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Comments 16 - 28 of 28

fjcaetano's avatar

fjcaetano

This movie should have ended with spoiler. Black screen, credits roll.
9 years 2 months ago
Zangin's avatar

Zangin

I'm not a big fan of war movies. However, this one in particular I do not like. This movie is neither pro-war nor anti-war. This isn't bad for a movie and others have pulled it off well. However, rather than seeming neutral to the horrors of the war, it comes off as having split opinions on whether war is necessary/heroic or terrible. The first half seems to denounce the tank crew that the film focuses on as hopeless, wretched people corrupted by war and then in the second half, seems to praise their heroic glory in taking a valiant stand against the German scum. It just all doesn't fit together and really ruined what could have been a somewhat decent movie.
9 years 3 months ago
audiopile's avatar

audiopile

OK, this was a stimulating hollywood modernized version of WW2 fantasy, but it's no history lesson. The tracers and wardrobe are not accurate to the era, not even trying to be. They hit all the points that make a successful movie but I'm not falling for it. Yuck. And has Brad Pitt lost his chops? Horrible wooden acting. 4/10.
9 years 3 months ago
lmkmoviemaniac's avatar

lmkmoviemaniac

An authentic and brutal World War 2 movie centered on a battle tank (belonging to the US Allies) helmed by a seasoned sergeant who leads his battle-hardened crew by example. They go from one dangerous mission to the other, against the Nazis in their own land. The crew also comprises a rookie, who is thrown into the battle field and picks up the ropes slowly but surely.

The film is packed with tremendous battle sequences, lots of raw emotions, scenes of team bonding and enjoyable war-lingo and nicknames. The music score is haunting and mood-setting, and the filming and detailing are as real as it can get. Brad Pitt lords over all his scenes, while the other main support actors fit the bill well.

Ought to be a favorite among war movie buffs.
9 years 3 months ago
Micaescalada's avatar

Micaescalada

Star Wars?
9 years 3 months ago
V012's avatar

V012

David Ayer has devolped a very keen sense of style. He has repeating ideas in film, such as Fury and End of Watch. Such ideas as intense scenes, strong attempts to horrify viewers, blunt truth, gritty and dark atmospheres, focus on cops, military or policeman, bloody formulas, spoiler ect. These sorts of motifs in his films seem like he is a perfect choice for Sucide Squad considering what WRB is going for.
9 years 4 months ago
Ressa's avatar

Ressa

I think Fury is what it attempts to be. David Ayer wrote and directed a raw, unsentimental and explicit war movie without bullshit. I don't see the lack of background stories as a bad thing. There is none, because Ayer doesn't want there to be. It's war in its rawest form "Dont get to close to anyone" as Pitt aka. ‘Wardaddy’ tells ‘Norman’ in the beginning. This goes for us too. Even though we don't know the crews childhood background Ayer and the fine acting performances manage to establish both repulsion, sympathy and understanding for the 5 main characters.

This movie is not propagandic or patriotic, as some comments suggest, when all the killing, badmouthing and so on aren't objectively justified in the movieplot. We simply just see the war from the view of a single American tanks crew. That's it! And my guess is that such a crew really wasn't fund of German Soldiers in real life either, but that's doesn't mean they are right about everything they say and that the Germans weren't humans. We are just shown what possible could have happened in a American tank. Nothing else is insinuated.

I agree that it is not a deep movie full of character-development and well-written dialogue, but it doesn't tries or needs to be. It has its flaws and weaknesses, but basically fulfills its goal. Fury is in the end, and in all its simplicity, a good and entertaining war movie in in my opinion.
9 years 4 months ago
Tezelian's avatar

Tezelian

A very good and gritty war movie. Basically the best tank war movie I have seen.
9 years 5 months ago
Chikamaharry's avatar

Chikamaharry

Who, this movie was intense. Really solid, until the last "fight". Felt like that kind of fell through. Also, very little backstory on the people in this movie. Makes you not care for them so much. Probably just Pitt and Logan Lermans character you actually care for.

The movies has the best action sequence in a tank you'll ever see. Overall, this movie has really cool action. But it is not able to build up the characters, and makes it ultimately fall kind of flat. That really important to a War movie, makes you care for them, their struggles and if the ultimately die. But, as I said the action is spectacular, so go see it as a decent action movie.
9 years 5 months ago
DisneyStitch's avatar

DisneyStitch

I think it's because I've seen way too many war pictures to name, but I really didn't think it was nearly as groundbreaking as some of the pundits are claiming it to be. We hardly get any back story on all the characters we see and so it makes it very difficult to get in touch with any of them. Even Pitt's character is merely just "another guy in a tank" along with the rest of the cast. It is very gritty however and you can tell they were going for a Saving Private Ryan-ish kind of vibe for many scenes but it doesn't resonate nearly as well. It's an entertaining movie but I won't be putting it anywhere near my top 10 war picture list anytime soon.
9 years 6 months ago
Boei's avatar

Boei

Great movie that turns to shit in the final chapter
9 years 6 months ago
The_Comatorium's avatar

The_Comatorium

Writer/Director David Ayer has had an interesting career so far. We have seen his brilliant times with the writing of Training Day and shit, even U-571. We’ve also seen his horrible times with Sabotage, Harsh Times, and the absolutely atrocious SWAT. I’ll never forget a character in SWAT, before blowing his brains out, looking toward Samuel L. Jackson and delivering this gem of a one liner…”Goddammit Sarge!” If you’ve seen the film you know what I mean. I can’t look at Josh Charles the same anymore. Ayer is obviously talented but I feel like he slips into a bad crime novelist whose books frequent airports from time to time. Training Day was obviously amazing, but besides End of Watch, his work has been mediocre at best recently. Fury, was ultimately a frustrating film with some moments of brilliance. The likes of a full length film with no glaring problems might be behind Ayer for now.

