The acting outclasses everything else about this movie. You care for the characters and feel for them. The opening scene is genuine and it isn’t trying to glorify war.
Since it was intended to be a movie, not a documentary, I'll accept whatever inaccuracies might be present, because the performances here were off the scale excellent. These five men should have been competing for Oscars for this movie.
I've rewatched this film a few times because it's great, but my conclusion from it is that this first scene is foreshadowing. Basically, War Daddy (Brad Pitt) has severe combat fatigue (or PTSD, if you prefer) and he doesn't really want to live anymore. He want's his crew to survive but he is suffering from clinical depression. Nothing matters to him other than his crew surviving, which seems honourable, but with the realisation and weariness to know that they're all fucked but he genuinely doesn't want them to go down with him despite the fact he realises that that is the way the prospects are written. Even if he survived the war, he wouldn't have survived the war, if you know what I mean.
I thought that ending was a big mistake. War Daddy cared deeply about his men and showed good leadership for the most part throughout the movie. There's no way he would have sacrificed his men like that, for literally no reason. His men loved him, and he knows they would never leave abandon him, that's why Shia pretty much begs him to go. He wouldn't have let his personal issues condemn his men to certain death. There is no way he would have done that. There was no heroism in the final stand, it was just pure recklessness that got all of his men killed. It was a horrible ending.
This scene is so good. I don’t care how inaccurate or Hollywood this movie is. This scene is SO good. A crew talking amongst the crew. Remarkable and immersive acting. Their bond is impeccable.
@@m33tballa a lot of it is but can be dismissed with critical thinking. Pak gun scene imo is terrible and I can’t figure out a logical reason as to why they can knock out or at least damage one of the shermans. Despite this, its my favorite movie cause of its grimly take on war and what it can do to humanity.
I just realize the connection bewteeen his interaction with this horse and the story of the squad spending 3 days killing horses in France. He really has a love for them
Despite its ( many) flaws , one thing that could be said for the Sherman, was it was a simple tank to maintain , compared to the over engineered Panther and Tiger tanks , which meant that more battlefield maintenance could be done by the tank crews themselves , rather than abandoning the tank , or waiting for recovery crews to arrive to salvage the vehicle, as was the case with many Panzer 5's and 6's
Pitt's timing can sometimes be next level. "We're alive, we're here..." "God's grace." Two words. The whole complexity of the character opens the way he hits those words. Pro.
Excellent film. Strategically they may make a few errors. But they more than make up for it in emotionality. You can feel the brotherhood that has been built between these men over three long years of continuous battle. They capture it so well. And that is a hard thing to do. And I applaud them for it.
Yeah, errors like German AT guns missing tanks not even 200 meters out and driving in a straight line towards them. Should've been like shooting fish in a barrel... With a rifle.💯🤦♂️🤣
Like the movie, brad Pitt excellent, but that Tiger tank scene ugh, with an 88mm they stayed at range, picked off enemy tanks till they ran out of ammo, or fuel or were knocked out, I understand the need for the drama but that scene wasn’t accurate.
@@rtqii Every time Trump ins on deck you little sycophants run around like chickens with your heads off shouting about fake news that will never materialize. 2017: Comey will get Trump! 2018: Mueller will get Trump! 2019: Avenatti will get Trump! 2020: Tish James will get Trump! 2021: AG Garland will get Trump! 2022: Jack Smith will get Trump! 😅😅😆😆😆😆
I've seen this film several time through, not a weak moment in it. The intensity of the battles, the comradery within the tank crew, the deprivation and perversity of war, and the realism, especially that booming sound of the shells from the tankers' perspective, second to none.
