I understood that reaction as Wardaddy wanting nothing to do with him cause hes so much younger than the crew and probably someone he'd have to watch die just like his last driver who was seen dead in the prologue. He then somberly accepts it considering he is missing a driver gunner.
Why wardaddy initally rejected him, was because, One - Wardaddy's late brother was named Norman, Two - He looked like this new Norman, Wardaddy did not want to lose him twice
Didn't realize until I saw the deleted scenes. That moment when Wardaddy's face and tone changes when he hears the kid's name. A powerful microsecond of a moment right there.
They trained him but not thoroughly. They expected him to learn quickly like they did and like their previous assistant driver but boy he took longer than expected because he never saw war like the other boys. In the end he didn’t become a killer…he became a soldier and manned up. Here he took crap from the boys but later one he fought back like a soldier.
@@connorwilson2014 so putting your life in the hands of someone you don’t expect to survive? Expecting them to be able to effectively keep your back? Completely foolish to do They didn’t try to train him nearly enough before getting into fights. He only became a killer after they lost people due to his hesitation and lack of ability.
I just noticed something interesting - when the crew ask Norman where he's from, I get the feeling that they're subtly telling him where they're all from while also ribbing him and giving him a hard time. Judging by their accents, Bible mentioning Missouri and likewise for Gordo (Chicago) and Travis (Arkansas) might be clues. I could be wrong though.
I got my hands on the script and it is indeed as you say… And I always thought that they were also trying to figure if they had someone “from home” in front of them…
@@synshenron798 some sources indeed say Georgia, in the script is definetly Arkansas. I found somewhere the photo of the movie props of his dogtags and it’s clearly stated Little Rock, Ark
@@Faithainsworth well my apologies then. I thought it was weird that he would list of Arkansas rather than Georgia if he was from Georgia when asking Norman where he was from.
That stare...So unsettling. Where did Shia GO in his psyche to get that performance so RIGHT? Shia must have been through true hell in real life. That line stayed with me through the entire movie.
@@The_Catalyzt Talk to any vet who's seen combat. It's called the 1000 yard stare. Vets sometimes refer to it as, "those eyes have seen some shit." It's what happens when you've seen and experienced something so traumatic again and again and again that your mind and emotions just turn off and go on auto-pilot. As Tops says at the dinner scene when he's telling the story about the horses, "Your eyes see it, but your head can't make no sense of it." Soldiers in WW1 called it shell shock. We know it today as PTSD.
This scene is like one of those scenes from Captain America when others are on Steve thought that he was skinny to a soldier until he went into that machine then came out a super soldier
But he also said afterwards, what till you see what a man can do to another man. Not killing is in the commandments. I don’t know if it’s suppose to be confusing and conflicting for believers, I might be wrong here.
Don Collier is a great character. He gives much knowledge about what many high ranked allied soldiers regardless of nationality literally came through.He is deeply stressed inside and too much tired of cruelty.
@@peaceweapon1933 yeah it was the final push to push Germany and get them to surrender in there own home land. They needed all the help they can get. There was no time for long training like in the early years of the 2nd World War.
Idk. A bit hard to believe anyone can consider their time being in basic training as time being in the army. Maybe he’s counting the weeks after he got shipped. That’s my opinion though.
This movie depicts severed bodies, gore and people getting blown out in every possible way and these guys are worried about bleeping out words like "shit".
"Are you saved? " "I'm baptised. " That ain't what he's asking. You gotta listen. " Most powerful movie line I've heard in my life. Any Christian can relate to this.
It's a useless question, nobody can know if they are saved because they can apostasize. Judging by his character, he likely does not even believe Baptism does anything
@@janglalgoupiak1891 then how can u know if you are saved? We are called to work out our salvation with fear and trembling (Philippians 2:12), and we are warned of the seeds which grow on rocky soil and fall away (Matthew 13). It becomes a thing where those who did apostasize were apparently never actually saved in the first place, but if such is true then how can someone know that they are not among them when they confidently say they are saved? Baptism works faith in our hearts as one of many means of grace. We do not get baptized because we believe, for most we believe because we are baptized. It's God's pledge to us, not our pledge to God. But even for the baptized, without proper nourishment it is easy for the seed to not produce fruit
I may be over analizing it, but i have the impression that Don's reaction is becaus he thinks Norman is too young. Like "Why the hell did the sent me this kid just to die?"
@@czolgistta Well , i get that his age was a problem, but at first i thought that he was being cruel because of his lack of experience not because he cared about his life.
My grandfather got into a bar fight. The judge made him an offer join the military or spend a year in jail. He joined the military and ended up at Omaha Beach.
@@Eric7-0Haagsophiethompson Sadly he died in 2003. After landing on Omaha Beach he fought village to village all the way to Paris. On a side note my grandmother worked in a munitions factory in Detroit. She made parts for the bombs dropped on Japan. She had 3 brothers that were at Pearl Harbor.
