Hands down my favorite scene in the entire movie slam fucking full of badassery. The critics didn't give this movie a bad review. Not by any means. Still, it's one of the most underrated films to have ever depicted WWII
1:57 is a criminally underrated scene. Everyone thinks that he’s laughing like it’s a joke but it’s not. Those two actions just taught him about 75% of that gun. The cover had an in-built safety piece that stopped the bolt from moving when closed, so when he’s explaining the cover he’s legitimately telling him how to arm the gun and how to make it safe. The M3 Grease Gun was designed to be cheap and stupidly easy to learn.
I told Shia in real life that we quoted this movie in our ambulance "best job I ever had" he got a kick out of it. Worked with him on set for American Honey. Really nice guy tbh. His D list costars were pretentious but he was just a normal guy then. Same day "just do it" came out actually
Shia is one actor I'd be pretty happy to meet in real life. Never been big on viewing celebrities as special or anything but he doesn't seem to be like the rest of Hollywood. Seems down to earth and human. Folks like Shia, Jim Carrey, Robin Williams in his time.
@ArthurShelby... On set for American Honey in a Rich neighborhood in western Omaha. Worked a few scenes in there where he shows up waving a gun around in a backyard with a pool. Shot about a day after "Just do it" became a meme. Hell I didn't know about it until I saw people on set doing the stance behind his back. But yeah dreaming this all up
I don't think I'll ever stop finding the panzerfaust scene disturbing. Everything from the screams, to the realisation that it was just children out there. It's so fucked, all of it. It's partly why I still love this film. The Allies are pushing into the heart of Germany, but they're not elated, in high mood, thinking the war is almost over. They're all so burned out, numb, desensitised. The last ditch, desperate attempts to resist make the invaders more and more apathetic. They're watching children attack them now, they've lost all pretence of being proud, noble soldiers. They've got a job to do and they just want it to be over now..
One reason why as a veteran I don't always tell people. They think I'm some type of hero or something. I just did my job. That job just so happen to be extreme in every way possible but I still signed that paper of my own free will.
@certifiedgigachad3294 I will say that after being injured by a hand grenade in Afghanistan I hope and wish that nobody has to go through that. I know it's naive but I don't care. War sucks.
I remember watching this movie with our grandfather who served back then and he was explicitly mad on how wrong this scene is 0:22 , apparently never in a million years would a truck carrying the deceased would drive to camp as it would lower the morale on the soldiers on that area, and they would drive it far away from the camp where no one could see and there will be a team there who will directly handle the coffins back to the main base to get them home.
apart from the vehicles and equipment there was very little realistic in this film, it had so much potential but bad writing and weak characters plus unrealistic combat made it an absolute bore, I fell asleep at the cinema watching it.
I like the inclusion of the Nisei soldier at 1:07, escorting the SS prisoner. More than a few Japanese Americans served in the Army during WWII, they were barred from the Marines at the time, even as their families were interned back home. The 442nd RCT specifically was almost entirely made up of Japanese American soldiers, and they were one of the most highly decorated units of their size in the army at the time.
It's historically inaccurate, though. The army was segregated back then, so a Nisei soldier wouldn't be "hanging out" with white and latino soldiers. He would be in his own unit, with OTHER Asian soldiers.
@@wilb6657It isn’t, as there’s no guarantee that the Asian guy is Japanese, he could’ve been one of many Asians serving in integrated units. Segregation was really only between Black and White and Japanese and everyone else
Top's line about the SS being assholes and to "kill every one you see" is tragically ironic. As it was an SS soldier who spotted Norman whilst he hid under the tank, and decided to keep that info to himself.
@@MrIlleismmost likely it was just a kid like Norman. Same people different uniforms. The SS in 1945 was made up of conscripts and children in a lot of cases. Though some companies were also purely made out of criminals and fanatics.
@@MrIlleism"Why". The stoic look on the face of the German, knowing the hell they put each other through for hours; I like to think it was warrior honor. They were of equal age as well.