This movie shows it better than many others PROPAGANDA. From Dunkirk, at the beginning of World War II, to Normandy, almost at the end, the Allied Armies did not put a single soldier in Germany. No a single one. The participation of the Allied Forces in Europe was limited to Aerial Bombing. These actions received a lot of publicity to make us believe that the Aerial Bombings were winning the war. But, there is a very long list of Bombing cities by “Mistake”. The bombing of Nijmegen in the Netherlands (February 1944), it occurred when US bombers returning from a failed mission, as occurred in most cases, were looking for "Optional" targets. Nearly 1,000 Dutch civilians were killed by the bombing. It is proven fact that Aerial Bombardment does NOT win wars, unless it is Atomic. Aerial Bombard't can destroy cities but does NOT destroy armies. If there is any doubt, then Nazi Germany would have defeated England, after nearly a year of bombing, or the US would have won in Korea, Vietnam or Afghanistan. Propaganda has always led us to believe that we, "The Yankees", beat Hitler. But, I have news for you: The US did not win the war against Germany. The Russians won it. The Allied Army of the US, UK, Canada, Belgium and France (and Poland, and other countries), was able to reach Normandy, thanks to the Soviets destroying the Nazis in Stalingrad, Leningrad and in Kurks, in 1943. It took them 289 days but the Russians won and without the help of nobody… OF NOBODY! Normandy was until June 1944, and Mr. “Hollywood” Patton did NOT manage to set foot on Germany until February 1945, when the Red Army was going over Berlin. In Fact, General Patton was able to enter Germany only when the Russians were 150 kilometers from the Oder River (LOL). The Allies were defeated at Arnhem (Market Garden Sep. 25-1944), and at The Battle of the Bulge (Jan. 25-1945). General Patton was paralyzed without fuel, while the Red Army was preparing for its last offensive into Berlin. Look here: The average age of the German Army that fought in Normandy was between 18 and 24 years old. And these soldiers faced each other in a ratio of 27 to 1, without Tanks, without Artillery, no Navy nor Air Force. To make matters worse, knowing that four Parachute Divisions were inland behind their backs. Never the less, It took the Allies 8 months to advance only 500 kilometers from Normandy to Arnhem, and from there, start the Withdrawal back to the border of France/Belgium (What?), facing a virtually defeated German Army cuz USSR. It's a Verifiable Fact that is written in all the History Books, that the German High Command surrendered to the Russian Generals six days BEFORE the first US soldier set foot in Berlin. Well… The US has been defeated in Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, Lebanon, Somalia and now, in Afghanistan. However, the powerful US Army defeated the tiny island of Grenada (1983), as it faced a fearsome army of 287 Police Officers, since Grenada does NOT have an army. In fact, they were half this number, since the Policemen on the afternoon shift had not yet come to work. What seems incredible is the fact that the US was defeated by Vietnam. What? Did the US lose the war against Nam? OMG! Against a poor country, underdeveloped, malnourished, without Navy, without Air Force, NO Marines, Green Berets, SEALs, Rangers, Delta Force, USMC, Rambos or Chuck Norris. Defeated by a country of peasants without strategic plans, no B-59 Bombers, PT-Boats, Northrop F-5 "Freedom Fighter", nor Atomic Submarines. Without Aircraft Carriers, NO Continental Missiles, nor Tanks, Choppters, AR-15, Gatlin Machines’, Flamethrowers, Napalm, Agent Orange. NADA! And to top it off, defeated by an army of teenagers who had no shoes: WITHOUT SHOES!!! Army that fought with bamboo sticks!!! Charlie Kicked Our Asses and even invaded our Embassy. Jeezzz!!! Here is the Duty, Courage and Chanting of Heroism of the US Army. This is the True Story of our Country. This is the History that is already written in the US Books. And the History that was written in Afghanistan is made with the same ink. All the "Glory" of the US Armed Forces is just PROPAGANDA.
More recently, some wars are about making the opponent unwilling to fight. Some are about inactivating the equipment, such that it doesn’t matter what the opponent wants.
Some more recent methods disable the computers or the communication, which would have been used to direct personnel to multiply force through equipment.
One of the most emotional war memorials I've ever visited was the War Animals memorial in London. "Dedicated to all the animals that served and died alongside our forces in wars throughout time. ...they had no choice"
can I just say a massive thank you for not doing a 5-minute intro into liking and subscribing we all know that that's what you want . by putting up that little cartoon reminds us but we don't have to endure the sales pitch thank you
Sober maybe but he is a religious nut. The mental state of the other crew members is caused by battle fatigue and PTSD, Shia's character has a mental illness caused by religion.
Excellent movie. Before many pick it apart I'm sure it's accurate in many ways. The clip on its making showed alot of time on detail to the point of tank school.
Although a movie, the proximity and dynamics of the personalities in a war and confined in a tank cannot be imagined. Think of the possible diversity of a MODERN American crew in battle if you did not like your commander or mates.. Im sure it's all put aside when its time to fight though.
@@frost3193 I've seen a number of his films that people claim of historically correct and I laugh so hard I fell out of my chair Saving Private Ryan the Waffen SS would never have entered a town like that like they were marching down Main Street on Parade years of fighting on Eastern Front vicious street fighting against the Russians taught them to enter a town on both flanks in the rear
After watching the movie for the first time years ago I thought that a good opening scene would have shown a large scrapyard filled with Shermans ready to be disassembled for scrap after the war....two workers walk up to the rusting "Fury" and look at the battle damage and one says "looks like this one seen a lot of action"...and the other one says "yeah" while he fires up his blowtorch....then the movie fades back into the scene with them in the tank and "War Daddy" ready to jump the German officer on the white horse......then we have the rest of the movie up until the last scene with Norman being taken away in the ambulance....we then fade back to the scrapyard with the sparks flying from the blowtorches and the word "Fury" is shot in a close up and then a wide shot view showing all the tanks in the yard waiting to be scrapped.