@@wantsome-zs5sq I'm sorry to hear that, he sounded like the perfect man, much respect to you and your family. Just knows he's looking down so make him proud. Living in Detroit of all places is bad enough, glad he got a 2nd chance im in a similar situation
0:20 when you find out don's little brother was named Norman as well, the pause and the look on his face makes so much more sense when he says his name
I remember a WW2 Documentary on German Tanks and the Veteran being interviewed commented on how the Recruits for the Tank Crews were getting younger and younger and he remarked himself saying to a naive recruit who was full of himself "Listen here son. If you don't do as you're told, you'll be dead tomorrow" (or something similar to that)
This reminded me of Desert Storm when my loader stepped on a land mine and I got a new loader. The new guy just graduated from AIT at Knox and was shipped to Saudi. He didnt think he would actually get on a tank, but he was sent to me. My crew and I ribbed him like the crew does to Norman.
Shia LaBeouf was raised by a Catholic father and a Jewish mother and was both baptized and had a bar mitzvah, but “it felt fake because I never invested,” he told Barron. “I had never felt any real suffering in my life, so I didn’t have any willingness to have any belief, so I had no faith." Shia was officially confirmed into the Catholic Church on New Year's eve and reportedly would like to become a deacon. God Bless him. BTW, he was fabulous in "Fury".
I know people give the tank crew shit for being rough in Norman well that’s war. I’ve had friends in the military the things you can see over seas and back then changes a man. The only way to survive back then was to harden up. If you were soft you hesitated, if you hesitated and the enemy didn’t, you’d be dead before you have time to regret it
Maybe it was too much for Wardaddy to reveal that he had extensive familiarity with the bible ... AND a dead brother named Norman ... right before the end. The cut scenes are very enlightening.
Imagine World War 3 and suddenly they forced you in the army and get trained for something not battle related for a few weeks and and then unexpectedly gets ordered and sent to battlefield after like Norman. This shit is fucked up.
So in ww2 never before had so many men, materials, etc. was needed to be trained, equipped, made, transported, maintained and delivered, this was a logistical nightmare which is why things like this happened, the US was able to avoid this happening to much but it did still happen by the hundreds.
Hebrews 13:8...Jesus will never make a mistake😌 I felt sorry for Norman like alot of feel sorry for our Brothers and Sisters Sons and Daughters that have to go through things that we feel they don't deserve..And we feel upset when the wicked doesn't have hard times when we feel they should but like the word says he's the same meaning everything that he does when he does it will turn out Good because YES he's Good all the time never forget it and Norman survived because of him..Someone reading this survived something because of him so give him the Glory for all the Good that you do because the Lord Jesus Christ or the God that you praise is behind the scenes but ahead of our lives..tell him Thank You💚 God Bless the US Army 💚
That Sargent will be Court Marshall for what he did by signing him in the tank division he has 8 weeks and his job is a CLERK. This will not just endangered the tank crew but japordize the mission.
This actually happened tho. Casualties for Sherman crews were so high, that random surplus troops would be given like a day's worth of training before being sent as replacement tank crewmen. It was frankly the only way to keep Sherman's operational.
Nah not during War Time, you put soldiers where they are needed. You are always and foremost a soldier. MOS means little when there is a need. My father was infantry and they pulled him to a field mess kitchen, because they were short on cooks. He never peeled a potato before, buy the end of the day, he said he could have wrote a Field Manual on peeling potatoes.
0:30 8 weeks!?! I doubt it. Basic training plus I assume at least a few weeks of advance training, plus railroad to ship, crossing the Atlantic, landing somewhere, assigned to somewhere, transported to the front. I know there was an infantry/armored manpower shortage late in the war, but 8 weeks from the first day of basic to front line duty in Europe?
Perhaps since there was a war going on they just wanted to teach him how to use a weapon and basic drills and the rest he learns on the field idk, desperate times requires desperate measures.
It's true. Near the end of WW2, basic training was only 2 weeks long, with MOS training done on the ship heading to the war zone. Training times are slashed in times of total war. It would happen again if WW3 kicked off.
@@NorthernNorthdude91749 Nah if WW3 happened the politicians will panic and go nuclear. And the generals will be all too happy to finally nuke something. The ones in charge cannot afford to lose a major war so they'll just go nuclear. That way nobody wins except the far right who will pick up the pieces. I don't mind it a change of uniform to something retrofasc sounds interesting.
@@NorthernNorthdude91749 Unless our armed forces suffered some type of catastrophic loss in which they would need to replace literally everyone in an extremely short period of time there aint nooooo way they are ever gonna shorten basic down to 2 weeks.
@@josephmurphy6127 They will if WW3 happens. You need as many troops as possible during total war, so they'll slash training time. It's already established.
Eight weeks? So Norman somehow skipped more than a third of his basic training, all of his small units training and all of his advanced combined training which in '44 took about 6 months to go through and still ended up as a replacement in France? The historical inaccuracies in this movie is worse than in Kelly's Heroes, which is saying something.