I think it was just a way of showing that not all German troops were the same or cold blooded killers, even if they were in the SS. There's still a piece of humanity even in our enemies. And I think the fact that they were both of roughly the same age played a part, too. They were both like 19 or 20 at most. So even though they were enemies and didn't even speak the same language, there was a commonality between them in that moment@@MrIlleism
@@BryonLetterman The vast majority of German troops by 1945 were mainly conscripts from the former Austo-Hungarian Empire and other independent German-related states/Confederation of Rhine that didn't align fully with the Prussian/Berlin Germans. (Ex: Just like the United States was divided up with different idealities Germany was once decentralized under the Holy Roman Empire that operated differently between Prussia & Austria) Like in Saving Private Ryan, there were Czechs on D-Day, yet American soldiers shot them, surrendering just to prove a point to the audience that the Allies weren't all saints either unless they didn't understand the language or did the more profound research of D-Day. Too much entertainment today simply makes the German people ALL evil beings for all of the time and shows how the Allied side didn't have any flaws or mistakes that they too caused criminal war atrocities. I tend to think that most Germans wanted to restore the status quo of the Holy Roman Empire's/Kasierreich's WW1 influence & prestige, but some elements of them that aligned with the Austo-Hungarians before or Napoleon's pact never wanted to follow Hitler's vision or his Holocaust fully. Hence, what lead to the Austrian resistance all the way into 1945 and eventually at the Battle of Itter Castle where some Germans fought alongside the US troops against the SS.
...except that they were P-51 Mustangs which normally liked to stay up high - P-47 Thunderbolts with big rugged radial engines and all kinds of guns and ordinance were the choice for low-altitude fighter-bomber missions.
'The greatest generation' is not a lie. People committed suicide if they weren't able to serve. Now, who would? We live on others backs. Then expect our rights to be preserved. I have a comfortable life. Wouldn't without those Men and women. To all who served 👍
@@JC-jk3kl Well Saving Private Ryan stands at the top, in terms of production and realism not much competes except maybe Band of Brothers and the Pacific, and Generation Kill is another very good one.
The guy that played Norman, the young recruit, was extremely good in this movie Brad & Shia are obviously big names, but Logan Lerman was extremely good at playing a young, confused recruit that doesnt want to be there Great performance
i never realized before but wardaddy claiming "theyre it" at 9:00 shows his dissatisfaction with being the new pointmen for the tank convoy. so in his eyes norman didnt just let the other tank get killed but also increased their chance of dying too
@@paulcarpenter7844not for nothing. He put his hands on his children and threw things at them. He still hasn’t apologized. Now some of his children won’t speak to him. He crossed lines and now he’s getting critical feedback.
9 years since the first time I watched Fury, multiple times watching it already, this is the first time I see a butt naked man on t0p of the tank in that specific scene 😂 good spot
@@Geojr815 the ones unfit for combat, absolutely. The children, the elderly, the women, all of whom were born Americans on this soil. I'm sure a vast majority of fit men were also sent to camps in fear of moles, but there were absolutely soldiers of all decent in the American military, in a WORLD WAR.
that's not the case in one of the scene that got cut out from final form wardaddy told norman to NOT FIRE THE GUN UNLESS HE SAID SO the video: ruclips.net/video/zsvXpOT3MvA/видео.html&feature=share9
@@tubeguy4066 Or maybe, just maybe, it’s supposed to show how the new guy can’t soldier well. Therefore having a character arc over the course of the film.
Norman said it himself. It was just a kid. They didn’t look older than 13. I would struggle to pull the trigger on a 13 year old regardless of whether or not he was holding a weapon. The Nazis were undoubtedly evil. The Volkssturm was one of the cruelest things Hitler did to the German people. He didn’t surrender. He made the children and the old fight.
Story super shit and highly American dramatized Just the usual for Hollywood The effect and the way the movie is made however is really good and I like the grittiness
What's good about this movie is that they don't hesitate to show the horrors of War, children brainwashed into taking part in a war for a cause they are taught to be true, civilians are always caught in the cross fire and for those who survive, their lives can never go back to normal.
I think this is the best war movie ever made. The German music, believable characters, realistic script, daunting visuals, etc. It's an absolute masterpiece.
If they could have made this movie with Fury having just a *little* less plot armor it would be a top 3 war film for me. Its so bleak and depressing but I still wish I could be in that tank with that crew. Aaaaand then 2 pak40s in ambushing concealed positions whiff 6 shots. Frustrating, but I still love the movie.
The mistake Norman made was not shooting, but calling out for contact. Doesn't matter if it's a animal or a person. He should've said something. He could've fired a warning shot so at least someone else fired did the kill for him.
@@ThinhNguyen-ql2dn I agree. There is so much that Hollywood does in this movie just for drama. Ultimately it's on War Daddy for not making sure Norman was properly trained.
