FURY (2014) FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION (PART 2)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
  • Arianna's first time watching Fury in a movie reaction.
    Full Length Reaction Here:
    / diegesischad
    Arianna's Instagram:
    / _aerii44
    Fury is a 2014 American war film written and directed by David Ayer, and starring Brad Pitt, Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Peña, Jon Bernthal, Jason Isaacs and Scott Eastwood. The film portrays U.S. tank crews fighting in Nazi Germany during the final weeks of the European theater of World War II. Ayer was influenced by the service of veterans in his family and by reading books, such as Belton Y. Cooper's Death Traps, about American armored units in World War II and the high casualty rates suffered by tank crews in Europe.
    #Fury #React #Reaction

Комментарии • 925

  • @Kirisute69Gomen
    @Kirisute69Gomen 2 года назад +985

    This movie was Shia LaBeouf's best performance in my own opinion.

    • @danc5644
      @danc5644 2 года назад +29

      I liked him in Disturbia as well, but that was a different Shia LaBeouf. I considered him a child actor for that role, so it just hits different than his performance in this film. Lawless wan't bad either.

    • @sgt1terrence
      @sgt1terrence 2 года назад +2

      Well he's a method actor and I read something about him wearing that uniform the whole time, just so he can smell like ass and everything xD

    • @chxse8685
      @chxse8685 2 года назад +5

      this and transformers

    • @codyschmidt510
      @codyschmidt510 2 года назад +35

      @@sgt1terrence yeah and the cuts on his face are real. He took a knife to his face in the mirror because he wanted to respect everyone who served in that war and thought face makeup wouldn't do that justice.

    • @boogboi_actual9415
      @boogboi_actual9415 2 года назад +10

      @@codyschmidt510 if you seen The Tax Collector you can see the scar on Shias face

  • @mastereppsreturns6586
    @mastereppsreturns6586 2 года назад +734

    I love the part they accept Norman into the pack and call him "Machine" and the music... it's like it's responding to what's being said.. the way it swells when Brad Pitt yells "Machiiiine!" and the chemistry between them. Friends resigning to their last fight. It's so beautiful.

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +29

      Totally agree. Beautiful scene

    • @jbsully2864
      @jbsully2864 2 года назад +4

      The music is perfect in this entire movie.

    • @jaquaviousjefferson
      @jaquaviousjefferson 2 года назад +6

      The GOAT hodgetwins compiler. Funny seeing you here

    • @Tbonyandsteak
      @Tbonyandsteak 2 года назад +1

      its disqusting

    • @30cal23
      @30cal23 2 года назад

      @@Diegesis i have a movie recommendation for you : Come and See. i will warn you though that shit will give you nightmares, it will also disturb you to think that rather than all this being a fiction it was reality in the 40's all over eastern europe, think how ww1 left behind bodies and un-exploded ordinance found to this day from 1915-1918 and realize that people still find things like that from ww2 to this day all over eastern europe, some people even find old german equipment stored behind such as mg42s and such.
      They do get some details wrong and some events were done by other units but mainly inspired by the notorious Dirlewanger brigade en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirlewanger_Brigade but its still a very well done film despite some of these inaccuracies and it pulls no punches in the depictions of horror, John Carpenters The Thing ain't got shit on this level of violence
      and again im going to stress this do not watch if you are bummed out or if its dark outside and you are alone in the house like have your sister or mom or grandma or someone nearby

  • @moose5293
    @moose5293 2 года назад +1018

    " You feel it!? "
    " its called war! "
    that line is so underrated

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +95

      Preach! My favorite line in the whole film by far. Next up is Bible's whole speech about Here am I, send me.

    • @Mikeyw9119
      @Mikeyw9119 2 года назад +36

      The scream after was so painful

    • @marcinm2767
      @marcinm2767 2 года назад +5

      @@Diegesis next fil "We were soldiers".

    • @tacticalglizzy7437
      @tacticalglizzy7437 2 года назад +1

      @@marcinm2767 YESSSSS

    • @BucksPackersBrewers
      @BucksPackersBrewers 2 года назад +4

      I get chills at that scene every time. So real.

  • @the_ZAMURAI
    @the_ZAMURAI 2 года назад +430

    “Here I am Lord; send me,” is such a haunting verse, and Shia delivers it expertly. What a powerful performance.

    • @sayjinpat4life
      @sayjinpat4life 2 года назад +36

      Shia said he found God while filming this movie. God open up his heart.

    • @lukeskywalker6809
      @lukeskywalker6809 2 года назад +2

      😂🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @the_ZAMURAI
      @the_ZAMURAI 2 года назад +6

      @@lukeskywalker6809 what?

    • @Wesleech
      @Wesleech 2 года назад +5

      Not religious in anyway. but that line is epic. Shia is ridiculously talented. Just needs to lay off the sauce.

    • @TJ-ve8sv
      @TJ-ve8sv 2 года назад +1

      @@sayjinpat4life No way in hell it wasn't a PR move to help rebuild his reputation. No way.

  • @WarWolfeX
    @WarWolfeX 2 года назад +145

    The whole scene where wardaddy is deciding he's gonna stay and Bible (Shia) is like "what are you doing?" is absolutely top notch acting by Shia!

    • @davidriddell9455
      @davidriddell9455 2 года назад +2

      Hes a weird dude, and still was amazing in his role. Truly top notch.

    • @greendogg83
      @greendogg83 2 года назад +2

      I think he was superb, just the look in his eyes

    • @jonathanparkinson4000
      @jonathanparkinson4000 2 года назад +1

      @@davidriddell9455 show me a master artist that's normal.

  • @dastemplar9681
    @dastemplar9681 2 года назад +335

    The reason Wardaddy exploded at his crew and slammed his pistol on the table, was because he was reminding them who had to shoot all the horses. It’s shown throughout the film that Wardaddy was very fond of horses, and for his crew to bring up the story in where he had to spend days shooting the very creatures he loved, that crossed a line badly. Even his crew immediately realized what they did and were ashamed of doing that.
    Imagine that, you had to spend days shooting the very creatures you loved, even if it was putting them out of their misery. That does something to someone, something you can never fix.