@@leecameron9226 Can’t lighten up. The movie is too crap. Brad Pitt is too distracting with his thick accent and the battle scenes look like Star Wars. I’m gonna watch Land of Mine. Much better movie. And it’s German. Which we don’t often see with WW2 flicks.
@@CactusCowboyDan when I watched the movie when I was like 15 the fight scenes bothered me not as much now I wondered why lasers were firing out there guns
@@leecameron9226 They bother me and many like me and I’m not a teenager. I know they are supposed to be tracer rounds but it looks like lasers. Red for good guys, green for bad guys. Plus the Germans in this movie have the aim of a stormtrooper. Making it all completely one sided all the time. Until that one tiger tank shows up. Also in the town why did the Germans shoot the old man first instead of Brad Pitt in his open hatch? Makes no sense. Also how is Brad Pitt’s body still in one piece when he takes a grenade in an enclosed space at the end? His ageing good looking face should be splattered all over the place. But I guess he wouldn’t allow that.
My Favorit scene was, When bratt shitt ordered the gunner to shoot, and the Shell destroyed a submarine, bounced off and destroyed a german jet, bounced off again and destroyed a Tiger, bounced once off again and exploded in the führer bunker. Still give me a shiver
I’ve met him. He stayed in our town for a couple days a while back and he was one of the nicest dudes I’ve talked to. Don’t be talking shit about people you’ve never seen.
At first i though he was being a dick but after watching multiple times i realized he was trying to protect the kid and he didnt want him to be involved in the horrors of war 😞
On purpose, soft dudes have no place in the army especially if they have just done 8 weeks in it. The whole crew has gone through alot of crazy stuff and got used to it, they are mentally f*cked up and try to harden up the softy immediately. You can clearly see that they feel bad for him that he is there, he seems so innocent, normal, mentally stable but they all know he doesn't know what he is going to witness soon.
@@Philipp_-cp2xw Army logic: "Since war is one of the most terrible things there is and he is going to witness the most insane stuff, let's also be a bunch of dicks towards him because it is totally going to help him."
I’ve heard that before, but they were drafting up to the age of 45 during the war, and after a couple of years of service wouldn’t be too much younger than Pitt. Also, I’m sure the brutality would age a man a bit.
How could Norman’s unit let him get kidnapped right off the back of their truck, that’s not how the Army works, I don’t know why so many people think this was such a good movie
Because the plot was solid, the brutality felt real, and the acting was phenomenal. Even if some of the details didn't add up, the grenade with the 15 second fuse particularly irks me, suspension of disbelief allows most people to enjoy movies like this.
When “pulled off the truck” he was most likely last minute reassigned because at the time army needed everyone fighting they didn’t need typists as much so Norman was fresh meat and new muscle, It happened all the time grunts didn’t know where they were going 9 times outta 10 you could be doing some safe and easily like a typist or making maps, until a certain division or unit was depleted of soldiers and they’re were no new soldiers to pick or units that could sacrifice more men to give so non fighting units were reassigned to random units that needed more fighters so you went where you were needed and where you were needed changed a 1000 times back then.
The best way I’ve ever heard fury described is “a movie directed by 12 year old who was high on call of duty, world of tanks, and had just watched saving private Ryan”. The director of fury was trying to copy Private Ryan in so many ways it’s not even funny. Starting with the idea of recruiting a typist, the only reason why it makes sense in private Ryan and not in fury is because the rangers needed a translator not another infantryman, and the typist in private Ryan spoke both French and German so it was a no brainer. In fury they would’ve had to get permission from Norman’s company commander before (I’ll say it again) “kidnapping” him. The tank commander in fury could’ve much more easily asked an infantry commander if he had a brand new infantry private that they could spare, or better yet, ask his own flippin company commander if they had any replacements before taking someone that doesn’t belong to his unit. And yes, when noncom units get deployed, they get attached to infantry units, emphasis on “attached”. What that means is that we get to wear that infantry units patch as a deployment patch, but that doesn’t mean that we are there for them to do with us what they will. Noncoms are there to do their job, whatever that job may be. I’m an Army air traffic controller, and for me and my fellow controllers to actually use a weapon to defend ourselves from the enemy, it would have to be going very very very very very poorly for us. Which it wasn’t in 1945, the Germans were not knocking at our door, the battle of the bulge had just ended and it was quite the contrary actually. It was us and the Russians knocking on hitlers door. So no, they wouldn’t have every and all infantry and noncom personnel fighting. And in my personal opinion, the plot of this movie was similar to the entire movie itself, which is a dumpster fire inside a dumpster fire. And don’t even get me started on all the disgusting war crimes that “war Braddy” and his crew committed
Interesting to realize now, Wardaddy's tone changed, and so did his face, the moment Norman tells him his name. That hits hard on repeat viewings.
Thinking "Damnit, will this kid die on me too?"
Why would that be? It did changed but idk why.