Of course it's Hollywood's movies... But, better movies as human story during war... Really human team against horror... 27 time seen... Best work for my life 😊
I think the delayed laughter after the Hitler chocolate joke is intentional and not just left in but I could be wrong. They are coping with their emotions constantly while trying to do their jobs and the delayed emotion of levity from the joke is meant to highlight how war forces you to suppress all emotion even if its just simple laughter. This movie is so good on multiple levels and definitely worth the watch if you have never seen it.
00:05 Ironic as that’s kind of how we did win the war. German tanks were ridiculously over engineered and had plenty of thick arm and big guns. But they didn’t produce a lot of them relatively. Whereas American and Russian tanks were simpler, the armour wasn’t as good nor the guns as big, but they each built a lot of them! So sure 5 went out but one came back. That was kind of the US military’s approach to Tank warfare in WWII. Why build one very good heavily armoured tank when you can have five less armoured ones?
Beyond all the flaws of the movie, I liked how they paid extra rage to the SS vs. The wermarcht regulars. The Wermarcht were just regular soldiers but the SS were true Nazis soaked in ideology.
Maybe on the Western Front, but on the Eastern Front the Wehrmacht was just as complicit in atrocities and ethnic cleansing as the SS. The "Clean Wehrmacht" myth largely created to justify creating a West German army.
@@boijames3253 he's not. The "clean Wehrmacht" is a myth, it's literal propaganda pushed by German generals at the end of WWII as a condition of West Germany being on the side of the Western Allies. Look up the Himmerod Memorandum, they demanded we accept and push the lie in order the sanitise the public perception of the German Army and pin all of the atrocities on the now destroyed SS. They were so concerned with restoring the honour of the German Army they demanded we warp history to pin all of the blame on a group that no longer existed. Convenient, clean, and it fucking worked. People still repeat literal Nazi propaganda to this day. Their national ideology at the time was soaked in racial superiority and eugenics, the idea that only the card carrying Nazi's supported this is absurd and I don't understand how more people don't question it and research it honestly.
This scene packs just about every war movie cliche into a tight nine-minute bundle. The baby-faced newbie who has to grow up in a hurry, the baby-faced officer whose more experienced underlings treat him with benign contempt, the potpourri of southern accents, the one religious guy… It ain’t great.
great video, very well put together! i found the exploration of violence interesting, but it feels a bit like glorifying the brutality at times. do you think there’s a fine line between showcasing reality and promoting it? just curious about others' thoughts!
08:51 If someone leaves a trace of passive collaboration, you might want to barry the Confed first best opportunity, before he goes active. #MIB #provos #TIE PS: That boy that ran? He ran back to the village. His first best opportunity.
How…. How did they know that HE saw him…. It doesn’t even look like he can clearly see anything from his angle through those branches….Why do they only blame HIM when NO ONE else saw or did anything…. The more “experienced” men….
He’s the tank following directly begins the tank that was ambushed. It’s his job as a gunner to be aware of their surroundings and stop any potential ambushes. And he did see him… we saw that in the movie. He hesitated because he was just a kid and Norman wasn’t as desensitized as his fellow soldiers yet.
@@reboundrides8132 idk, I think it’s a stretch to say he for sure recognized what he saw he said “what the fuck?” As if he couldn’t be sure if he was seeing what he was seeing. War daddy couldn’t even tell it was a kids until he went and looked, and he was the one that shot them Again, it still doesn’t actually give an excuse to the rest of the column for not seeing anything either and it is still really stupid that all of the blame was put on him when it’s everyone’s job to keep an eye out and look How do THEY know that he for sure did see and did recognize the threat? How can they so confidently put all of the responsibility on a bow gunner who has such a hilariously limited field of few from the bottom of the tank as compared to the view the mfr on top of the tanks would have… this was very much a Hollywood moment
@@Bagledog5000 yeah I think people over estimate how much of that was really Norman’s entire fault, sure he could have said something, but none of them were even looking to the right so… their own situational awareness was piss poor
this happened in the past, and this is a (albeit simulated) wartime situation, it involves life or death, the commanding officer didn't overreact nor harass soldiers in command, it could be them
That moment when they start laughing again after the "Hitler for a chocolate" line is pure gold.
It wouldn't surprise me if it was unscripted lol
Hands down my favorite scene in the entire movie slam fucking full of badassery.
The critics didn't give this movie a bad review. Not by any means. Still, it's one of the most underrated films to have ever depicted WWII
Brad pritts most fakest laugh
Yeah that’s good stuff. Made me miss my old team.