    • @mikehawkhovers9872
      @mikehawkhovers9872 2 года назад +29

      Damn, I didn't think of that and I've seen this movie multiple times

    • @thel-dawg868
      @thel-dawg868 2 года назад +11

      Woah, trip out

    • @alexvasquez6793
      @alexvasquez6793 2 года назад +4

      That right there is my friend is one ☝️ of the reasons why this movie is amazing 🤩 and how stupid,idiotic and no taste these haters have😂😂

    • @SouperForSupper
      @SouperForSupper 2 года назад +2

      @@mikehawkhovers9872 My thoughts exactly! Great comment from @DasTemplar

    • @dastemplar9681
      @dastemplar9681 2 года назад +8

      @@alexvasquez6793 Is it accurate? Not always. But it certainly has great writing and character details. If you really focus on the conversations and know a decent amount of WWII history, you’d be amazed how much subtle backstory there is in this film for our characters. This is one of those films that lets the details tell their share of the overall story. Ngl, it took me a couple viewings to fully understand certain scenes, but once I did, it really made me appreciate how actually well made this war film was.
      The story of the horses alone tells us where they were during the Liberation of France. Gordo was talking about the Falaise Pocket where the entire German 7th Army was encircled and wiped out by the combined forces of American, British, Canadian, and Polish.
      For such subtlety in referring a major event on the Western Front, this shows how much history the filmmakers cared for while making this flick.

  • @mainnerd2222
    @mainnerd2222 2 года назад +519

    This movie captures the emotion and bleakness of war perfectly. One part of the scene I can relate with is where they just got done killing the tiger tank, and they're laughing and saying "best job I ever had", I know that feeling. We would get it after every firefight in Afghanistan on my deployment. You come close to death and it's like a crazy relief as the adrenaline starts to wear off and you've realized you survived. My vehicle got hit by an IED one time, no one was hurt, we were all okay, and after it all, we were laughing and cracking jokes. You're just relieved that you're okay and it wasn't worse. The adrenaline rush helps with that, as well.

    • @thmshfstd
      @thmshfstd 2 года назад +29

      Thank you for your service.

    • @dareal5401
      @dareal5401 2 года назад +2

      Sounds cool

    • @owenbauder4287
      @owenbauder4287 2 года назад

      C

    • @iffymarashi7700
      @iffymarashi7700 2 года назад +2

      Killing people and making it through makes it the best job you’ve ever had? That is sad.

    • @shadowtempest2145
      @shadowtempest2145 2 года назад +11

      Getting rocked by IDF sucked balls too, afterwards we all had our bells rung and one of us said something along the lines of "Wonder if we can hit it back with a bat..." For whatever reason that was the most hilarious fucking thing ever at the time

  • @rx7dude2006
    @rx7dude2006 2 года назад +248

    That look you gave when the German didn't report him under the tank perplexed me.They are human just as much as anyone and can show sympathy, it's not good vs bad it's humans made to believe their side is always right, put there by the higher ups who are the only true winners in war.

    • @afewsnakes
      @afewsnakes 2 года назад +83

      It’s such a good dynamic in the film, too. At the beginning, Norman spares a kid & it gets a member of his team killed. At the end, Norman is saved by another kid who was probably in a very similar situation to Norman at the beginning of the film.
      Fucking tragic. Norman sacrificed his humanity in the end to save his comrades, and was saved by the very thing that got his friends killed.

    • @wishdotcalm
      @wishdotcalm 2 года назад +16

      I completely agree, the only rebuttal or counter argument I have for this statement is the fact that the SS or Schutzstaffel were monsters. They were essentially Hitler private funded army and were almost devote to him like he was a messiah (obviously that's exaggeration but for the point). The reason its so shocking for the soldier in this clip to not turn in him was because he was SS (you can tell by the pin on his collar (ᛋᛋ). The normal Wehrmacht were as you put it "just humans". The Wehrmacht were there as the main military force of Germany and were just serving their country whether some of them thought it was right or wrong couldn't have mattered because if they weren't "right" they would've been stripped of their ranks and sent to CCs like all the other prisoners. But as I said, your statement is completely right, the high command of the third Reich were monsters who forced the lower ranking soldier who didn't have a say into their bidding. A really good movie that touches on this and the monster high command is "Valkyrie (2008) starring Tom Cruise" it shows some Soldier and Higher Ranking officers who saw and acted on the immoral nature of what the third Reich was doing! Concluding back to my original statement, that is the reason why it was so shocking, is because the lore or history behind the SS were no prisoners and how they were such monsters. But yes!

    • @afewsnakes
      @afewsnakes 2 года назад +31

      @@wishdotcalm indeed. To be fair, though, the war was in its death throes. At this point, the German army including the SS included young boys & aging men who were forced into compulsory service because most of the experienced/veteran SS troops were killed on the Eastern front. By the time the Germans finally pulled out of Russia, it was far too late. Too many men & resources had been expended that were not easily replaceable. (For example, a major flaw of the infamous “Blitzkrieg” tactic is that the armored columns pushing up & laying waste to everything often times outpaced & lost their logistics/supply divisions leaving perfectly good armor often times just stranded in the middle of nowhere. By 1942, Germany was nearly out of fuel completely.)
      So to that end, I could very easily see the young SS boy as having been in the right place at the wrong time: being born into an aristocratic family, being brought up in a Hitler Youth program, whatever, the fact that he’s so young is a clue & a historical fact that the SS were not the same group by the end of the war. Though many of them were.