@@nv_chinothere’s actually a deleted scene where Wardaddy tells Norman he had a brother named Norman.
I understood that reaction as Wardaddy wanting nothing to do with him cause hes so much younger than the crew and probably someone he'd have to watch die just like his last driver who was seen dead in the prologue. He then somberly accepts it considering he is missing a driver gunner.
Why wardaddy initally rejected him, was because,
One - Wardaddy's late brother was named Norman,
Two - He looked like this new Norman,
Wardaddy did not want to lose him twice
Didn't realize until I saw the deleted scenes. That moment when Wardaddy's face and tone changes when he hears the kid's name. A powerful microsecond of a moment right there.
@@fuzzo73 that was a double whammy right there
But he rejected him before he knew his name.
@@runicrochers6548 but the tank commander saw that he looked like his brother.
@@wutm8316 That was never emphasized in the film.
They cared more about jabbing him than actually training him. Then acted surprised when he didn’t perform well.
Because he wasn't expected to survive. And they did train him. They turned him a killer. Which is what he needed to become in order to live.
They trained him but not thoroughly. They expected him to learn quickly like they did and like their previous assistant driver but boy he took longer than expected because he never saw war like the other boys. In the end he didn’t become a killer…he became a soldier and manned up. Here he took crap from the boys but later one he fought back like a soldier.
thats military in 2022 still my friend trust me
@@connorwilson2014 so putting your life in the hands of someone you don’t expect to survive? Expecting them to be able to effectively keep your back? Completely foolish to do
They didn’t try to train him nearly enough before getting into fights. He only became a killer after they lost people due to his hesitation and lack of ability.
They had been through alot themselves, they are not the men they once were
I just noticed something interesting - when the crew ask Norman where he's from, I get the feeling that they're subtly telling him where they're all from while also ribbing him and giving him a hard time. Judging by their accents, Bible mentioning Missouri and likewise for Gordo (Chicago) and Travis (Arkansas) might be clues. I could be wrong though.
I got my hands on the script and it is indeed as you say…
And I always thought that they were also trying to figure if they had someone “from home” in front of them…
We definitely have Travis down here in Arkin'sass.
@@Faithainsworth I thought that Grady was from Georgia? I don’t remember where I heard that but I remember hearin it from somewhere
@@synshenron798 some sources indeed say Georgia, in the script is definetly Arkansas. I found somewhere the photo of the movie props of his dogtags and it’s clearly stated Little Rock, Ark
@@Faithainsworth well my apologies then. I thought it was weird that he would list of Arkansas rather than Georgia if he was from Georgia when asking Norman where he was from.
Wait til you see it, what a man can do to another man….
That delivery was terrifying
@@Tommy-ns6xx and shia’s cold stare adds to it
That stare...So unsettling. Where did Shia GO in his psyche to get that performance so RIGHT? Shia must have been through true hell in real life. That line stayed with me through the entire movie.
@@The_Catalyzt Talk to any vet who's seen combat. It's called the 1000 yard stare. Vets sometimes refer to it as, "those eyes have seen some shit." It's what happens when you've seen and experienced something so traumatic again and again and again that your mind and emotions just turn off and go on auto-pilot. As Tops says at the dinner scene when he's telling the story about the horses, "Your eyes see it, but your head can't make no sense of it." Soldiers in WW1 called it shell shock. We know it today as PTSD.
What was he referring to?
The thing about this scene is when they’re all asking him “are you saved”? By the end of the film Normans the only one who has been saved.
This scene is like one of those scenes from Captain America when others are on Steve thought that he was skinny to a soldier until he went into that machine then came out a super soldier
I think he's asking are you saved by the blood of Jesus the christ.
So the answer was yes then....
I don’t think that’s what he meant by being saved, Norman just survived. Might be wrong here
But he also said afterwards, what till you see what a man can do to another man. Not killing is in the commandments. I don’t know if it’s suppose to be confusing and conflicting for believers, I might be wrong here.
Don Collier is a great character. He gives much knowledge about what many high ranked allied soldiers regardless of nationality literally came through.He is deeply stressed inside and too much tired of cruelty.
A bit hard to believe he was only in the army eight weeks. Training was longer than that and it took a while to be shipped overseas.
This was 1945 at the end of WW2. They needed every body they could throw at the problem
@@peaceweapon1933 yeah it was the final push to push Germany and get them to surrender in there own home land. They needed all the help they can get. There was no time for long training like in the early years of the 2nd World War.
Some troops finished training onboard the troop carriers. No empty ships.
Idk. A bit hard to believe anyone can consider their time being in basic training as time being in the army. Maybe he’s counting the weeks after he got shipped. That’s my opinion though.
He was counting from graduating basic.
For some reason the bleeping of the cusswords makes the scene funny when he meets Norman
This movie depicts severed bodies, gore and people getting blown out in every possible way and these guys are worried about bleeping out words like "shit".
"Are you saved? "
"I'm baptised. "
That ain't what he's asking. You gotta listen. "
Most powerful movie line I've heard in my life. Any Christian can relate to this.