Excellent scene
“Ain’t gon save him from MAN’S justice” lmao
Kickass line haha, and true.
1:57 is a criminally underrated scene. Everyone thinks that he’s laughing like it’s a joke but it’s not. Those two actions just taught him about 75% of that gun. The cover had an in-built safety piece that stopped the bolt from moving when closed, so when he’s explaining the cover he’s legitimately telling him how to arm the gun and how to make it safe. The M3 Grease Gun was designed to be cheap and stupidly easy to learn.
And you found this out through a youtube short
@@gillbates1439 And its not any less correct than if they hadn't
he needs to find the mag release and the charging handle and thats it so about 50%
@@gillbates1439 You trying to shame someone for knowing something? Cringe.
@@tylerfreal6472 there's no chraging handle there's just a thumbhole in the bolt
Open it
Now u killin
Close it up now u aint 😂😂😂
if this movie had nothing else, that scene would be enough.
😂😂
That laugh in the end 😁
Yeah, and no need for a hi viz or safety statement either.
The giggle like a caveman afterwards the explanation killed me
"Oh, I'll question him." What a brilliant scene!
Do you like fat girls, who doesn't 😄
I read your post as: "I am an idiot."
What’s your favourite colour do you like fat girls
😂
@@klolwtf5602huh?
I told Shia in real life that we quoted this movie in our ambulance "best job I ever had" he got a kick out of it. Worked with him on set for American Honey. Really nice guy tbh. His D list costars were pretentious but he was just a normal guy then. Same day "just do it" came out actually
Shia is one actor I'd be pretty happy to meet in real life. Never been big on viewing celebrities as special or anything but he doesn't seem to be like the rest of Hollywood. Seems down to earth and human. Folks like Shia, Jim Carrey, Robin Williams in his time.
In your dreams.
@ArthurShelby... On set for American Honey in a Rich neighborhood in western Omaha. Worked a few scenes in there where he shows up waving a gun around in a backyard with a pool. Shot about a day after "Just do it" became a meme. Hell I didn't know about it until I saw people on set doing the stance behind his back. But yeah dreaming this all up
Those moments like at 6:40 when you make a joke, try to go back to being serious again, but you’re not really done laughing.
Yeah one of my favorite
I don't think I'll ever stop finding the panzerfaust scene disturbing. Everything from the screams, to the realisation that it was just children out there. It's so fucked, all of it. It's partly why I still love this film. The Allies are pushing into the heart of Germany, but they're not elated, in high mood, thinking the war is almost over. They're all so burned out, numb, desensitised. The last ditch, desperate attempts to resist make the invaders more and more apathetic. They're watching children attack them now, they've lost all pretence of being proud, noble soldiers. They've got a job to do and they just want it to be over now..
One reason why as a veteran I don't always tell people. They think I'm some type of hero or something. I just did my job. That job just so happen to be extreme in every way possible but I still signed that paper of my own free will.
Now imagine witnessing that irl, picture everything you felt now times that by 10
@certifiedgigachad3294 I will say that after being injured by a hand grenade in Afghanistan I hope and wish that nobody has to go through that. I know it's naive but I don't care. War sucks.
@@s70driver2005 I can only imagine how shit that must’ve been, thank you for service soldier 🫡
@s70driver2005 thank you for your sacrifice and service ❤
The makers of Fury and the actors have done so much honor to all those Armor G.I.s who fought so hard during WW2.
I remember watching this movie with our grandfather who served back then and he was explicitly mad on how wrong this scene is 0:22 , apparently never in a million years would a truck carrying the deceased would drive to camp as it would lower the morale on the soldiers on that area, and they would drive it far away from the camp where no one could see and there will be a team there who will directly handle the coffins back to the main base to get them home.
The truck was driving out of camp. Maybe you and your fake grandfather should pay attention
apart from the vehicles and equipment there was very little realistic in this film, it had so much potential but bad writing and weak characters plus unrealistic combat made it an absolute bore, I fell asleep at the cinema watching it.
I like the inclusion of the Nisei soldier at 1:07, escorting the SS prisoner. More than a few Japanese Americans served in the Army during WWII, they were barred from the Marines at the time, even as their families were interned back home. The 442nd RCT specifically was almost entirely made up of Japanese American soldiers, and they were one of the most highly decorated units of their size in the army at the time.
I’m guessing he is non Japanese Asian American. Asian Americans fought in white units in Europe.
