: George Miller
  • Writers: Nico Lathouris; Mark Sexton
  • Artists: Mark Sexton; Andrea Mutti; Leandro Fernandez; Riccardo Burchielli
  • Colorist: Mike Spicer
  • Letterer: Clem Robins
  • Cover Artist: Tommy Lee Edwards

In this sense, the Colonel capitalized on an opportunity that few would even recognize in front of them, and even fewer would be able to make the most of, in the way he did. Joe Morton’s military background, and his evident disregard for human life – which appears to have pre-dated the fall of civilization – led him to found a new social order based entirely around his own edification. In the process, the Colonel became more than just a ruler: he became immortal.


The mad or rogue “Colonel” is a familiar trope in fiction, with this rank giving rise to despotic behavior seemingly more than any level of the military command chain. This was most famously exemplified by Marlon Brando’s Colonel Kurtz from the film
Apocalypse Now
.

Joe Had To Lose His Humanity To Gain Immortality

A “God” Born In Bloodshed

As he emerges victorious, after facing certain death, his followers bestow the name (Immortan Joe) upon him. However, as
Fury Road
made clear, more than just a title, immortality became Joe’s obsession.


Whatever flickering spark of humanity that might have been in Colonel Joe Morton prior to the end of the world was quickly extinguished by necessity. The Colonel became an uncompromising, calculating monster – Nux & Immortan Joe #1 depicts him swelling the ranks of his army by force. Returning humanity to its deepest roots of antiquity, Morton’s standing order was to kill any men they came across, and absorb the women and children into their numbers. Eventually, this led him to the Citadel, his base in Fury Roadand in the process, to a form of godhood.

Interestingly, the prequel comic depicts the future Immortan Joe as a student of history himself – meaning he likely drew direct inspiration from the most ferocious leaders of the past in shaping his conquest of the wasteland. He breaches the Citadel’s defenses using a tactic drawn from historical precedent, in the pivotal moment that transforms him from the Colonel into Immortan Joe. As he emerges victorious, after facing certain death, his followers bestow the name upon him. However, as Fury Road made clear, more than just a title, immortality became Joe’s obsession.


Fury Road’s Prequel Comics Deepen Fans’ Understanding Of The Film

Valuable Context

More than just a great backstory for an evocative villain,
Nux & Immortan Joe
#1 also speaks to the process of mythmaking, and how it shapes societies.

The nightmare-fuel visual design of Immortan Joe in Mad Max: Fury Road is the product of the character’s in-universe desire to prolong his life, through whatever means necessary. Further, the central conceit of Fury Road – Joe’s zealous desire to propagate a dynasty – showed the villain’s true dynastic ambitions. More than just wanting to rule with an iron fist, Immortan Joe wanted his control over the wasteland to extend in perpetuity. In this sense, the character is depicted as almost desperate for any form of life beyond death.


Nux & Immortan Joe #1 elucidates some of the core themes of Mad Max: Fury Road. It skillfully establishes key details that the film did not have time or space for, but which greatly add to the storyfor those readers who have spent time with the prequel comics. At the same time, the story stands remarkably well on its own. More than just a great backstory for an evocative villain, Nux & Immortan Joe #1 also speaks to the process of mythmaking, and how it shapes societies.

Nux & Immortan Joe #1, History Man with the War Rig symbol painted on his hand, rest of his bodied covered in writing.

By contrasting the origins of its two focal characters, Nux & Immortan Joe #1 provides both an inspirational story, and a cautionary tale. Nux’s personal history shows how the nasty, brutish, and short existence of wasteland dwellers twisted an innocent child into a War Boy. Immortan Joe’s backstory skillfully rendered how dictators come to power, by preying upon the desperation of their followers. Joe’s story in particular makes his downfall in Mad Mad: Fury Road even more triumphant, especially knowing that history will preserve his memory as one of humanity’s worst monsters.


Mad Max Fury Road Poster

Mad Max: Fury Road

Mad Max: Fury Road is the fourth film in George Miller’s long-running sci-fi franchise, with Tom Hardy starring as Max Rockstansky, a vagabond who lives on the road in an apocalyptic wasteland. When Max comes across a cult group that keeps its people in fear and under control with a monopoly on water and other crucial supplies, he joins up with Imperator Furiosa, a warrior woman leading a rebellion against the cult’s leader, Immortan Joe.

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