They scrapped a lot of footage that better explained why War Daddy was in the Army and why he took a protective interest in Norman. Inclusion of these scenes would have made the movie better but much longer.
Just to clarify the intro, many countries used children in some form. German soldiers I think were at least 15 or 16, German had a youth division of 16-25+ and a programme of younger children but not in combat roles. However I think towards the end I remember an artillery unit manned by 12-15 year old, possibly even younger. Soviet Union had people over 16 in secondary units from Central Asia but 18-19+ for combat. UK had 17 year olds, Poland had conscripted 12-15 (and below 14) years old in units. The US had an 18 year old conscription but thought it was odd that they could die for their country but not drink alcohol yet face charges. Japan also mobilised youth between 14-17.
Sending older teenagers to war is completely different from total war. Defending one's home is completely different from sending people across the sea to fight in a foreign land.
As of 1939, the Hitler Youth conscripted boys from the age of 13. Obviously, if you wanted your family to get a knock on the door and the prospect of an extended camping holiday you didn't have to turn up. From the age of 13 these children were given training and weapons and were expected to fight. A lot served on flak guns, but by April 1945 they were front-line troops.
The United States would send teenagers to war during WWII as well if the teen volunteered and the parent signed a waiver. It wasn't common but it was known to have happened a few times.
I didn't know about this movie. Been watching clips for an hour, and I have to say, incredibly good acting all the way around. Good everything, actually. I'm just especially impressed with the acting.
This movie was phenomenal. Nearly a documentary except for only a few inconsistencies in it during the Panzer tank fight. But damnit, this was how those soldiers lived. By the seat of their pants. Beautiful film! ❤️
0:31 "And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth..." and then Brad Pitt put a stop to that😆
this scene and movie in general really reminded me that it wasn’t a easy walk straight to berlin after the d-day landings, both sides had to suffer until the conclusion of the war
this was a great movie. I would rank it up there with the big red one, perhaps even better. if you haven't seen the big red one yet watch it and compare. it's a very good movie.
When I have a bad day I think about brave gentlemen fighting in WW2. Not even close,,, I can compare a bad day of mine with what they went thru. I wouldn’t have the balls to go thru all that and just not go insane in my head
2nd A/D... 88-91,, very proud to have served under that lineage, it had still bred strong and true up until then...old "blood and guts" sure knew how to create an American soldier.... just my thoughts...
I was wondering if anyone caught the symbolism the white horse. It represents death fourth horsemen. Explains why they all died at the end it came for them.
In April of 1945, most German troops, with the exception of some SS troops and over-excited Hitler Youth, were trying to think of anyway they could surrender to anyone who wasn't a Russian. The bloodiest fighting was still in the East, particularly around Berlin and Budapest.
The writing of Jon Bernthal's character is really underrated. He's a meathead, he's undeniably an asshole, a tough person to get along with; but he's usually pretty much right about everything he says, even if he says it in the worst possible way. It allows his character to be tragically relatable even if you don't LIKE his character as a person, and over the course of the movie you can see how his personality might have ended up this way.
Note to the writers, a soldier would say "Yes, Sargeant" to an Army NCO and NOT "Yes, Sir"....a NCO addressed as "Sir" would say, "I'm a Sargeant, I work for a living"...
Just like in Forest Gump, we see the feather to feather scene. The white horse represents death walking throughout the battlefield until the end of the movie it finally leaves.
My take on the tank crew is it shows a group of men who would never have been together in normal life-- but how war, and the confines of the tank created a bond that is unforgettable. The scene in the town with the two women underlines how different the men actually are in somewhat normal circumstances, outside the tank. But inside the tank is a brotherhood and common cause that overwhelms everything else.
@@freddygarcia3049 It’s a purposefully flawed statement. People no longer speak like this. Remember, the events and people in this film are 77 years old.
@freddy garcia I'm sorry but you cannot be American if you live anywhere other than the U.S.A., and being in South America is not justification either. Sorry pal but that just the way it is. It's what our great great GREAT grandparents came up with.
This scene made me imagine a group of soldiers, maybe American, maybe German, maybe close to this battlefield, maybe not. Out looking to kill when off in the distance they’ll see a white horse galloping away from gunfire and they will wonder if what they’re seeing is real. Same as the conversation about the horses they had to put down. The eyes see it but the brain can’t make any sense of it, good or bad, we’re only human.
I know people like to rip on Shia Labeouf, but this was one of his best performances
Who rips on Shia lebeouf he's top tier
@@rossicourvosi218 he’s a weirdo in real life
I couldn’t agree more with this statement
he is one hell of an actor no doubt
It's really cool to see him take a backseat, and play the proverbial scrub, and be perfectly fine with it. Hell, it suits him.