It's historically inaccurate, though. The army was segregated back then, so a Nisei soldier wouldn't be "hanging out" with white and latino soldiers. He would be in his own unit, with OTHER Asian soldiers.
i think that solider was supposed to be chinese. chinese americans for the most part served with white units in europe.
@@wilb6657It isn’t, as there’s no guarantee that the Asian guy is Japanese, he could’ve been one of many Asians serving in integrated units. Segregation was really only between Black and White and Japanese and everyone else
i'm pretty sure he's supposed to be Chinese. Chinese American's for the most part served in white units in the army.
When Brad Pitt asks if Hitler would do them for a chocolate bar is hilarious 😂😂
This how he became Aldo the apache 😂😂😂
His German is much better than his Italian.
GRATsee@@Prizrak131
This has to be after remember he dies in this movie lol
@@Mazalara so he will be the only one soldier who have his rank going down, from litenaunt to sergeant then 😅
@@prabu4361 more like chewed out, now he's been chewed out before 🤣🤣🤣
Top's line about the SS being assholes and to "kill every one you see" is tragically ironic.
As it was an SS soldier who spotted Norman whilst he hid under the tank, and decided to keep that info to himself.
Any theories on why?
@@MrIlleismmost likely it was just a kid like Norman. Same people different uniforms.
The SS in 1945 was made up of conscripts and children in a lot of cases. Though some companies were also purely made out of criminals and fanatics.
@@MrIlleism"Why". The stoic look on the face of the German, knowing the hell they put each other through for hours; I like to think it was warrior honor. They were of equal age as well.
I think it was just a way of showing that not all German troops were the same or cold blooded killers, even if they were in the SS. There's still a piece of humanity even in our enemies. And I think the fact that they were both of roughly the same age played a part, too. They were both like 19 or 20 at most. So even though they were enemies and didn't even speak the same language, there was a commonality between them in that moment@@MrIlleism
@@BryonLetterman The vast majority of German troops by 1945 were mainly conscripts from the former Austo-Hungarian Empire and other independent German-related states/Confederation of Rhine that didn't align fully with the Prussian/Berlin Germans. (Ex: Just like the United States was divided up with different idealities Germany was once decentralized under the Holy Roman Empire that operated differently between Prussia & Austria)
Like in Saving Private Ryan, there were Czechs on D-Day, yet American soldiers shot them, surrendering just to prove a point to the audience that the Allies weren't all saints either unless they didn't understand the language or did the more profound research of D-Day. Too much entertainment today simply makes the German people ALL evil beings for all of the time and shows how the Allied side didn't have any flaws or mistakes that they too caused criminal war atrocities.
I tend to think that most Germans wanted to restore the status quo of the Holy Roman Empire's/Kasierreich's WW1 influence & prestige, but some elements of them that aligned with the Austo-Hungarians before or Napoleon's pact never wanted to follow Hitler's vision or his Holocaust fully. Hence, what lead to the Austrian resistance all the way into 1945 and eventually at the Battle of Itter Castle where some Germans fought alongside the US troops against the SS.
5:21 Freakin Gordo lol
6:51 flyboys showing their dominance
...except that they were P-51 Mustangs which normally liked to stay up high - P-47 Thunderbolts with big rugged radial engines and all kinds of guns and ordinance were the choice for low-altitude fighter-bomber missions.
@agwhitaker by the end of the war most p47s were replaced by p51s
At this point, the Luftwaffe had effectively ceased to exist. Allied air power could do whatever the hell it wanted.
'The greatest generation' is not a lie. People committed suicide if they weren't able to serve. Now, who would? We live on others backs. Then expect our rights to be preserved. I have a comfortable life. Wouldn't without those Men and women. To all who served 👍
Fury is one of the best war movies ever!
@@JC-jk3kl Well Saving Private Ryan stands at the top, in terms of production and realism not much competes except maybe Band of Brothers and the Pacific, and Generation Kill is another very good one.
@@DrelamAt least Fury had a real Tiger. They get big props for that. Private Ryan’s was a made over T34.
"a bridge too far" was top 2 with a stellar cast as was the longest day
The guy that played Norman, the young recruit, was extremely good in this movie
Brad & Shia are obviously big names, but Logan Lerman was extremely good at playing a young, confused recruit that doesnt want to be there
Great performance
i never realized before but wardaddy claiming "theyre it" at 9:00 shows his dissatisfaction with being the new pointmen for the tank convoy. so in his eyes norman didnt just let the other tank get killed but also increased their chance of dying too
Incorrect. He is angry that his friend died. A coward is the one worried about taking the lead. Warriors don’t cower.