Movie title
@@rachealadjeiFury 2014 Brad Bitt
It's a useless question, nobody can know if they are saved because they can apostasize. Judging by his character, he likely does not even believe Baptism does anything
@@DeFyYing As saved person won't apostasize
@@janglalgoupiak1891 then how can u know if you are saved? We are called to work out our salvation with fear and trembling (Philippians 2:12), and we are warned of the seeds which grow on rocky soil and fall away (Matthew 13).
It becomes a thing where those who did apostasize were apparently never actually saved in the first place, but if such is true then how can someone know that they are not among them when they confidently say they are saved?
Baptism works faith in our hearts as one of many means of grace. We do not get baptized because we believe, for most we believe because we are baptized. It's God's pledge to us, not our pledge to God. But even for the baptized, without proper nourishment it is easy for the seed to not produce fruit
My goal must be to watch this entire movie in 3 minute increments... lol 🤣
I guess I'm racing you
@@boondocktax5179 haha 🤣
There's just about enough clips of it on youtube that you can!
Please make a playlist to show what you think the order of the movie is
I think I’ve seen it twice and never sat down to watch it in its entirety!
you know your having a bad day when you get a dead mans job
Now imagine all the Normans(normals) that were ripped from comfort and thrown into hell....God bless all of the young lost souls
Should’ve been the choir boy
@@Bison257 just be glad it wasn't you...
"Get a bucket of hot water from the kitchen and get that shit clean" then it occurred to me why.
why
@@FlippityflapI'm guessing his predecessors blood.
And his Face. Did you kook closely?@@Amoogus
I may be over analizing it, but i have the impression that Don's reaction is becaus he thinks Norman is too young. Like "Why the hell did the sent me this kid just to die?"
That's PRECISELY why he has such a reaction.
@@czolgistta Well , i get that his age was a problem, but at first i thought that he was being cruel because of his lack of experience not because he cared about his life.
@@czolgistta No shit
Not only that but Don tells Norman his late brother was named Normanin a deleted scene.
"Don't get too close to anyone..."
My grandfather got into a bar fight. The judge made him an offer join the military or spend a year in jail. He joined the military and ended up at Omaha Beach.
Not sure which would be the right decision. I hope your grandfather is in peace.
the judge: tehe :3
That comment is the most potent thing ive seen in years
Thank you and i hope your Grandfather is doing good.
This should be top comment
@@Eric7-0Haagsophiethompson Sadly he died in 2003. After landing on Omaha Beach he fought village to village all the way to Paris. On a side note my grandmother worked in a munitions factory in Detroit. She made parts for the bombs dropped on Japan. She had 3 brothers that were at Pearl Harbor.
@@wantsome-zs5sq I'm sorry to hear that, he sounded like the perfect man, much respect to you and your family. Just knows he's looking down so make him proud.
Living in Detroit of all places is bad enough, glad he got a 2nd chance im in a similar situation
“It’s the FNG sir”
“What kind of name is Norman anyway?”
0:20 when you find out don's little brother was named Norman as well, the pause and the look on his face makes so much more sense when he says his name
Just as a counterbalance, I'd like to see a movie about a german tank crew being polite to each other and the "new guy". :3
All quiet on the western front
ah young Hans, welkommen to ze tiger tanken. this here is Schmidt and Hans also and im Wilhelm. glad to have you, ja?
I remember a WW2 Documentary on German Tanks and the Veteran being interviewed commented on how the Recruits for the Tank Crews were getting younger and younger and he remarked himself saying to a naive recruit who was full of himself "Listen here son. If you don't do as you're told, you'll be dead tomorrow" (or something similar to that)
Oh my God SAME I've been trying to look for one like that too!!! Unfortunately I haven't found one 😭
Wait until you find out that politeness doesn’t exist in an active war zone. It’s not a fucking shopping mall
I come back just to see Shia’s delivery in this scene. One of his most brilliant performances
"Just wait until you see..................what a man can do to another man"
-The History of all Human Civilization in a Nutshell
Till the missiles took the responsibility for the kill part…
To be continued
@@nextube_ownerthe buttons are done by Man.
@@marshalsoult3860and made by them
He's talking about Jesus tho ....
Norman Lincensing LLC lol
it's what he did after the war
You know it’s an r rated movie when you see the word damn bleeped out
This reminded me of Desert Storm when my loader stepped on a land mine and I got a new loader. The new guy just graduated from AIT at Knox and was shipped to Saudi. He didnt think he would actually get on a tank, but he was sent to me. My crew and I ribbed him like the crew does to Norman.