    • @christianmayer7432
      @christianmayer7432 2 года назад +6

      ​@@wishdotcalm As a German who studied this era quite a bit, I want you to consider to differentiate: Not every member of the SS was a monster. Especially in the end of the war, the Waffen-SS recruited even schoolboys who were more or less forced to join them. I once read an autobiography, in which a then 15-year old boy described, when in the last months of the war, a SS-leader showed up in his school and wanted them to join his unit. He used such psychological pressure on the boys that nearly all joined him. The author "defended" himself with the argument, that his parents had forbidden him to join the SS and that he should be part of the Wehrmacht. The SS-leader accused him of cowardice and humiliated him as a little, effiminated puss, but eventually had to give in.
      And to stress an important fact: the Wehrmacht as an institution worked with the SS hand in hand and was equally criminal. There are lot's of sources that imply that ordinary Wehrmacht soldiers participated in the killing of innocent civilians (the shooting of Jews had even its term, the "Judenschießen", female soldiers of the Red Army were quite often simply executed). The killings. including the Holocaust and the "Generalplan Ost" (the murdering between 60 and 80 mio. Slawic human beings to create "living space in the East" ("Lebensraum im Osten" ) were often euphemized as "actions against partisans" when in fact whole villages were wiped out.
      Some of these soldiers showed their contempt for these crimes in different sources, some even saved other humans, but all too many were far too indoctrinated in NS- ideology. And you are correct, that men were forced to participate, quite literally: If you had a certain age, then your refusal to be a soldier, would cost you your head. And the movie depicts correctly the madness in the last months of the war, when even teenagers were hanged by fanatical Nazis and some deranged generals (like this son of a bitch Ferdinand Schörner who had to be put under Soviet guard in POW camps because his own German comrades had killed him, if they had got the opportunity).
      It is complex, and remember that even "monsters" are humans after all. History is never only white and black, even if this topic has the darkest colouring.

    • @BucksPackersBrewers
      @BucksPackersBrewers 2 года назад +7

      To be fair that was an SS battalion. By and large SS wanted to be SS. They voraciously supported the cause. It wasn’t like the regular German army where people were forced to enlist or did out of fear for their life. They signed up, many of them brainwashed of course from growing up in the Hitler Youth, but absolutely thinking they were serving a purpose.
      That being said, IMO, that scene fit well with Norman’s storyline. The SS soldier was a kid, likely hadn’t seen battle similar to Norman at the beginning of the movie. Norman let a kid live himself (although that kid attacked a tank and was killed by others). It was sort of Karmic…like Grady said even in war it was clear Norman was a good person, and he ended up being spared by a kid.

  • @reconsoldier135
    @reconsoldier135 2 года назад +132

    As a veteran my favorite scene in this entire movie is when they’re sharing a drink in the tank, it reminds me of the guys that I served in Iraq with and how much I miss them and all the hours we spent shooting the shit smoking cigarettes passing the time when we weren’t out patrolling the streets of Baghdad

    • @obdiane
      @obdiane 2 года назад +5

      Hey, I was in Baghdad, too (2003-2004) . Hoorah!!!

    • @Beer-can_full_of_toes
      @Beer-can_full_of_toes 2 года назад +7

      Thank you both. I had friends there. Lost one after he got back. Had a deep connection with him as I was one of the very few if not the only one he would talk to about what it did to him being there. Sniper EOD Airborne. Dustin was a hell of a kid. He was in 2010-2014. Brain cancer jumped his ass shortly after coming home. Depleted uranium is a hell of a thing.

    • @normandy1140
      @normandy1140 2 года назад +3

      1st CAV, OIF 06-08. Lets throw some f--king lead downrange.

    • @fearthewolf1175
      @fearthewolf1175 2 года назад +3

      More than a few tanker buddies of mine love how accurate this movie is

    • @Dbars19
      @Dbars19 2 года назад +1

      same i miss my friends

  • @timweihrauch4381
    @timweihrauch4381 2 года назад +53

    I appreciate the emotions from a movie like this. The one thing that always blew my mind with this movie is that we saw Norman's first 24 hours of WW2. Everything happened in one day.

  • @luisfreddyhernandez4916
    @luisfreddyhernandez4916 2 года назад +39

    I don’t know you and I’ve never seen you channel before but some how your reaction to fury came through my RUclips feed. I really appreciate your video and wanted to share something with you. I am a retired disabled vet and I was a tanker my entire military career. I’m a Puerto Rican who grew up in church and throughout my time I was a driver, loader, gunner and eventually tank commander. I was Gordo, Bible and War daddy all in one. Norman represents every Soldiers fist time experience when exposed to the reality of war and human nature to survive. I was Norman when I first joined and was deployed for the first time. I made my wife watch Fury with me when it came out and right about the time of the movie when the tank brakes down and they are alone my wife turned to me and said “ now I understand why you are they way you are”. I loved my Soldiers as if they were my own boys. I was hard on them because I wanted to prepare and protect them. Even when it meant risking my life in doing so I did. That movie help my wife to understand a lot of things that just can not be put into words and it helped our marriage which wasn’t going to great at that moment in time. It also help me to open up with her a lot more. That is what it is like in real life. 4 dysfunctional people living, sleeping eating together getting on each other’s last nerve, but when it came down to doing our specific task or jobs we all worked as one. Thank you again!
    P.S. Did you realize the movie fury is based on 24 hours. Norman showed up that same morning before they went out to the cross roads and was rescued the next morning. He went from an innocent young man to a killing machine in under 24 hours. That is the true harsh reality of war and how it affects the Soldiers who fight them. That’s why we are never the same when we come home.

  • @josea.martinez2134
    @josea.martinez2134 2 года назад +233

    That scene where bible quotes the Bible always gets me. Such a beautiful scene.

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +26

      Yeah possibly my favorite scene

    • @undrielgrenger53
      @undrielgrenger53 2 года назад +1

      Its also out of place, because God is nowhere in that butchery of human lives

    • @ArgosySpecOps
      @ArgosySpecOps 2 года назад +17

      @@undrielgrenger53 then you've never read the old testament friend.

    • @sabadodomingo1293
      @sabadodomingo1293 2 года назад +2

      @@undrielgrenger53 yeah but it was still pretty violent. Moses litterally had all his wife’s people who traveled with the hebrews killed because some of them were marrying with hebrews and caused some of them to worship their gods🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @sabadodomingo1293
      @sabadodomingo1293 2 года назад +1

      @@undrielgrenger53 not to mention they would kill entire populations in towns

  • @ColinRichards1
    @ColinRichards1 2 года назад +14

    The last calm in the tank when they name him the machine... is the best depiction of brotherhood I've ever seen in a movie. It feels completely real and genuine and how it happens.