The acting outclasses everything else about this movie. You care for the characters and feel for them. The opening scene is genuine and it isn’t trying to glorify war.
Hell yeah. 10/10 movie.
The opening scene is unrealistic af
@@kingsman3087 What do you mean?
I couldn't stand the arrogant Fury crew and was looking forward to watching them die.
Glorify War.... LoL. It's War. Once you've entered all that remains is victory death glory and honor. .......
4:19 I think the camera shot outside with Grady yelling was funny
Always wish this movie got a prequel, for all its inaccuracies the chemistry of the actors throughout the movie was insane on another level.
Since it was intended to be a movie, not a documentary, I'll accept whatever inaccuracies might be present, because the performances here were off the scale excellent. These five men should have been competing for Oscars for this movie.
I've rewatched this film a few times because it's great, but my conclusion from it is that this first scene is foreshadowing. Basically, War Daddy (Brad Pitt) has severe combat fatigue (or PTSD, if you prefer) and he doesn't really want to live anymore. He want's his crew to survive but he is suffering from clinical depression. Nothing matters to him other than his crew surviving, which seems honourable, but with the realisation and weariness to know that they're all fucked but he genuinely doesn't want them to go down with him despite the fact he realises that that is the way the prospects are written. Even if he survived the war, he wouldn't have survived the war, if you know what I mean.
Hmmm. I agree
I love posts like these, where someone clear put in thought and effort.
I thought that ending was a big mistake. War Daddy cared deeply about his men and showed good leadership for the most part throughout the movie. There's no way he would have sacrificed his men like that, for literally no reason. His men loved him, and he knows they would never leave abandon him, that's why Shia pretty much begs him to go. He wouldn't have let his personal issues condemn his men to certain death. There is no way he would have done that. There was no heroism in the final stand, it was just pure recklessness that got all of his men killed. It was a horrible ending.
@@justaguy328 An ending that ultimately saved the lives of countless U.S. troops.
How I feel everyday bruh
“Ayy you wanna talk mexican, join another tank, a mexican tank” this part made me laugh so hard even though i’m mexican😂
At least he didn't say "Mes-kin."
lol
Ya somos 2
4:36
@@venom14offRoad you have no idea what you just did
I spent many years on tank crews. This movie does a great job capturing the bond and the dynamic.
First three minutes…. No dialogue….. just scene setting… beautiful!!
This scene is so good. I don’t care how inaccurate or Hollywood this movie is. This scene is SO good. A crew talking amongst the crew. Remarkable and immersive acting. Their bond is impeccable.
“bUt... BuT ThE tIgEr sHoUlD oF sHoT fuRy fIrSt bEcaUsE fuRy has BigGer Pp”
this part seemed accurate. the movie turned to shit whenever there was combat
How is this movie inaccurate?
@@m33tballa a lot of it is but can be dismissed with critical thinking. Pak gun scene imo is terrible and I can’t figure out a logical reason as to why they can knock out or at least damage one of the shermans. Despite this, its my favorite movie cause of its grimly take on war and what it can do to humanity.
@@m33tballa you mean the part where tiger doesn't smoke all 3 shermans?
Very good opening scene, setting the mood and letting the audience get a feel for the characters right away.
Si tutto falso una porcheria di film fatto per glorificare degli assassini
I only felt for the dead guy and the driver. Wardaddy is a bit of a racist, Grady is a psycho, and the other one is Shia Lebeouf.
Not just the characters but setting the grim reality it was for tankers. U.s.a sheer losses of tanks is still a lesson that should not be forgotten.
I just realize the connection bewteeen his interaction with this horse and the story of the squad spending 3 days killing horses in France. He really has a love for them
It's also possible that he grew up on or worked at a stud ranch.
Read up on the Falaise pocket, it’s brutal
Horse be like "Fuck this shit, I'm out"
Then why was it standing there?
Despite its ( many) flaws , one thing that could be said for the Sherman, was it was a simple tank to maintain , compared to the over engineered Panther and Tiger tanks , which meant that more battlefield maintenance could be done by the tank crews themselves , rather than abandoning the tank , or waiting for recovery crews to arrive to salvage the vehicle, as was the case with many Panzer 5's and 6's
Ah yes, the age old saying that hasn't been regurgitated by so many.
@@convertible4925 but it IS an undeniable truth
@@dovidell doesn't mean you have to repeat it until your brain explodes
@Duncan Macleod you’re a communist, aren’t you? 😊
They could not just ship the Shermans back to the factory, could they? Having an ocean between your factories and yout battlefield has its quirks....
Pitt's timing can sometimes be next level. "We're alive, we're here..." "God's grace." Two words. The whole complexity of the character opens the way he hits those words. Pro.
Excellent film. Strategically they may make a few errors. But they more than make up for it in emotionality. You can feel the brotherhood that has been built between these men over three long years of continuous battle. They capture it so well. And that is a hard thing to do. And I applaud them for it.