Are you saved
I'm baptized
That ain't what he asked u
See you gotta listen
Lmfao
Taps his head lol
Had to chuckle when he said his name was Norman because I was reading the small text at the bottom lol
"Don't get too close to anyone." Cause they might die the next day
thanks, corek
Yes, Sherlock, we know
Very insightful, Corek
i actually didn't know. Thanks corek, unsarcastically
Or worse they died yesterday 😂😂
norman had such an innocence ab him.. i keep coming back to this movie
I felt this one. I joined the Marines in '05 as a Comm guy, was made a Medevac driver in Fallujah one month after being assigned to 1/1
Shia is a monster actor
Why would I want that. Bleeping. I can watch any video on YT. Great job.
" which way is the front " is that some kind of a popular phrase back then? Or he was asking it literally?
NGL , I Thought he was talking about the tank
Shia looks right through Norman, into his soul !!
Ok , so I've seen the intro , the outro , the horse scene , and where Norman is forced to kill. I need to fill in everything in-between
Don't get to close to anyone. It's a Tank!! Everyone is close! 🐹👻
See, you got to listen.
Not too hard to understand what he meant.
First time English learners be like
That ain't what he meant, son
Don't get too close emotionally, like buddy's or bros.
Army Don't Make Mistake
It's hard to get close to someone in the military cuz you think you're just going to die especially in a war
Pitt's stripes are so haphazardly sewn on. It seems like he was promoted really recently.
MSG with the clipboard lol
WarDaddy....🔥🔥
Comfortable to be around people just like me! My type of team
Gee golly thanks for the bleeps, I'd hate to hear a curse word in my movie about millions of men engaged in constant killing
I was gonna make this exact comment but you beat me to it!
War…is not a romantic adventure. Hell on the earth.
Common mistake by the new guys in war, don't ever ask where is the front,or action or anything like that
why is that
@@ahmadmikhail9187 because guys like that probably die in their first few minutes of battle
anyone noticed at the bottom ov video it says "Norman Licensing"
"This addiction to overwhelming hatred"
Yo even the company that licensed this video is name Norman 😂
I like it how at the bottom of the video it says 2014 Normal Licensing and thought to myself, damn Norman must have done well after the war XD
That is a clean scene.
SHIA WAS A GOD IN THIS MOVIE !!! His expression ... you can see the pain ... the horror .. HE IS DEAD inside !
Shia labeouf is such a good fuckin actor
Censoring really takes away from this
anyone who says they wouldn't be intimidated by bernthal's character is bullshitting
Dam. That FNG is still a kid
Really? censors? We don't got enough with UA-cam kids
That's the style of this channel. You can see the goriest stuff on it, but you won't hear the 💩word here.😅
Gotta keep it clean for the kids. Though a man committing suicide while burning alive is fine.
Never knew the guy who plays Norman is Percy Jackson
Mistake? ... Army don't make mistakes lol
Angelmaker Bloodthirster.
He was indeed Saved~
Shia LaBeouf was raised by a Catholic father and a Jewish mother and was both baptized and had a bar mitzvah, but “it felt fake because I never invested,” he told Barron.
“I had never felt any real suffering in my life, so I didn’t have any willingness to have any belief, so I had no faith." Shia was officially confirmed into the Catholic Church on New Year's eve and reportedly would like to become a deacon. God Bless him. BTW, he was fabulous in "Fury".
Should have never deleted the scene where he tells Norman that was his little brother's name who died and that it looks like him
When a level 1 meets a level 50 prestige
I know people give the tank crew shit for being rough in Norman well that’s war. I’ve had friends in the military the things you can see over seas and back then changes a man. The only way to survive back then was to harden up. If you were soft you hesitated, if you hesitated and the enemy didn’t, you’d be dead before you have time to regret it
Maybe it was too much for Wardaddy to reveal that he had extensive familiarity with the bible ... AND a dead brother named Norman ... right before the end. The cut scenes are very enlightening.
Imagine World War 3 and suddenly they forced you in the army and get trained for something not battle related for a few weeks and and then unexpectedly gets ordered and sent to battlefield after like Norman. This shit is fucked up.
Won’t happen till our armies and allies armies are depleted where they need a draft. During ww2 the USA wasn’t a power house like it is today
That is pretty much what Russia does with its soldiers.
...in what bizarre, 1950s retro world is it still necessary to censor "damn"?
UA-cam, as a matter of fact. One "obscene" word and no money for you. How it works unfortunately.
What a lineup , Achilles , Percy Jackson, Shane from The Walking dead , and Shia fucking Labeouf😂😂
So this is where Percy Jackson went
Crossed training is always welcomed in the army. I’m 92G but I did MP duty, clerk, patrol, administrative work. Army don’t make mistake of your mos 😂
Normal Licensing LLC reserves all the rights where Private Norman Ellison appears.
Casting is fine but making Michael part of the crew was not realistic for the era. There was still segregation in the us military
So in ww2 never before had so many men, materials, etc. was needed to be trained, equipped, made, transported, maintained and delivered, this was a logistical nightmare which is why things like this happened, the US was able to avoid this happening to much but it did still happen by the hundreds.