  • @GhostManPRO
    @GhostManPRO 2 года назад +22

    The chills down my spine when you see how many bodies there were, all caused by the valiant sacrifice of 5 people, absolute chills.

  • @panzerwolf494
    @panzerwolf494 2 года назад +47

    That Tiger scene, that's the first time since the war a real Tiger I tank was used on film. That's Tiger 131 from Bovington, the only running Tiger I in the world

    • @michaelmclachlan1650
      @michaelmclachlan1650 2 года назад +6

      The Australian Armour & Artillery Museum has recently rebuilt a late Tiger 1 from collected pieces. There's plans to get it running BUT not with the original Maybach. They're also currently working on a Jagdpanther and a Stug III, clips are on RUclips.

    • @codeporsche4651
      @codeporsche4651 2 года назад

      too bad that scene was kinda bad on another hand I saw that tank an touched it this summer thing is bigger than you think, also saw that fury tank in action driving around

    • @GoGicz
      @GoGicz 2 года назад

      @@michaelmclachlan1650 actually the only running tiger 131 is not even full original they used engine from tiger 2.

    • @admiralfloofz658
      @admiralfloofz658 2 года назад

      @@GoGicz The HL230 theyre using was used in the later versions of the Tiger 1 aswell, and the Panther. The original HL210 on it was only used in the very first Tiger 1s produced.

    • @GoGicz
      @GoGicz 2 года назад

      @@admiralfloofz658 hmm i see i heard it was from the tiger 2 but idk.

  • @mav2knight
    @mav2knight 2 года назад +70

    I love the raw emotion you show. Keep up the good work. War is a brutal, brutal thing.

  • @imnotkosher444
    @imnotkosher444 2 года назад +28

    "He lost whole his team, his mentor, the first girl he had feelings for"...... and now he starts day 2 of fighting!

  • @1320crusier
    @1320crusier 2 года назад +279

    Its amazing that they got a real tiger and real shermans for this movie. The tiger engagement would have never gone down that way though.

    • @Britcarjunkie
      @Britcarjunkie 2 года назад +69

      It's based on an incident that took place in April '45: the Tiger destroyed 3 Shermans before the 4th one killed it.
      Only way to kill a Tiger, was from behind.

    • @kaybevang536
      @kaybevang536 2 года назад +14

      People think it would be like Kursk but in reality in ww2 tanks are usually in defensive roles

    • @Chopstorm.
      @Chopstorm. 2 года назад +13

      You're right, the Tiger would have been dead after it's first shot.

    • @jasonbarnes9781
      @jasonbarnes9781 2 года назад +43

      Absolutely correct. Only experienced crews were in tigers, they would have stayed hidden or reversed away to exploit the long range of the powerful main gun.

    • @nicolaslara5212
      @nicolaslara5212 2 года назад +4

      @@jasonbarnes9781 yea and the firing on the move was a no no

  • @monzer-sy5yp
    @monzer-sy5yp 2 года назад +25

    The most powerful line movie history: "It's called WAR, Can you feel it?!"

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +5

      Yes! this line impacted me so hard in the theater I wrote it down

  • @sejtaridiss
    @sejtaridiss 2 года назад +76

    I also thought that the whole "dinner at a table" plotline was a little too... impossible? But then I remembered my grandma's stories from war (eastern front, polish) and yeah - that was totally possible. During the war, especially on eastern front, where war atrocities were beyond anything you can imagine, people were like "fuck it - I may day tomorrow, I'm gonna do whatever I want". That's why people got married after a two weeks of knowing each other, fucking without any moral conandrums and so on. We shouldn't apply our moral norms of times of peace to that period, as it was something we cannot even imagine.

    • @hededcdn
      @hededcdn 2 года назад +1

      Well said.

    • @trequor
      @trequor 2 года назад +5

      It's nice to play pretend, if only for a few hours. Nobody wants to be in that situation, but going on a "date" is a helluva lot better than getting shot at or blown up.

    • @MDchainsaw
      @MDchainsaw 2 года назад +6

      My great Uncle was in 3rd Army going into Germany. He and a few others got cut off in a German village, and figured they were screwed. Long story short, a local woman took them into her house, hid them from the German army, fed them, washed their uniforms, and got them soap and water to bathe.
      Same uncle talked about how they would execute prisoners for about a week after they liberated a concentration camp. He had mixed feelings about Germans.

    • @tnganthavee100
      @tnganthavee100 2 года назад

      Thank you for sharing this. It makes the parts of the movie more believable..

    • @nocturnowl_0100
      @nocturnowl_0100 11 месяцев назад

      It's understandable that when people have to cram an entire lifetime of experiences into a relatively small timeframe, fears and inhibitions go out the window

  • @Meshack263
    @Meshack263 2 года назад +14

    Out of all the reaction videos I’ve seen, I think this is my favourite. Your reactions are genuine and real, but I also love that you actually keep my favourite scenes of the movie in your video. All the other ones edit them out. Thanks for the upload!

  • @clementbaudeau4111
    @clementbaudeau4111 2 года назад +14

    The amazing soundtrack and the line " its call war do you feel it " wow make me cry every time

  • @jluisl3652
    @jluisl3652 2 года назад +41

    10:50 this was perhaps the most powerful scene in the hole movie !!!! that was some alpha shit right there ...goosebumps .... Better to fight for something than live for nothing- george patton

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +3

      Yeah thats my favorite scene

  • @adamtucker1064
    @adamtucker1064 Год назад +1

    Couldn’t stop crying in the theater back when I watched it

  • @fredmercury4448
    @fredmercury4448 2 года назад +33

    She does some of the best reactions on the entire internet. Keep it up!