Assessment of strategies in a movie seems fruitless and egocentric.
@@benjaminlear1619 Fruitless? Undoubtably. Egocentric? I wouldn't say that ...
@@I_Don_t_want_a_handle egocentric is correct. Someone always wants to try and say they would have done it better.
Yeah, errors like German AT guns missing tanks not even 200 meters out and driving in a straight line towards them. Should've been like shooting fish in a barrel... With a rifle.💯🤦♂️🤣
Like the movie, brad Pitt excellent, but that Tiger tank scene ugh, with an 88mm they stayed at range, picked off enemy tanks till they ran out of ammo, or fuel or were knocked out, I understand the need for the drama but that scene wasn’t accurate.
What an excellent movie. These clips prove it's so much better than I remember it, and requires another rewatch.
@rocketassistedgoat1079
2000 mules is a much better movie, especially since it will trigger your radical marxist TDS
@rocketassistedgoat1079
Trump 2024! winning for a third time - i can't wait to see the look on your face :) M A G A! keep cryin'
@@AUMINER1 A propaganda conspiracy movie... Part of Operation Black Magic Birth Certificate
@@rtqii Every time Trump ins on deck you little sycophants run around like chickens with your heads off shouting about fake news that will never materialize.
2017: Comey will get Trump! 2018: Mueller will get Trump! 2019: Avenatti will get Trump! 2020: Tish James will get Trump! 2021: AG Garland will get Trump! 2022: Jack Smith will get Trump! 😅😅😆😆😆😆
I've been obsessed with this movie for the last week for some reason.
because of the war in ukriane
god same. watched this movie years ago and i know i enjoyed it then but i watched it again recently and cant stop thinking about.
Great casting in this movie, these guys kill it.
That's not all they kill.
I've seen this film several time through, not a weak moment in it. The intensity of the battles, the comradery within the tank crew, the deprivation and perversity of war, and the realism, especially that booming sound of the shells from the tankers' perspective, second to none.
*camaraderie
What is great about this film is it’s tenacity; sending young men to kill other young men. War is killing.
This movie shows it better than many others
This movie shows it better than many others PROPAGANDA. From Dunkirk, at the beginning of World War II, to Normandy, almost at the end, the Allied Armies did not put a single soldier in Germany. No a single one. The participation of the Allied Forces in Europe was limited to Aerial Bombing. These actions received a lot of publicity to make us believe that the Aerial Bombings were winning the war. But, there is a very long list of Bombing cities by “Mistake”. The bombing of Nijmegen in the Netherlands (February 1944), it occurred when US bombers returning from a failed mission, as occurred in most cases, were looking for "Optional" targets. Nearly 1,000 Dutch civilians were killed by the bombing. It is proven fact that Aerial Bombardment does NOT win wars, unless it is Atomic. Aerial Bombard't can destroy cities but does NOT destroy armies. If there is any doubt, then Nazi Germany would have defeated England, after nearly a year of bombing, or the US would have won in Korea, Vietnam or Afghanistan. Propaganda has always led us to believe that we, "The Yankees", beat Hitler. But, I have news for you: The US did not win the war against Germany. The Russians won it. The Allied Army of the US, UK, Canada, Belgium and France (and Poland, and other countries), was able to reach Normandy, thanks to the Soviets destroying the Nazis in Stalingrad, Leningrad and in Kurks, in 1943. It took them 289 days but the Russians won and without the help of nobody… OF NOBODY! Normandy was until June 1944, and Mr. “Hollywood” Patton did NOT manage to set foot on Germany until February 1945, when the Red Army was going over Berlin. In Fact, General Patton was able to enter Germany only when the Russians were 150 kilometers from the Oder River (LOL). The Allies were defeated at Arnhem (Market Garden Sep. 25-1944), and at The Battle of the Bulge (Jan. 25-1945). General Patton was paralyzed without fuel, while the Red Army was preparing for its last offensive into Berlin. Look here: The average age of the German Army that fought in Normandy was between 18 and 24 years old. And these soldiers faced each other in a ratio of 27 to 1, without Tanks, without Artillery, no Navy nor Air Force. To make matters worse, knowing that four Parachute Divisions were inland behind their backs. Never the less, It took the Allies 8 months to advance only 500 kilometers from Normandy to Arnhem, and from there, start the Withdrawal back to the border of France/Belgium (What?), facing a virtually defeated German Army cuz USSR. It's a Verifiable Fact that is written in all the History Books, that the German High Command surrendered to the Russian Generals six days BEFORE the first US soldier set foot in Berlin. Well… The US has been defeated in Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, Lebanon, Somalia and now, in Afghanistan. However, the powerful US Army defeated the tiny island of Grenada (1983), as it faced a fearsome army of 287 Police Officers, since Grenada does NOT have an army. In fact, they were half this number, since the Policemen on the afternoon shift had not yet come to work. What seems incredible is the fact that the US was defeated by Vietnam. What? Did the US lose the war against Nam? OMG! Against a poor country, underdeveloped, malnourished, without Navy, without Air Force, NO Marines, Green Berets, SEALs, Rangers, Delta Force, USMC, Rambos or Chuck Norris. Defeated by a country of peasants without strategic plans, no B-59 Bombers, PT-Boats, Northrop F-5 "Freedom Fighter", nor Atomic Submarines. Without Aircraft Carriers, NO Continental Missiles, nor Tanks, Choppters, AR-15, Gatlin Machines’, Flamethrowers, Napalm, Agent Orange. NADA! And to top it off, defeated by an army of teenagers who had no shoes: WITHOUT SHOES!!! Army that fought with bamboo sticks!!! Charlie Kicked Our Asses and even invaded our Embassy. Jeezzz!!! Here is the Duty, Courage and Chanting of Heroism of the US Army. This is the True Story of our Country. This is the History that is already written in the US Books. And the History that was written in Afghanistan is made with the same ink. All the "Glory" of the US Armed Forces is just PROPAGANDA.