Why does this feel like a call of duty cut scene
Deleted scene was allot more real and dark
Hebrews 13:8...Jesus will never make a mistake😌
I felt sorry for Norman like alot of feel sorry for our Brothers and Sisters Sons and Daughters that have to go through things that we feel they don't deserve..And we feel upset when the wicked doesn't have hard times when we feel they should but like the word says he's the same meaning everything that he does when he does it will turn out Good because YES he's Good all the time never forget it and Norman survived because of him..Someone reading this survived something because of him so give him the Glory for all the Good that you do because the Lord Jesus Christ or the God that you praise is behind the scenes but ahead of our lives..tell him Thank You💚
God Bless the US Army 💚
2:41 this is Chritstian chanel !!!!
That Sargent will be Court Marshall for what he did by signing him in the tank division he has 8 weeks and his job is a CLERK. This will not just endangered the tank crew but japordize the mission.
@Stanly Stud at least some realistic but that's HOLLYWOOD.
This actually happened tho. Casualties for Sherman crews were so high, that random surplus troops would be given like a day's worth of training before being sent as replacement tank crewmen. It was frankly the only way to keep Sherman's operational.
Nah not during War Time, you put soldiers where they are needed. You are always and foremost a soldier. MOS means little when there is a need. My father was infantry and they pulled him to a field mess kitchen, because they were short on cooks. He never peeled a potato before, buy the end of the day, he said he could have wrote a Field Manual on peeling potatoes.
Sergeant not Sargent, Court Marshal not Court Marshall, jeopardize not jeapordize
Nah not when casualties are high like in WW2. Its all hands on deck
0:30 8 weeks!?! I doubt it. Basic training plus I assume at least a few weeks of advance training, plus railroad to ship, crossing the Atlantic, landing somewhere, assigned to somewhere, transported to the front. I know there was an infantry/armored manpower shortage late in the war, but 8 weeks from the first day of basic to front line duty in Europe?
Perhaps since there was a war going on they just wanted to teach him how to use a weapon and basic drills and the rest he learns on the field idk, desperate times requires desperate measures.
It's true. Near the end of WW2, basic training was only 2 weeks long, with MOS training done on the ship heading to the war zone. Training times are slashed in times of total war. It would happen again if WW3 kicked off.
@@NorthernNorthdude91749 Nah if WW3 happened the politicians will panic and go nuclear. And the generals will be all too happy to finally nuke something. The ones in charge cannot afford to lose a major war so they'll just go nuclear. That way nobody wins except the far right who will pick up the pieces. I don't mind it a change of uniform to something retrofasc sounds interesting.
@@NorthernNorthdude91749 Unless our armed forces suffered some type of catastrophic loss in which they would need to replace literally everyone in an extremely short period of time there aint nooooo way they are ever gonna shorten basic down to 2 weeks.
@@josephmurphy6127 They will if WW3 happens. You need as many troops as possible during total war, so they'll slash training time. It's already established.
Eight weeks? So Norman somehow skipped more than a third of his basic training, all of his small units training and all of his advanced combined training which in '44 took about 6 months to go through and still ended up as a replacement in France? The historical inaccuracies in this movie is worse than in Kelly's Heroes, which is saying something.
The couch experts who blindly love this movie don’t care.
@@CactusCowboyDan because its a good movie yeah it took some liberties lighten up a bit
@@leecameron9226 Can’t lighten up. The movie is too crap. Brad Pitt is too distracting with his thick accent and the battle scenes look like Star Wars.
I’m gonna watch Land of Mine. Much better movie. And it’s German. Which we don’t often see with WW2 flicks.
@@CactusCowboyDan when I watched the movie when I was like 15 the fight scenes bothered me not as much now I wondered why lasers were firing out there guns
@@leecameron9226 They bother me and many like me and I’m not a teenager. I know they are supposed to be tracer rounds but it looks like lasers. Red for good guys, green for bad guys.
Plus the Germans in this movie have the aim of a stormtrooper. Making it all completely one sided all the time. Until that one tiger tank shows up.
Also in the town why did the Germans shoot the old man first instead of Brad Pitt in his open hatch? Makes no sense.
Also how is Brad Pitt’s body still in one piece when he takes a grenade in an enclosed space at the end? His ageing good looking face should be splattered all over the place. But I guess he wouldn’t allow that.
Good to see he got out and started his own licensing company.
Great movie
My Favorit scene was, When bratt shitt ordered the gunner to shoot, and the Shell destroyed a submarine, bounced off and destroyed a german jet, bounced off again and destroyed a Tiger, bounced once off again and exploded in the führer bunker. Still give me a shiver
Legend has it that it's still bouncing to this day.
@@doublezero7850 haha 😂👌🏼
Looking back, what’s the correct call, tie the young ones up and let the old man go buy more time or?? Ughhh so unlikely and terrible timing :( R.I.P.
Wrong movie but I get what your saying 😂
Shia Lebouf was pretty good at playing a jerk. Oh wait that wasn't acting.
I’ve met him. He stayed in our town for a couple days a while back and he was one of the nicest dudes I’ve talked to. Don’t be talking shit about people you’ve never seen.