There hasn’t been a film dedicated to tank crews that I can remember. You see the air force, ground troops, hell, even fighter pilots highlighted in films, yet until now nobody has highlighted the work that tank crews did during WW2. For the most part, it was almost a death sentence. Like flamethrowers in Japan, a tank is like a huge target for enemy fire. You’re not going to last long unless you take the tank out FIRST. US tanks were also poorly made compared to superior German Tiger tanks. US tanks were slower and would routinely be taken out by enemy artillery. In short, tankers didn’t live long. This crew has though. Brad Pitt and company have been together for years and when a newcomer (Lerman) comes along, he needs to be broken in fast or else he’ll risk the lives of the entire crew. We’ve seen this before with Ayer. A newbie comes into the world of hardened veterans and has to see the horrors of the job before he can become one of them. Honestly, my interest in this film wasn’t the story. I’m a big WW2 fan and the concept of a film dedicated to tank crews scratched my history itch.

I had problems with the film. For one, the music in the film was just overbearing. The film was intense enough. I didn’t need a blaring orchestra to remind me that I should be in suspense. Somehow, the death and firebombs going off on the screen did it for me. It was distracting. I also had a problem with a few scenes that not only took the pace of the film and brought it to a grounding halt, but it also didn’t make a lick of sense. The biggest offender of this was the breakfast scene with the German girls. The only thing I liked about this was the performance of Shia LaBeouf but we’ll get to more of that soon. Jon Bernthal tries WAY too hard to be a crazy person and the film decided that rape didn’t exist in War and that every German girl who was being FORCED to cook and serve these troops would also sleep with them. It was insulting. The film had some of the most violent scenes in a war movie since Saving Private Ryan but they had to sprinkle glitter over these men when they interacted with women. It was just odd. The whole scene with the younger girl and Lerman was just a set up to what happened after they exited the house. It was cheap and amateur. The final scene was also completely nonsensical and dragged out. A particular scene, after the battle, after literally hundreds of people died, was laugh out loud bad. Those of you who have seen it will know what I’m talking about.

So, what was good? Well, the sound design was top notch. I expect nominations for that team because each round and explosion sounded like the real thing. There were two tank battle scenes that REALLY stood out thanks to amazing sound design and very intense interior shots of the tank crew in action from inside the tank. I was on the edge of my seat for these. The camerawork was also overall pretty great. The opening scene looked like a leftover scene from War Horse. Yes David Ayer, I just compared you to Spielberg. You can relish in that. The acting was also top notch from Pitt and LaBeouf, specifically Shit. These are the roles that the kid needs to be doing. He needs to take this crazy persona of his and stick it into his acting. He was a marvel in this film, showing an unbelievable amount of range. His character, Bible, was a God loving Christian outside of the tank, and a ruthless gunner inside. LaBeouf handled it wonderfully. I was very impressed. Pitt was also very solid as the leader although he really shined when interacting with LaBouf and Lerman. The rest held their own with Lerman giving a good performance and Pena and Bernthal just kid of slogging through.

The film was worth a ticket. It was a bleak look into war that didn’t stop when things got too hectic, unless German lasses were involved. There were some intense scenes and a whole storyline that was devoted to tank crews but there were some serious flaws in the logic behind some of the scenes in the film. It also serves as proof that Shia LaBeouf is still a talented actor when given the right role.

3/5

www.thoughtsfromthebooth.com
@booththoughts
9 years 6 months ago
jdjudge's avatar

jdjudge

Intensely unbalanced, misjudged, hypermasculine bullshit. Tries REALLY hard to be Saving Private Ryan and emulate its points about the lack of humanity in war, without actually understanding that that film's graphic nature wasn't meant to inspire an us-against-"them" xenophobic shoot 'em up. Lerman's character spoiler starts off showing intense pacifism, and by the last act turns into the most bloodthirsty of all; and his pacifism was never about thinking about the German soldiers as actual people, just that he didn't want to kill, because it was only about *him* in that regard. You can *tell* the attempted point being made about war turning good men into animals, but then they decide to show hundreds of Germans' heads exploding with total glee and satisfaction. All this, without even discussing that 66% of the only three female characters in the film exist for the main cast to put their dicks inside of, and then are disposed of. Just a truly miserable experience.

Bonus: a guy in my screening got up afterward and shouted to me and my boyfriend "and we're supposed to be nice to THEIR kids!" Way to go, everyone.
9 years 6 months ago

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