More recently, some wars are about making the opponent unwilling to fight. Some are about inactivating the equipment, such that it doesn’t matter what the opponent wants.
Some more recent methods disable the computers or the communication, which would have been used to direct personnel to multiply force through equipment.
@@nelsblair2667especially inglourious basterds
This movie was hard core realism. Not super hero comic book fantasy. It was gritty and grim. No glamour, just war.
4:14 the arguing from the tank killed me 😭
Several recent war movies have made reference to empathy felt toward the horses in war.
Like the soldiers, the horses don't wanna be there either.
One of the most emotional war memorials I've ever visited was the War Animals memorial in London.
"Dedicated to all the animals that served and died alongside our forces in wars throughout time. ...they had no choice"
Brad Pitt was never on my radar until Basterds, a new found appreciation for exactly how talented he is...
like his worst movie almost
Have you… ever watched fight club?
@@mr.sharpback5106 not yet. I will
Troy
You want some good brad Pitt roles?
Snatch, Burn After Reading
If you’re partial to Tom Cruise as well try Interview With A Vampire
Brad Pitt rocks as a tank Commander in this movie. The crew rocks as tank crewmen. Their stress really shows. Great job Men...
can I just say a massive thank you for not doing a 5-minute intro into liking and subscribing we all know that that's what you want . by putting up that little cartoon reminds us but we don't have to endure the sales pitch thank you
LeBouf is a goofball but MAN he's a good actor.
He's definitely calmed down recently.
He reformed. He's had an experience and became Catholic.
The most unrealistic thing about this movie is Shia Labeouf being the stable, sober and grounded one of the bunch.
Sober maybe but he is a religious nut. The mental state of the other crew members is caused by battle fatigue and PTSD, Shia's character has a mental illness caused by religion.
He's very much like this now.
You're a legit hater dude... he straightened his life up
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
He… apparently is now? I didn’t see that twist coming
Hard to believe that a WW2 Sherman tank is no bigger than a modern day SUV car. This was home for 4 people.
5. Red was killed.
@@nicholasmuro1742so yeah 4 people and a corpse
May they all be remembered forever. All of them!
How many do you remember?
brad pitt shoud have got the academy award for this performance.
The opening scene has a dream sequence quality that is haunting
Shia Labeouf is one weird dude but an outstanding actor. Pitt is also great in this role.
Excellent movie. Before many pick it apart I'm sure it's accurate in many ways. The clip on its making showed alot of time on detail to the point of tank school.
Although a movie, the proximity and dynamics of the personalities in a war and confined in a tank cannot be imagined. Think of the possible diversity of a MODERN American crew in battle if you did not like your commander or mates.. Im sure it's all put aside when its time to fight though.
The interior of a tank is substantially more cramped than what they show here. You get real comfortable with being in someone’s space
@@mileshudson8011 I not talking about personal space, i talking about being around someone you dislike..
The only thing worse at that time would have been a sub.
How have I only just noticed that the white horse in this scene also reappears in the final scene where Norman wakes up under Fury
The way he acts with the horse and the music is fire. Freaking Shia Labeouf john bernthal gordo the acting is great
Killing that German on the horse felt like something out of Inglorious Basterds lmao, he was channeling his inner Aldo for a second there
GODDAMMIT BRAD PITT KILLED ME, I GUESS I SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN RIDING LIKE I WAS AT THE PARK ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON.
Your right he should have rode that horse more tactically. Some barrel rolls would have saved him.
Yeah, it was in the script. Sorry man.