That's a pretty crappy way to treat a new man who you just may have to depend on to save your ass in a battle.
It’s the American army. They treat every new person like this. It’s American high school behaviour.
Please don't beep on abuse , they waste their emotions
At first i though he was being a dick but after watching multiple times i realized he was trying to protect the kid and he didnt want him to be involved in the horrors of war 😞
WAIT UNTIL YOU SEE IT 👁👁
Dude! Why do they have to be so Rude to him?
Dude, it's the military, ain't no one a softie in there. Especially battle-hardened. Especially towards a recruit...
On purpose, soft dudes have no place in the army especially if they have just done 8 weeks in it. The whole crew has gone through alot of crazy stuff and got used to it, they are mentally f*cked up and try to harden up the softy immediately. You can clearly see that they feel bad for him that he is there, he seems so innocent, normal, mentally stable but they all know he doesn't know what he is going to witness soon.
@@Philipp_-cp2xw
Army logic:
"Since war is one of the most terrible things there is and he is going to witness the most insane stuff, let's also be a bunch of dicks towards him because it is totally going to help him."
@@Klexxxxx i hope for your sake this is just bait lol
Just the nature of any organization that has a ranking system between it's members.
Don’t go into eternity without the Lord Jesus Christ. Get saved now! Never know when you’ve seen your last sunrise. Don’t wait!!!
why dont they make more fury movies
you know how the movie ended, right?
Brad Pitt way too old for a soldier in WW2!😭
I’ve heard that before, but they were drafting up to the age of 45 during the war, and after a couple of years of service wouldn’t be too much younger than Pitt. Also, I’m sure the brutality would age a man a bit.
What does "are you saved" mean?
Jesus Christ died on that cross to save all of us from our sins. And through his forgiveness we are saved by the blood he shed.
@@QDProd1i’m a christian but tbh story makes no sense and i don’t get why that saves people
@@careforjusticealways its because the wages of sin are death. And Jesus gave us a free gift of salvation from sin by dying on that cross for us.
@@QDProd1 that’s unreasonable that God unalived himself to forgive us
@QDProd1 just so we can suffer here on earth, yea makes lots of sense
How could Norman’s unit let him get kidnapped right off the back of their truck, that’s not how the Army works, I don’t know why so many people think this was such a good movie
Because the plot was solid, the brutality felt real, and the acting was phenomenal. Even if some of the details didn't add up, the grenade with the 15 second fuse particularly irks me, suspension of disbelief allows most people to enjoy movies like this.
When “pulled off the truck” he was most likely last minute reassigned because at the time army needed everyone fighting they didn’t need typists as much so Norman was fresh meat and new muscle, It happened all the time grunts didn’t know where they were going 9 times outta 10 you could be doing some safe and easily like a typist or making maps, until a certain division or unit was depleted of soldiers and they’re were no new soldiers to pick or units that could sacrifice more men to give so non fighting units were reassigned to random units that needed more fighters so you went where you were needed and where you were needed changed a 1000 times back then.
The best way I’ve ever heard fury described is “a movie directed by 12 year old who was high on call of duty, world of tanks, and had just watched saving private Ryan”. The director of fury was trying to copy Private Ryan in so many ways it’s not even funny. Starting with the idea of recruiting a typist, the only reason why it makes sense in private Ryan and not in fury is because the rangers needed a translator not another infantryman, and the typist in private Ryan spoke both French and German so it was a no brainer. In fury they would’ve had to get permission from Norman’s company commander before (I’ll say it again) “kidnapping” him. The tank commander in fury could’ve much more easily asked an infantry commander if he had a brand new infantry private that they could spare, or better yet, ask his own flippin company commander if they had any replacements before taking someone that doesn’t belong to his unit. And yes, when noncom units get deployed, they get attached to infantry units, emphasis on “attached”. What that means is that we get to wear that infantry units patch as a deployment patch, but that doesn’t mean that we are there for them to do with us what they will. Noncoms are there to do their job, whatever that job may be. I’m an Army air traffic controller, and for me and my fellow controllers to actually use a weapon to defend ourselves from the enemy, it would have to be going very very very very very poorly for us. Which it wasn’t in 1945, the Germans were not knocking at our door, the battle of the bulge had just ended and it was quite the contrary actually. It was us and the Russians knocking on hitlers door. So no, they wouldn’t have every and all infantry and noncom personnel fighting. And in my personal opinion, the plot of this movie was similar to the entire movie itself, which is a dumpster fire inside a dumpster fire. And don’t even get me started on all the disgusting war crimes that “war Braddy” and his crew committed
@@comrademason7835 🤓
@@abigbutterstick1780 would it be too much to ask that you read the comment before so quick to judge it
Butterfly effect.
What movie bleeps out bruh
Why this channel bleeping out curse words when multiple channels dont do that at all
Bruh the censorship, dang that’s annoying
Which ways the front? Hmmm?