  • @JustTooDamnHonest
    @JustTooDamnHonest 2 года назад +7

    WW2 to this day still has the highest body count and that includes soldiers and civilians from both sides. "War Is Hell", that quotes sells war out and anyone who has been in a warzone knows this.
    "The Best Job I Ever Had" has slowly become an iconic saying in the military and rightly so.

  • @Twelvegage30
    @Twelvegage30 2 года назад +7

    There were parallels at the end, the Sniper who shot WarDaddy an older more experienced and Grizzled man like WarDaddy and the Young, Hopefull German who found Norman but didn't report him dispite the fact that if the others were to find Norman and knew he said nothing he would probably be executed.

  • @oldgoat142
    @oldgoat142 2 года назад +5

    Arianna, thank you for sharing this with all of us.
    My father was in the European Theater of Operations from 1944 until the end of 1945. He saw many things that he was unable to talk about until nearly the end of his life. He passed away in 2005. One story he shared with me stands out in my mind. He told me how the German civilians would line up at the trash cans of the field kitchen of his unit, waiting for the GI's to dump their leftovers. He told me how some of his fellow soldiers would show compassion and leave extra on their trays, while others who harbored genuine hatred for the German people would leave nothing. Not a scrap.
    This was just one of the stories shared not only by my father, but other soldiers, marines, sailors, airmen, and coasties of that generations I've met during my lifetime.
    Like Captain John Miller told Private Ryan, may we earn this.

  • @TheFlashover3
    @TheFlashover3 2 года назад +21

    She is so cute I love how emotionally invested she’s gets into the movie

  • @bellavita1323
    @bellavita1323 2 года назад +11

    First time ever seeing this movie and it ripped my heart shreds. I have 4 sons that are my life, are young men now and I couldn't imagine them going through war and my heart breaks for those that have and the parents thatve had to lay their sons or daughters to rest. I have nothing but the utmost respect for those thatve fought, continue to fight to keep our country free and those thatve lost their lives doing it. They haven't sacrificed their lives so political criminals can come in and undo all they've fought for and I am sickened by what's been occuring yet praying these people are found out and punished.

  • @awolfalone2006
    @awolfalone2006 2 года назад +8

    I don't know if anyone has mentioned this, but this story is actually partially inspired by a real tank from WW1 named Fray Bentos. The tank became stuck in no mans land for three days taking fire from both sides. The crew, except one killed while trying to get the tank unstuck, was eventually able to get back to British lines and were highly decorated for their defense.

    • @riffler24
      @riffler24 2 года назад +1

      As far as I know, the actual inspiration (and major source for this movie) was the book "Death Traps" by Belton Cooper. It's become infamous for being known as "the one book people cite about Sherman tanks" despite Belton Cooper not knowing really anything about tanks or armored warfare (he literally worked as a liaison, his job in the war was counting destroyed tanks and driving the report back to HQ, he wasn't a tank driver, tank mechanic or strategist).
      It comes from a passage in his book where he recounts a story he was told about a Sherman tank that was stranded during an attack. The story pans out almost exactly as it does in the movie, with the crew fighting a horde of German soldiers until only one of the crew is left alive. Historians believe this story to have been a twist and exaggeration of Audie Murphy's exploits, and can find no evidence it ever actually happened. Or hell, it could be a story inspired by the one you're talking about.

    • @someguy7629
      @someguy7629 2 года назад

      The 3 tank missions in Battlefield 1 are inspired from that.

  • @Fransens
    @Fransens 2 года назад +2

    Fun fact:
    That Tiger is a real one and the reason he is not doing much except driving forward and moving it's turret is because the people they borrowed it from were VERY specific in their instructions about what they can and cannot do with it for fear of irreperably damaging the last existing Tiger tank in the world.
    That's why he basically only moved forward and that's it.

  • @reddevil3387
    @reddevil3387 2 года назад +4

    At the end when he looks out the window after being called a hero, he is realizing that the real heroes are still in the tank.

  • @haydenmuttee4671
    @haydenmuttee4671 2 года назад +5

    That last scene contrasts so beautifully, as norman gets loaded onto the truck to be taken to the field hospital, they are telling him “you’re a hero, you know that?” And he looks back one more time to see that the war machine keeps moving forward, like they really didnt mean anything.

  • @jackfisk2840
    @jackfisk2840 2 года назад +4

    "Ideals are peaceful, history is violent!" ...and, history repeats, and repeats, and...

  • @hiddenfromhistory100
    @hiddenfromhistory100 Год назад

    Thanks Arianna for your humanity. It's why we can never talk about what we went through.

  • @ragnarulfbroder1
    @ragnarulfbroder1 2 года назад +4

    Historical note:the main gun on Fury is a 76mm gun. Those could penetrate a Tiger tank from the front. German tankers knew to take those out first cuz they were that deadly.

  • @lebourreau7177
    @lebourreau7177 2 года назад +6

    9:59 It's always hard for me seeing him like that, basically realizing that they are all making a choice that will most likely end their lives.

  • @alexvasquez6793
    @alexvasquez6793 2 года назад +4

    Amazing reaction yet again this is one of my personal favorite movies I could never watch it without crying 😢 it has the beauty and pain of war all in one.

  • @11bisthewaytobe13
    @11bisthewaytobe13 7 месяцев назад

    David Ayers did a true God blessing with this film. Not only did he depict a part of WWII with the tanker side.....their horrific stress and hurt....but he did it with men who could portray it

  • @nandoman4769
    @nandoman4769 2 года назад +4

    The crazy part to me is that soldiers in real life actually go threw insane shit like Norman did and then they come home and people expect them to act completely normal and stigmatize them for not being fine.

  • @TJ-ve8sv
    @TJ-ve8sv 2 года назад +1

    To clarify any confusion about why that German let Norman go, is because by this time of the war many German soldiers knew the end was nigh and were losing their want of fighting. Also, many German soldiers were conscripted into the army or weren't even Germans at all at times. Like the scene in Saving Private Ryan after the battle of Normandy when they shoot two seemingly German soldiers who were speaking Czech trying to tell the Americans they weren't Germans. They were merely conscripted Czechs forced to fight, and the Americans, not understanding them, shot them anyway.