Yeah, it was the director's way, sorry man
@@frost3193 I've seen a number of his films that people claim of historically correct and I laugh so hard I fell out of my chair Saving Private Ryan the Waffen SS would never have entered a town like that like they were marching down Main Street on Parade years of fighting on Eastern Front vicious street fighting against the Russians taught them to enter a town on both flanks in the rear
After watching the movie for the first time years ago I thought that a good opening scene would have shown a large scrapyard filled with Shermans ready to be disassembled for scrap after the war....two workers walk up to the rusting "Fury" and look at the battle damage and one says "looks like this one seen a lot of action"...and the other one says "yeah" while he fires up his blowtorch....then the movie fades back into the scene with them in the tank and "War Daddy" ready to jump the German officer on the white horse......then we have the rest of the movie up until the last scene with Norman being taken away in the ambulance....we then fade back to the scrapyard with the sparks flying from the blowtorches and the word "Fury" is shot in a close up and then a wide shot view showing all the tanks in the yard waiting to be scrapped.
Awesome idea
They scrapped a lot of footage that better explained why War Daddy was in the Army and why he took a protective interest in Norman. Inclusion of these scenes would have made the movie better but much longer.
@@panzerabwerkanone we're still waiting for that uncut version to this day, or a prequel to Fury.
That would just be too much like the opening of Saving Private Ryan
@@HESSIAN578I'd take that as a compliment....same sentiment intended.
Just to clarify the intro, many countries used children in some form. German soldiers I think were at least 15 or 16, German had a youth division of 16-25+ and a programme of younger children but not in combat roles. However I think towards the end I remember an artillery unit manned by 12-15 year old, possibly even younger. Soviet Union had people over 16 in secondary units from Central Asia but 18-19+ for combat. UK had 17 year olds, Poland had conscripted 12-15 (and below 14) years old in units. The US had an 18 year old conscription but thought it was odd that they could die for their country but not drink alcohol yet face charges. Japan also mobilised youth between 14-17.
Many US children from the ages of 15-17 lied or faked birth certificates to join the military. Everyone had children fighting unfortunately.
Sending older teenagers to war is completely different from total war. Defending one's home is completely different from sending people across the sea to fight in a foreign land.
As of 1939, the Hitler Youth conscripted boys from the age of 13. Obviously, if you wanted your family to get a knock on the door and the prospect of an extended camping holiday you didn't have to turn up. From the age of 13 these children were given training and weapons and were expected to fight. A lot served on flak guns, but by April 1945 they were front-line troops.
The United States would send teenagers to war during WWII as well if the teen volunteered and the parent signed a waiver. It wasn't common but it was known to have happened a few times.
I absolutely love this dialogue!
FURY is one of my favorite action movie..
It’s not an action movie it’s a war film
More of a horror story
@@jay4sizzle that’s a very astute observation as well. War is one of the biggest real life horrors anyone could experience
I didn't know about this movie. Been watching clips for an hour, and I have to say, incredibly good acting all the way around. Good everything, actually. I'm just especially impressed with the acting.
"you're an animal, all you understand is the fist and boot."
damn
This scene is reminiscent of the opening scene of The Big Red One
This movie was phenomenal. Nearly a documentary except for only a few inconsistencies in it during the Panzer tank fight. But damnit, this was how those soldiers lived. By the seat of their pants. Beautiful film! ❤️
A documentary. WTF? There isn't a single accurate scene in this movie. Every scene is a trope.
0:31 "And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth..." and then Brad Pitt put a stop to that😆
That last arty round right after the end of the clip hit the tank and killed them all.
this scene and movie in general really reminded me that it wasn’t a easy walk straight to berlin after the d-day landings, both sides had to suffer until the conclusion of the war
5:40 the last thing you want to hear when your a tank commander
Rains coming
this was a great movie. I would rank it up there with the big red one, perhaps even better. if you haven't seen the big red one yet watch it and compare. it's a very good movie.
one of the best scenes in the movie
I can watch this movie 100 more times and still be glued
absolutely brutal scene - romantic, Napoleonic trudge through the aftermath of battle......and then the reality; great scene
I really like the cinematography where you see the silhouette of tank rolling forward amongst mortar fire.
One of the very best war flicks ever made.
Fury is my favorite rom com
One man and his tank find the white horsey
This is the best movie Brad Pitt ever made.
Fight club and 7 were dam good...and money ball
"What's in the box??"
This music perfectly encapsulates that even in war we can find our humanity soo nice that he let the horse go
Not sure why, but I kind of expected Brad Pitt to scalp that guy.
Yea, hmm, that’s an odd feeling. I don’t think Aldo…..I mean Brad, would do that
You all owe me 100 Nazi scalps!!
100 Natzi scahlps!
"I want my scalp!"
