A writer for a men's blog called for a boycott of the post-apocalyptic film 'Mad Max: Fury Road' because it is a 'feminist piece of propaganda posing as a guy flick' instead of a film made for men.

Aaron Clarey, an author and occasional writer for 'Return of Kings,' has come under fire for his recent post on the ROK blog titled 'Why You Should Not Go See 'Mad Max: Feminist Road.''

In the post, uploaded Monday, Clarey holds that 'Fury Road' director George Miller used explosions, fire tornadoes, and desert raiders to 'trick' Clarey and other men into seeing a film that forces a 'lecture on feminism down your throat.'

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Boycott: Aaron Clarey (photographed) called for a boycott of the post-apocalyptic film 'Mad Max: Fury Road' because the film is a 'feminist piece of propaganda posing as a guy flick'

Spidey Senses: Clarey (left and center right) wrote that when he saw a trailer for the film the movie looked like a 'straight-up guy flick,' but then, he said, his 'spidey senses started noticing a couple things'

Clarey wrote that when he saw a trailer for the film -- which opened in theaters Friday -- the movie looked like a 'straight-up guy flick.' But then, he said, his 'spidey senses started noticing a couple things.'

He noted that Charlize Theron's character, Imperator Furiosa, 'sure talked a lot' during the trailers and made more appearances than Tom Hardy's character, Mad Max.

'Charlize Theron's character barked orders to Mad Max,' he wrote. 'Nobody barks orders to Mad Max.'

Clarey wrote that his speculations about the film were confirmed when he learned that Miller invited Eve Ensler, author of 'The Vagina Monologues,' to the set in Namibia to consult five female actresses who play sex slaves in the film.

Imperator: Charlize Theron (right) plays Imperator Furiosa a woman looking to make it back to her childhood homeland

Mad: 'Mad Max: Fury Road,' follows Mad Max and Imperator Furiosa as they try to escape a savage warlord

While Clarey says he is not a men's rights activist, he wrote that 'Fury Road' is 'the Trojan horse feminists and Hollywood leftists will use to (vainly) insist on the trope women are equal to men in all things, including physique, strength, and logic.'

'And this is the subterfuge they will use to blur the lines between masculinity and femininity, further ruining women for men, and men for women,' he wrote.

This comes as the movie opened to stunning reviews, almost universally praising the film for its action sequences and surprising depth.

'Mad Max: Fury Road' isn't a reboot, it's a power-up -- an outrageously kinetic, visually inventive, dramatically satisfying demolition derby that pits the matriarchy against the patriarchy while standing as the action film to beat for the rest of the summer, possibly the decade,' wrote Ty Burr at the Boston Globe.

Critics also noted the stength of Theron's character.

'While the extended action sequences are dazzling, the film succeeds mostly due to the powerful performances of Hardy and Theron. The best female action hero since Sigourney Weaver in Alien, Theron is riveting as the clever and determined, shaved-headed Furiosa,' opined Claudia Puig of USA Today.

Many reactions to 'Fury Road' have centered on the dominant role of women in the film,Vanity Fair reports, and Miller said women had a major impact on the film behind the scenes as well.

'I've gone from being very male dominant to being surrounded by magnificent women. I can't help but be a feminist,' Miller said in an interview for the magazine.

Miller also enlisted the help of his wife to edit the film, he said, so 'Fury Road' 'won't look like every other action movie.'

He called on Ensler, a feminist activist, to lead the five actresses in a workshop to give 'perspective on violence against women around the world, particularly in war zones.'

Theron's character fights to lead the five sex slaves to safety.

Fury Road was not going to be a movie made for men. It was going to be a feminist piece of propaganda posing as a guy flick. Aaron Clarey

While some commend Miller for his decision to tackle women's issues in the film, Clarey urges 'all men across the world' to do themselves a favor and not only refuse to see the movie but to 'spread the word to as many men as possible.'

'Not all of them have the keen eye we do here at (Return of Kings,)' he writes. 'And most will be taken in by fire tornadoes and explosions.

'If they sheepishly attend and 'Fury Road' is a blockbuster, then you, me, and all the other men (and real women) in the world will never be able to see a real action movie ever again that doesn't contain some damn political lecture or moray about feminism, (social justice warrior)-ing, and socialism.'

Clarey wrote that 'Hollywood' removed the film's namesake and replaced him with 'an impossible female character in an effort to kowtow to feminism.'

Trailer: He noted that Charlize Theron's character, Imperator Furiosa, 'sure talked a lot' during the trailers and made more appearances than Tom Hardy's character, Mad Max

Theron said that she was glad to take on the role of the road warrior, according to CNN, 'to celebrate everything there is about being a woman, and not trying to put women on a pedestal, but being surrounded by other women in a story that was just real.'

The 'Return of Kings' 'about' section describes the blog as a platform for 'heterosexual, masculine men' 'who believe men should be masculine and women should be feminine.'

The page says, 'Women and homosexuals are discouraged from commenting here.'

Other posts on the blog include ''Rape Culture' Was Manufactured To Wage An Unjust War Against Men,' 'Women Should Not Be Allowed To Vote,' 'Young Girls Are Better Than Older Women,' and 'Women Have No Sense of Justice.'

Not an Activist: While Clarey's post has drawn criticism since it was uploaded Monday, he holds that he is not a men's rights activist