Brad Pitt is just an awesome actor.
So much hate for nothing one of the best even his early days
@@paulcarpenter7844not for nothing. He put his hands on his children and threw things at them. He still hasn’t apologized. Now some of his children won’t speak to him. He crossed lines and now he’s getting critical feedback.
@@ragingzim Eh they're his children and nobody's perfect plus my parents were a whole lot worse bub.
Celebrity worship makes me nauseous.
@@ragingzimyou wouldn’t have survived growing up in the south then 😂.
Anyone else catch the background at 3:20 to the guy on top of the tank with no pants on? The blow of steam out the back side?
Bruh.
Not until you said something 😂
What do you think that's all about?
9 years since the first time I watched Fury, multiple times watching it already, this is the first time I see a butt naked man on t0p of the tank in that specific scene 😂 good spot
2:44 LMAO!!! Binkowsky woke up and chose violence 😂😂😂
5:21 I think is just Michael Pena being Michael Pena
Ok, it’s not true.
Lmao 😂😂😂
Bruh that dramatic pause and silence suddenly broken by Michael Peña is hilarious
The feeling you know you could be dead any minute and still going out to fight is just so chilling
Salute to these mans 🫡
Jesus.... $40 back then is about $875 today... lmao
He never said he was good at gambling.
I wonder how much a chocolate bar was back then 😂
Jesus knows…..you don’t have to tell him
@@JohnCampos-uw1rh with how much they are now you might as well lay down for it lmao
A lot of million airs .
6:47 best part of the movie
1:05 Wow we can see here an American-Japanese soldier fighting for Allies. In truthfulness, Many Japanese really did fight for America back in WW2
In truth many people in Japan were against the war the general was the only one that wanted to fight
I thought anyone with Japanese descent was sent into internment camps
@@Geojr815 the ones unfit for combat, absolutely. The children, the elderly, the women, all of whom were born Americans on this soil. I'm sure a vast majority of fit men were also sent to camps in fear of moles, but there were absolutely soldiers of all decent in the American military, in a WORLD WAR.
You sure he mightn't be Chinese or even Korean?
Japanese were either translators in the Pacific or the 100th Infantry in Europe. There were no Japanese amongst other troops until after the war.
One sec lemme look right at the enemy and say absolutely nothing until they fire that panzerfaust
Must be hard to bring yourself to pull the trigger if you never killed someone. Probably just looking for an excuse not to have to then it’s too late
that's not the case
in one of the scene that got cut out from final form
wardaddy told norman to NOT FIRE THE GUN UNLESS HE SAID SO
the video: ruclips.net/video/zsvXpOT3MvA/видео.html&feature=share9
Terrible writing
@@tubeguy4066 Or maybe, just maybe, it’s supposed to show how the new guy can’t soldier well. Therefore having a character arc over the course of the film.
Norman said it himself. It was just a kid. They didn’t look older than 13. I would struggle to pull the trigger on a 13 year old regardless of whether or not he was holding a weapon. The Nazis were undoubtedly evil. The Volkssturm was one of the cruelest things Hitler did to the German people. He didn’t surrender. He made the children and the old fight.
전쟁의 참상과 진실.
군인의길을 보여주는 영화 입니다.
전쟁은 없어야 합니다.
The part where he’s entranced by the girl with the bike and his buddy just ruins it 😂. It caught me off guard and I’ve the movie
The fucking for a chocolate bar is depressingly real, what people had to do just to survive the war is soul crushing.
Lmao
I hate it break it to you, but granny didn’t do that for “survival” as much as “dear lord i havent had chocolate in 2 years”
Nothing is should crushing. Depressing, sad, horrible, sure. But nothing can destroy the soul
@@Glitchfaction That’s as true as it’s wrong
People slag off thsi movie but I think it is pretty damn good.
Fury is an incredible movie, the rivet counters just have no soul.
Story super shit and highly American dramatized
Just the usual for Hollywood
The effect and the way the movie is made however is really good and I like the grittiness
Powerful the other tank Commander was going to grease Norman...War Daddy called it off...👍
Dam I didn’t catch that until now
That would just be murder
Never saw that
?
@@GodFuryNA war daddy stopped a cold death from Happening never saw that before
What's good about this movie is that they don't hesitate to show the horrors of War, children brainwashed into taking part in a war for a cause they are taught to be true, civilians are always caught in the cross fire and for those who survive, their lives can never go back to normal.
bro lighting up cig for brad while ignoring their platoon commander lol
Wow they were all together for 3 years!