  • @themuilover
    @themuilover 2 года назад +4

    You just gotta love Arianna. She has such a sweet soul.

  • @b3astms385
    @b3astms385 2 года назад +1

    They are such good actors you can see the acceptance of death setting in and the realization that their time is coming to an end

  • @bighuge1060
    @bighuge1060 2 года назад +4

    That was a true reaction video. You didn't use the film to showcase yourself by making wise comments like -- unfortunately -- many others seem to do.
    I've heard there were inaccuracies in this movie but it still grabs my attention whenever it airs on television.

  • @skinWalkman
    @skinWalkman 2 года назад +2

    This movie is a perfect encapsulation of what it’s like to serve in armored or otherwise mechanized units. That vehicle is your home. And the men in it are the closest family you will ever have. This film isn’t just about the brutality of war, but about men who fight it completely isolated in their vehicle.

  • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
    @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 2 года назад +3

    Timestamp at 11:50.
    *Wardaddy: I christen thee "Machine."*
    Not only you have a nickname, but you ALSO got a war name.

  • @robertwilson2007
    @robertwilson2007 2 года назад +1

    My grandpa's brother George R. Wilson died just a week before the end of WW2. He was the driver of an American M4 tank and the entire crew died. It happened at the intersection of Karl Heine Str. and Zschochersche Str. in Leipzig Germany, 18 April 1945, He belonged to Company C, 741st Tank Battalion.

  • @Teamrat
    @Teamrat 2 года назад +3

    Now picture that kid as an old man, sitting in a nursing home somewhere telling someone the story about the time he was the only survivor in his tank group. No matter how detailed he tells the story, you can't imagine what he and his comrades actually went through unless you where there.

  • @firecrakka
    @firecrakka 2 года назад +1

    I don't watch too many reactors because it often seems as though they are just acting the part. But I've watched a few of yours now and I love how you are genuinely invested in the characters and show pure, unbridled emotion. This is the epitome of what a reaction video should be. Kudos and keep up the good work.

  • @benztech5726
    @benztech5726 2 года назад +5

    You have the best reaction videos I’ve seen. I just subscribed today. I’ve seen several others react to this movie and I enjoyed yours the most. Keep up the great work ♥️

  • @shadowbox4438
    @shadowbox4438 9 месяцев назад

    Having been a mounted crew member at one point, it adds so much more understanding to the bond that develops between them. Also, I was honestly a little impressed when I saw you be the first to say "ya get the officer" like not that you couldn't have that knowledge, but actually hearing you say what rarely ever gets said? Amazing

  • @thisishowthetruthdies684
    @thisishowthetruthdies684 2 года назад +9

    Another great reaction video. You're not a babe in the woods like Popcorn in Bed, you just seem to share with her a ton of empathy and decency.
    For sheer visceral reaction, Hamburger Hill and the last act of Full Metal Jacket really get me. As brutal as Schindler's List is, because of the subject matter, you sort of go in expecting the worst.

    • @Diegesis
      @Diegesis  2 года назад +2

      PIP really has a market though don't she? lol thanks for the kind words :) We're gonna try to do schindlers list soon

  • @MilitaristTurkcu
    @MilitaristTurkcu 2 года назад

    1:17 the way he said "I'm just drunk,I'm sorry🥺"🤣🤣

  • @harbscantina
    @harbscantina 2 года назад +10

    Your reaction was exactly like mine when I saw this film. What a film.

  • @Tomcat088
    @Tomcat088 5 месяцев назад

    I agree with some others that this is one of Shia’s best performances. I love how much you feel and understand this movie. It’s so hard and living in the moment is hard to imagine, but it seems like you understand the tensions and difficulties better than most. It’s so tough.

  • @GHOST-pe2go
    @GHOST-pe2go 2 года назад +7

    Im in love with this woman's powerful reactions, by the end of the movie she looks like she was there.

  • @robertwalegir8677
    @robertwalegir8677 Год назад

    Your reactions are truthful in many ways thank you for being so open and honest you didn’t tell me what you thought you told me what you feel

  • @chickypooinaz
    @chickypooinaz 2 года назад +4

    I love your reactions!❤️

  • @brwnjohnnysvage7251
    @brwnjohnnysvage7251 2 года назад +1

    The scene with Norm and Grady is so good “its called WAR!”…Shia was also great in this movie. Best line up since SPR

  • @edwardrmayer9807
    @edwardrmayer9807 2 года назад +3

    Arianna, I just love your reactions to these films, I'm a big fan and I thank you for allowing us to enjoy the vids. with you, ED.

  • @MistaDurdenn
    @MistaDurdenn 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for reacting to one of my personal favorite war movies. You had a very similar reaction to me, and all of your videos are very underrated, especially because your reactions are very genuine, and share a lot of emotion that other viewers have had.

  • @danielkinn782
    @danielkinn782 2 года назад +6

    I posted this on Reaction 1. A great reaction and great video. I think she's ready for Schindler's List.

    • @gnomche
      @gnomche 2 года назад +1

      Agree

    • @MikeB12800
      @MikeB12800 2 года назад +1

      Do you like tears?

    • @TheTurinturumbar
      @TheTurinturumbar 2 года назад +5

      Is anyone really ready for Schindler's list?

    • @prollins6443
      @prollins6443 2 года назад

      @@TheTurinturumbar no, they think they are, and then that movie breaks them

    • @justaperson3641
      @justaperson3641 2 года назад

      No she needs to react to hacksaw ridge

  • @n1xt3r97
    @n1xt3r97 2 года назад +1

    "Hey, you are hero, buddy" in watched a lot of times ending of fury, but it still makes me cry

  • @schrootrobert
    @schrootrobert 2 года назад +5

    One of my favorite ww2 movie is My Way, it's based on true story.

  • @raze06
    @raze06 2 года назад +2

    The tiger in the main anti-tank scene is one of the only original Tiger tanks from WWII that is still fully operational!