Because his character in Legends of the Fall would have
The relief you feel when that tank starts moving at 3mph. No strange feeling to anyone who's been stranded with a dead vehicle out in the wilderness
I've seen this movie several times already and now I'm going to watch it one more time thanks to this clip.
Para mi, es de lo mejor de Brad Pitt, todos muy buenos personajes ... una muy buena película para mi.
Rewatching this, the way he pets the horse hits a little different after hearing Gordo’s story about what they did with those animals.
One of the Best War Movie Ever 🔥🔥🔥🔥
🤦😂
What I loved about this scene was that later on you understood why he was sympathetic to the horse
When I have a bad day I think about brave gentlemen fighting in WW2. Not even close,,, I can compare a bad day of mine with what they went thru. I wouldn’t have the balls to go thru all that and just not go insane in my head
I like horses. They're cute! Horses are nice.
I like horses.
Man! now I wanna see the entire movie....again!
Only just realised - the horse passes the tank again at the end of the film, just as Norman is being found
2nd A/D... 88-91,, very proud to have served under that lineage, it had still bred strong and true up until then...old "blood and guts" sure knew how to create an American soldier.... just my thoughts...
Just checkout the music while Brad climbing on the tank 😍😍😍, David ayer did great job in this movie ,one of my favorite
This is like something out of Revelation
I lost it when he started kicking Grady 🤣🤣🤣💀💀💀
Amazing movie and cast.
I was wondering if anyone caught the symbolism the white horse. It represents death fourth horsemen. Explains why they all died at the end it came for them.
In April of 1945, most German troops, with the exception of some SS troops and over-excited Hitler Youth, were trying to think of anyway they could surrender to anyone who wasn't a Russian. The bloodiest fighting was still in the East, particularly around Berlin and Budapest.
The writing of Jon Bernthal's character is really underrated. He's a meathead, he's undeniably an asshole, a tough person to get along with; but he's usually pretty much right about everything he says, even if he says it in the worst possible way. It allows his character to be tragically relatable even if you don't LIKE his character as a person, and over the course of the movie you can see how his personality might have ended up this way.
First time seeing this scene since it’s been out and watching fighting l/battle (Fury) scenes. sept. 19
Note to the writers, a soldier would say "Yes, Sargeant" to an Army NCO and NOT "Yes, Sir"....a NCO addressed as "Sir" would say, "I'm a Sargeant, I work for a living"...
This movie is unrealistic, but the soundtrack is glorious!
A great movie for about half a dozen reasons
Imagine a story like this but with mechs
Now that is realiism. Period 🔰
3:40
Never noticed that before. Didn't know Daisy Duke cut offs were a fashion back in 1945...on glossy poster paper too boot!
Yep, I know when I have an important message to deliver, I like to ride right through a close quarters combat area that's still on fire.
Just like in Forest Gump, we see the feather to feather scene. The white horse represents death walking throughout the battlefield until the end of the movie it finally leaves.
Everyone is talking about the horse
Is no one gonna talk about this tank crew? 3:42
Even the horse is like “thanks for getting that nazi prick off my back”
In reality, they would have had some great stories to tell!
My take on the tank crew is it shows a group of men who would never have been together in normal life-- but how war, and the confines of the tank created a bond that is unforgettable. The scene in the town with the two women underlines how different the men actually are in somewhat normal circumstances, outside the tank. But inside the tank is a brotherhood and common cause that overwhelms everything else.
Spectacular film.
"Hey now.... this is a American tank, if you want to speak Mexican join a Mexican tank."
i'm glad to read this. how many "estadounidenses" knows how many countries with other names are in america? i'm proud to be american, in costa rica.
@@freddygarcia3049 he is quoting the line from the movie bro chill out
@@freddygarcia3049 It’s a purposefully flawed statement. People no longer speak like this. Remember, the events and people in this film are 77 years old.
@freddy garcia I'm sorry but you cannot be American if you live anywhere other than the U.S.A., and being in South America is not justification either. Sorry pal but that just the way it is. It's what our great great GREAT grandparents came up with.
I feel badly for the horse... he looked so sad
The horse is free now, not a slave to the German military of WWII 😜
Why is it so hard to get good movie clips on UA-cam feed? I watched so many and yet I get none
*“Rains comin’.”*
I am glad they are finally talking properly for the 30s 40s
This scene made me imagine a group of soldiers, maybe American, maybe German, maybe close to this battlefield, maybe not. Out looking to kill when off in the distance they’ll see a white horse galloping away from gunfire and they will wonder if what they’re seeing is real.
Same as the conversation about the horses they had to put down. The eyes see it but the brain can’t make any sense of it, good or bad, we’re only human.
Brad Pitt the only man who can punk Shane/Punisher successfully
“Cause you’re an animal, a dog. Only thing you understand is the fist and boot.”