If you know ww2 that’s a long time.
Jon Bernthal is phenomenal in this.
I love the little details like Wardaddy’s chevrons, they look like he sewed them on.
I was about to say. He flipped out an i pad but it was a clipboard 😂
Coffees too hot 😂 that part always gets me
This movie is a piece of classic
Grammatically that doesn’t make any sense. “A piece of classic”? 🤦🏻 I know what u mean but still bruh smh
@@Lucyopps well u can continue to smh
I think this is the best war movie ever made. The German music, believable characters, realistic script, daunting visuals, etc. It's an absolute masterpiece.
“Fckin 4 will do it” 🤣🤣
To imagine that all of them except Norman died that day
The dirty uniforms look is sick as.
Lol at the chocolate bar line.
aint nobody got a fresh cut like that in WW2
This just makes me imagine the guys that were kids in ww2 and sargeants in korea. The amount of shit they probably went through.
fine...i'll watch fury again
If they could have made this movie with Fury having just a *little* less plot armor it would be a top 3 war film for me. Its so bleak and depressing but I still wish I could be in that tank with that crew. Aaaaand then 2 pak40s in ambushing concealed positions whiff 6 shots. Frustrating, but I still love the movie.
Shane treating the new recruit same way he treated Randall in TWD he even says "boy shut up" the same way😂
Where did War Daddy get the STG 44? Awesome.
The German army issued it to him, how do you think he got it
i thought i was watchin the whole movie about halfway into it lol
In the mood. If you know, ya know
7:40 why ain't he rolling in the dirt ?
The mistake Norman made was not shooting, but calling out for contact. Doesn't matter if it's a animal or a person. He should've said something. He could've fired a warning shot so at least someone else fired did the kill for him.
Well, he wasn't trained to be a gunner in a tank. He also never went to the battlefield before.
@@ThinhNguyen-ql2dn I agree. There is so much that Hollywood does in this movie just for drama. Ultimately it's on War Daddy for not making sure Norman was properly trained.
He he he! You gotta love Jon Bernthal. He didn't have much sympathy for the "krauts"
2:52
Autobots! Roll out! - the early years
2:40 - Lt. Gorman ancestor.
“Spilled my fucking coffee”! Who else heard that after the fight with the SS😂
...when you have watched an entire movie by just watching
clips 😂😂😂
5:34 ignore em....dont disappoint christ now 😂😂
6:46 “😆” “😂” “😄”
Of course it's Hollywood's movies... But, better movies as human story during war... Really human team against horror... 27 time seen... Best work for my life 😊
such a good movie
I think the delayed laughter after the Hitler chocolate joke is intentional and not just left in but I could be wrong. They are coping with their emotions constantly while trying to do their jobs and the delayed emotion of levity from the joke is meant to highlight how war forces you to suppress all emotion even if its just simple laughter. This movie is so good on multiple levels and definitely worth the watch if you have never seen it.
sometimes what your supposed to do, ain't what you gotta do. and sometimes what you gotta do ain't what you're supposed to do.
Don't disappoint but think yes and go for it
Chillin with the boys
One of Brad's best movies!!!❤❤❤
00:05 Ironic as that’s kind of how we did win the war. German tanks were ridiculously over engineered and had plenty of thick arm and big guns. But they didn’t produce a lot of them relatively. Whereas American and Russian tanks were simpler, the armour wasn’t as good nor the guns as big, but they each built a lot of them! So sure 5 went out but one came back. That was kind of the US military’s approach to Tank warfare in WWII. Why build one very good heavily armoured tank when you can have five less armoured ones?
Just think: This is your first day on the "job". Compare it to any job, even yours.
I always wondered how Wardaddy got endless ammunition for his StG44?
That's a navy move 😂
How m3 smg operate?
-See that cover? Open it, now you kill. Close it up, now you ain’t.
Nice simple instruction 👍
American loves Aleksandr Great... ❤❤❤
Beyond all the flaws of the movie, I liked how they paid extra rage to the SS vs. The wermarcht regulars. The Wermarcht were just regular soldiers but the SS were true Nazis soaked in ideology.
Erm you’re kinda right but Wermarcht still had some actual Nazis, it’s just that the SS had wayyy more.
Maybe on the Western Front, but on the Eastern Front the Wehrmacht was just as complicit in atrocities and ethnic cleansing as the SS.