  • @charles5895
    @charles5895 2 года назад +4

    Once you watch enough of these brutal movies you become used to them and stop showing emotion so easily. It’s almost like you become hardened.

  • @Akajaydoe
    @Akajaydoe 11 месяцев назад

    “ and he who does gods will is gonna live forever, forever “ gave me chills

  • @liloozyfart5355
    @liloozyfart5355 2 года назад +1

    That “I’m just drunk, I’m sorry” ptsd shit hit hard.

  • @dylangregory9855
    @dylangregory9855 8 месяцев назад

    I watched the night before I shipped off for boot camp where I later trained to become a tanker myself. Best job I ever had

  • @piperp9535
    @piperp9535 2 года назад +1

    For Arianna. I enjoyed watching your reactions. The intensity of surprise, dread, and horror. Even more, your understanding and acceptance of "hard truths" like War Daddy's need to turn Norman from a liability into a warrior. And you also seem like you aren't a stranger to the Military. You seem accepting of difficult concepts that are realities of war, as terrible as they are. It was interesting watching you get drawn into to the show and it looks like you actually started to care for the characters. Again, I enjoyed your work, Thank You.

  • @TheNerdForAllSeasons
    @TheNerdForAllSeasons 2 года назад

    The "Machine" scene is a perfect snapshot of why a lot of people adore David Ayer movies. By all accounts he does a great job of portraying how men bond and act in situations of extreme stress and violence.

  • @lunaticmickful
    @lunaticmickful Год назад

    "Do you feel it, thats war". Thats what jon bernthall said after she died in the bombardement of that building. War is difficult, you have to hate someone you don't know that do terrible things to your buddies and others. And you have still a mission to fullfill and you feel the hate grow and killing is just something you start to enjoy. You got bitter, sharper and angry all the time. And when you come back after months of years at your family. You are not the same anymore. You can stop thinking about it anymore and have nightmares every night. They doctors call that PTSS...after that sentence it changed the whole movie...
    and in 2009 as a veteran i have the same experience like norman. Thats why this part will always stick with me.

  • @templarwhiskey8167
    @templarwhiskey8167 2 года назад

    My grandfather served in Europe and drove a dragon transport (it can carried two Shermans). He told me that one cold morning they were awaken to deliver their Shermans to the front motor pool. As they were unloading, tank crews were running in, getting on a Sherman and grabbing random GI's yelling, "You are our driver, come on!" OR gunner or loader. It was the start of the Battle of the Bulge.

  • @kemosabeusmc
    @kemosabeusmc 2 года назад +1

    I wasn't a tanker, but I was a crewman on an anti tank light armore vehicle in the Marines. Let me tell you that this is exactly how it is as a crew. We're all we got, we fight,cuss, argue, bitch, moan, complain, but above all else we stand tall with each other. I miss my brothers
    -Black 5 actual,.

  • @Shoewearer20211
    @Shoewearer20211 2 года назад

    One of my all-time favorite movies thank you so much for reacting to this

  • @PatrickHutton
    @PatrickHutton Год назад

    This film in many ways was Norman's Journey. A character arc of an innocent young man who'd rather die than kill the enemy in cold blood, to mercy killing the enemy when they were burning from white phosphorus, to sleeping with a German girl, to gunning down many German soldiers in the final battle.
    Why didn't the young German soldier shoot or alert the others when he saw Norman cowering under the tank? Because he was the German equivalent of Norman before war changed him.
    We have the Sniper scene where we see him crawl slowly, steadily, and purposefully toward the Fury. Every shot and reload was careful, unhurried, calm, deliberate, and accurate. The Sniper was the German counterpart to Wardaddy. We see this when he lifts his sniper's veil so we could see the older wiser battle hardened soldier like Wardaddy he had seen too much blood, suffering, and killed so many that like Wardaddy he was a soul scarred individual.
    Going back to Wardaddy he was a battle hardened and callous man, making Norman kill in cold blood and later insisting Norman sleep with the German girl or he would sleep with her instead (a bit rapey with dubious consent). Whilst with the women we are shown his scarred back. This was to show his battle scars but also maybe his war scarred soul too.

  • @lightbluehaze
    @lightbluehaze 2 года назад

    there are a few cut scenes with a lot of context packed in I don't think the movie would be better with them in but it does fill in the things you really already know in your minds eye.

  • @moyesboy1
    @moyesboy1 2 года назад +1

    A good film, but Hollywood, that a whole SS regiment rushes like stupid against an immobile tank, and then also pretty bungled, well. But the tiger scene tops everything. You don't have to tell much more about this tank, but One of his greatest advantages was that he could switch off other tanks at very great distances with the 88. to leave cover instead of snapping out one Sherman after the other, the commander in this movie was apparently completely drunk. Only highly trained elite crews sat in the Tiger. Attacking tank collones from the side, rule number one, first the command tank (especially there because it's Fury, who has the only cannon that can be dangerous to you!) then the last, and they are nicely locked up and free to be shot

  • @jeffreynunez175
    @jeffreynunez175 2 года назад +2

    I legit subscribed once I saw this reaction to one of my all time favorite films!

  • @garychandler7632
    @garychandler7632 2 года назад +1

    For his role, Shia lebouf imbedded with an army unit for several weeks and followed the chaplain.

  • @erivera700
    @erivera700 2 года назад

    The plot of this movie was made from letters and journals of WWII tankers. While there was no crew who experienced all of these events, just about everything from this film really happened in some form.

  • @Andy.Smurphy
    @Andy.Smurphy Год назад

    To explain the horse scene .. the battle they talked about was the Falaise pocket where a German Army was destroyed ... the German army although known for its tanks had issues with fuel supply so their main means of supply and transportation was horses, in the Falaise pocket the American and British airforce flew many many missions shooting up the German columns trying to escape, those columns also had many horses ... so after the battle when the infantry went in to mop up they indeed found thousands upon thousands of dead and dying horses as well as men and boys as the hitler Jurgen were involved in the battle. The Falaise pocket was never 100% closed and many Germans did manage to escape to come back and fight again ..

  • @petkoyanakiev244
    @petkoyanakiev244 Год назад

    It is called WAR!! You feel it!! I have a gusbumps from this phrase.

  • @langeweileonline4720
    @langeweileonline4720 2 года назад +1

    6:00 the german tank drive had as far as I saw it the "Panzerjäger spange" in silver two times which means he destroyed 10 enemy tanks and that's a lot for that time

  • @odysseus011380
    @odysseus011380 5 месяцев назад

    Fury was an exceptionally good film for a tank movie. I didnt expect that. Watched it twice.

  • @AdmiralDevil
    @AdmiralDevil 2 года назад

    This movie hits hard Norman,the last living member of the crew,he lost his family

  • @CrossroadsReloaded
    @CrossroadsReloaded 2 года назад

    I love Fury and its ending.
    We've only been following the crew up to the final fight, which is I think purposely over-the-top both to depict what the crew felt was going on (fighting off hundreds of SS), and make us feel like they've achieved something big.
    Then we see the eerie silhouette of the damaged tank surrounded by advancing troops. We are reminded there always was a much bigger picture. War moves on, Norman leaves without a goodbye, the crew were only ever the main protagonists of their own story. Their loss is meaningless in a conflict of that scale.
    It really makes you re-think many things. When I was younger, I imagined I could be a war hero, had I lived during that time . As an adult, I have understood I would probably just die for nothing, and be left forgotten in the mud. And I look at dead soldiers thinking they were the main protagonists of their own story, and felt their were playing their part, while realistically they achieved nothing significant.

  • @docdave15
    @docdave15 Год назад

    "It's my home." That was Wardaddy realizing he was never gonna adapt to his home life again when the war ended. He was gonna die in the thing that he made his home. The story of these guys is a tragedy. Their humanity was barely there. Norman was the only one who had the possibility of adapting back to "the world."
    This movie is so underrated.

  • @WarriorPoet01
    @WarriorPoet01 2 года назад

    Other war movies to consider are: We Were Soldiers (based on a true battle in Vietnam), Das Boot (Director’s cut), Cross of Iron, and The Beast (harder to find, it’s about a lost Soviet tank crew in Afghanistan).

  • @b1gpapan3cr04
    @b1gpapan3cr04 2 года назад +2

    This movie is more true to form than SPR. So much loss and devastation..

  • @navajoguy8102
    @navajoguy8102 2 года назад +1

    0:14 They're talking about the Falaise Pocket, when the Allies encircled the German 7th Army and shredded it. The German military wasn't really mechanized at the time and relied heavily on horses so witnesses of the aftermath stated there were thousands of dead and dying horses strewn all over the battlefield.

    • @jeffburnham6611
      @jeffburnham6611 2 года назад

      Your information is incorrect. The German Army was still very much mechanized, just badly depleted. Operation Luttich, the German Counter-Offensive to break out of the encirclement, had the 2nd SS Panzer Division alone still operated 75 Panzer IV's, 70 Panthers and 32 self-propelled guns, and there were 3 other panzer divisions trapped in the pocket.

    • @Abbath77
      @Abbath77 2 года назад +1

      @@jeffburnham6611 The amount of tanks has nothing to do with the mechanization of an army. The Wehrmacht and SS used horses to keep the supply lines running, even the artillery was transported by horses. Main reason for this was the shorage of fuel. A horse lasted 4 years, a truck only one year. The Second World War is also called "the biggest horse war in history".

  • @jakebotha9580
    @jakebotha9580 2 года назад +2

    I love how she says "just a mine" when any American would prefer that over a panther or tiger tank

  • @jasonleightonDTA
    @jasonleightonDTA 2 года назад

    I was a tanker, and excited to see this movie when it premiered. I watched it with my wife, and she kept asking me if I was okay because I was yelling,aughing, crying, and saying "yep" a lot. When they were fighting the tiger, you asked how they were going to make that work. The M4A2 Sherman was faster than the tiger because of the Christie suspension, and better engine.

  • @mikeortiz6008
    @mikeortiz6008 2 года назад

    I am not a huge Brad Pitt fan but every once in a while he shows his acting abilities to why he is an iconic actor Fury is one of those movies along with Inglorious Bastards are 2 of my favorites in my top 50 of all time! Great reaction its hard to see war from civilians eyes I am a Vet from Iraq and Afghanistan but through your eyes I see you shared the pain. Thank You.

  • @MikeB12800
    @MikeB12800 2 года назад +2

    Said it in part one, i’ll say it again…. I love Adrianna!!!

  • @lionlyons
    @lionlyons 2 года назад +1

    17:32 - 17:50 Best part of the film.

  • @sggsdsgdgsd6897
    @sggsdsgdgsd6897 2 года назад

    I highly enjoyed this girl's reaction, noticed she isn't in the other channel's reactions. Is the account shared between a few others or is there a place I can watch her stuff?

  • @juanpalomino1438
    @juanpalomino1438 2 года назад +2

    Next one has to be GreyHound (with Tom Hanks). Hell of a film!

  • @nathanstrickland8692
    @nathanstrickland8692 2 года назад +1

    I have many good friends who have seen combat. I've never asked ANY of them about it, out of respect to them. But all if them have talked to me about it. Other people who asked them about it, they just walk away. I feel honored that they trust me enough to talk about it. I never say anything, I just listen. One of them said something one day that just has never left me. He said, there is no such thing as an atheist on a battle field. I wish with all my heart and soul I could take the horrible visions out of their head. But I can't, all I can do is be there for them. Much respect to every single service member that ever served to protect me and this country. I owe you a debt that I will never be able to repay. I pray that God gives all of you peace in your life's!!

    • @TenTonNuke
      @TenTonNuke 2 года назад +1

      People keep saying there are no atheists in a foxhole. But myself and like my entire platoon were either atheists or not religious. Once you see the evil that men can do to each other, you realize that either God does not exist or God does not care. His creations are violent, disgusting creatures. And we were made in his image.