The "Clean Wehrmacht" myth largely created to justify creating a West German army.
@@boijames3253 he's not. The "clean Wehrmacht" is a myth, it's literal propaganda pushed by German generals at the end of WWII as a condition of West Germany being on the side of the Western Allies. Look up the Himmerod Memorandum, they demanded we accept and push the lie in order the sanitise the public perception of the German Army and pin all of the atrocities on the now destroyed SS. They were so concerned with restoring the honour of the German Army they demanded we warp history to pin all of the blame on a group that no longer existed. Convenient, clean, and it fucking worked. People still repeat literal Nazi propaganda to this day.
Their national ideology at the time was soaked in racial superiority and eugenics, the idea that only the card carrying Nazi's supported this is absurd and I don't understand how more people don't question it and research it honestly.
SS weren't even all Germans. They were the pan-European force
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth_of_the_clean_Wehrmacht#:~:text=The%20myth%20of%20the%20clean,crimes%20during%20World%20War%20II.
This scene packs just about every war movie cliche into a tight nine-minute bundle.
The baby-faced newbie who has to grow up in a hurry, the baby-faced officer whose more experienced underlings treat him with benign contempt, the potpourri of southern accents, the one religious guy…
It ain’t great.
Nice shoot. DEETHEARESTARAND DEETHEARESTARRead more.
Brad Pitt drinks a cup of coffee with two hands, pass it on
I use 3 hands myself.
noobs. i use 4 hands to drink my coffee
Check out the vet (of China's People's Liberation Army) reacting to Fury with his son - always good to see it from the other side
About the tank commander who served back in vietnam war? It seems i heard that before
great video, very well put together! i found the exploration of violence interesting, but it feels a bit like glorifying the brutality at times. do you think there’s a fine line between showcasing reality and promoting it? just curious about others' thoughts!
Why is the commanding officer showing direction on the map nervous before his subordinates?
to be fair they should have warned 7:23 norman that they could be fighting kids and that he shouldnt hesitate
The ones who are worthy know to hide
Die Alies sind da drüben!
poor Norman bro.
Brad Pitt is the same age as Omar Bradley was in 1945.
He goes off on Norman yet he’s just as guilty of not spotting the guy with the panzerfaust.
first time realizing at 3.00.. that's a baseball bat.. I heard one of my platoon Sargent's reference it did knot realize ... he was right
What do ropes have to do with this?
6:48 "Just guys being dudes."
08:51 If someone leaves a trace of passive collaboration, you might want to barry the Confed first best opportunity, before he goes active.
#MIB #provos #TIE
PS: That boy that ran? He ran back to the village. His first best opportunity.
6:47 😂
"Killed a lot of men, have you?...HA!"
How…. How did they know that HE saw him…. It doesn’t even look like he can clearly see anything from his angle through those branches….Why do they only blame HIM when NO ONE else saw or did anything…. The more “experienced” men….
He’s the tank following directly begins the tank that was ambushed. It’s his job as a gunner to be aware of their surroundings and stop any potential ambushes. And he did see him… we saw that in the movie. He hesitated because he was just a kid and Norman wasn’t as desensitized as his fellow soldiers yet.
At the very least he could have said “contact right,”Norman screwed up.
@@reboundrides8132 idk, I think it’s a stretch to say he for sure recognized what he saw he said “what the fuck?” As if he couldn’t be sure if he was seeing what he was seeing. War daddy couldn’t even tell it was a kids until he went and looked, and he was the one that shot them
Again, it still doesn’t actually give an excuse to the rest of the column for not seeing anything either and it is still really stupid that all of the blame was put on him when it’s everyone’s job to keep an eye out and look
How do THEY know that he for sure did see and did recognize the threat? How can they so confidently put all of the responsibility on a bow gunner who has such a hilariously limited field of few from the bottom of the tank as compared to the view the mfr on top of the tanks would have… this was very much a Hollywood moment
@@Bagledog5000 yeah I think people over estimate how much of that was really Norman’s entire fault, sure he could have said something, but none of them were even looking to the right so… their own situational awareness was piss poor
8:25
The Japanese Self -Defense Force is a power harassment and is disciplined.
What are you talking about?
this happened in the past, and this is a (albeit simulated) wartime situation, it involves life or death, the commanding officer didn't overreact nor harass soldiers in command, it could be them
Это у нас Так на Рыбалке, на Красную рыбу.
Good Movie
Green.
When I've had a few drinks.
When I've had more than a few drinks.