My First Time Ever Watching Fury | Movie Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 354

  • @MovieJoob
    @MovieJoob  Год назад +19

    FULL AND LONGER REACTION:
    www.patreon.com/MovieJoob
    Jade is here to watch Fury! 💣🪖
    P.S. There can be many RUclips issues so we apologise if there are any scenes cut that are important!
    Join along in watching Jades reaction to this movie and as always leave a like, subscribe and click the notification bell to keep up with all our content! ❤🔴

    • @karlhaber1904
      @karlhaber1904 Год назад

      Watch Hacksaw Ridge, it's a TRUE Story, and you think you'll like it.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      @@karlhaber1904 I did! ruclips.net/video/MTUtTNKt0aE/видео.html I hope you enjoy!! 😊😊

    • @philshorten3221
      @philshorten3221 Год назад

      Here's 3 historic conflicts that are definitely definitely definitely worth watching:-
      Zulu (Michael Caine)
      Master and Commander:The Far Side of the World (Russell Crowe)
      Gladiator (Russell Crowe)
      All 3 of these are just great films with great characters in extraordinary circumstances 😉

    • @AstroXeno
      @AstroXeno Год назад

      The best World War II movies you have left to watch are A Bridge Too Far, Valkyrie and Enemy at the Gates
      If you're OK with subtitles, Das Boot, Downfall and Letters From Iwo Jima are also outstanding

  • @darylsfan9680
    @darylsfan9680 Год назад +290

    “Ideals are peaceful, history’s violent.”
    Such a powerful line.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +4

      Such a heavy hitting line!! 💔

    • @karlhaber1904
      @karlhaber1904 Год назад +2

      It's always been one of my favorite comeback movie.

  • @terryharrow3127
    @terryharrow3127 Год назад +291

    Fun fact: the German tank used in the film is Tiger 131, the last functions Tiger tank left in the world, this was also the first time a tiger tank had been used in a film since 1950

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +38

      Oh wow!! That is so damn cool!

    • @thewandering01
      @thewandering01 Год назад +11

      @@MovieJoob Yeah, apparently both that Tiger and the American tanks were borrowed from a museum in England.

    • @texastootin1628
      @texastootin1628 Год назад +7

      There are more tigers, just not fully original. They are restored from shells or partially assembled tanks. I’m surprised they were able to get one of the originals for the movie considering how delicate it might be.

    • @thatcher00
      @thatcher00 Год назад +3

      @@thewandering01 the bovington tank museum

    • @jacklingham6069
      @jacklingham6069 Год назад +5

      @@texastootin1628 there are more tigers yes but tiger 131 is the only running tiger 1

  • @jojoemcgeejoe457
    @jojoemcgeejoe457 Год назад +120

    Something that a lot of people miss.
    When the Fury rolls back into that first camp, and the tank commanders are all talking. One says "I thought there were no more Tigers". and Wardaddy replies "tell that to the rest of my platoon". Meaning, that opening scene when they were broke down, and the last tank survived in their platoon? yeah. They'd just finished a battle like the one against the Tiger in that field, and all the other tanks in their platoon had been destroyed. That's how their day started.
    And, the movie takes place over a single 24-hour day. Opens at sunrise and ends at sunrise the next day.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +17

      Dang... they all had been through so much! And in 24 hours! The exhaustion they would feel would be incomprehensible!!

    • @NoahNKC
      @NoahNKC Год назад

      ​@@MovieJoob More mindfuck. Germans were creating drugs to manipulate the brain and feel very little exhaustion even after 24hs of hardcore battle.

    • @matthewcharles5867
      @matthewcharles5867 Год назад +4

      @@MovieJoob the guns in the tigers were based off the 88mm anti aircraft gun. They were anti everything superior range and fire-power to many of the allied tanks . The petrol engine and being prone to breaking down due to lack of parts was the biggest problem. Not unusual for them to knock out a dozen allied tanks before being destroyed or breaking down.

  • @ronbeekiii781
    @ronbeekiii781 Год назад +70

    Such an incredible film. It’s full of tragedy and violence and darkness- but in the end it’s an enemy soldier with a heart like Norman’s that allows him to live. It’s a profound sliver of hope in all of this carnage. A beautiful film despite its brutality.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +10

      It was such a beautiful sliver of hope indeed!! And I love that they acknowledge that not all on the German side were monsters - some were made to join this war and do these things against their will. (including those that we're hung for choosing to not fight) 💔

  • @SilentXtract
    @SilentXtract Год назад +94

    One of my favorite scenes in this is when the building is destroyed and Norman frantically runs to the destroyed house and bernthals character runs to get it him and yells out “it’s called war . do you feel it?” The delivery is incredible and sums up how the fighting man is numb to to the killing but uses emotion at times to harness it and turn it into aggression.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +11

      It was so impactful! Such a well done moment! 💔

    • @matthewskinner1637
      @matthewskinner1637 Год назад +4

      I also love how he pulls Norman into the barn before the last battle and tells him he’s a good man, he knows the war has changed the rest of the crew to be cold to the world but they all still have warmth and humanity left deep down.

  • @Mubiki
    @Mubiki Год назад +27

    Honestly, I really appreciate that you do not hold an unreasonable amount of judgement for the men who were asked to do these things for the greater good. Men in these situations do not always behave as they should, but it's hard to hold onto your humanity 100% of the time when you are asked to do inhumane things on a daily basis. So yeah, thanks for being cool.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +8

      Aww thank you! I completely understand! They all use different defense mechanisms to handle the horrors they are going through and I think that is fair enough! They're all just doing the best they can in their situations!

  • @phil0934
    @phil0934 Год назад +48

    So sweet how every video starts with thanking your audience. Why would someone not be supportive or kind? It is fun to wtch you. Keep it on.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +8

      Awww you are so sweet that is so nice! Thank you from the bottom of my heart! 😊

  • @Bossworth
    @Bossworth Год назад +16

    Hacksaw Ridge, Band of Brothers, and Schindler's List, all need to be watched.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      I did watch Hacksaw Ridge and I am going to watch band of Brothers once I finish The Last of Us show and I definitely want to watch Schindler's list eventually especially because of my background!! Thank you so much!

  • @Josh86_559
    @Josh86_559 Год назад +18

    One of the deleted scenes explains why Brad Pitt's back was all scarred up from burns...it was before the war. Also , Don had a younger brother named Norman. That's why he was hard on Norman , he wanted him to live. Really , if Don didn't toughen Norman up, I don't think he survives

  • @TheLuckyRabbitZ
    @TheLuckyRabbitZ Год назад +19

    Your call to shoot the tracks on Tiger 1 would have been a good call I’m proud of you Jade

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +4

      Thank youu! I'm learning! 🪖

    • @TheLuckyRabbitZ
      @TheLuckyRabbitZ Год назад +1

      @AHitler47 also true but I was more saying it wouldn’t be a bad shoot if needs be

    • @spygineer1076
      @spygineer1076 Год назад +1

      @Adolf Hitler 75 ? you mean 76 right ? and they can pen at 700 yards or 800 meters

    • @spygineer1076
      @spygineer1076 Год назад +1

      @Adolf Hitler yes I know that, but the e8 doesn't have a 75

    • @ralphjacobson8815
      @ralphjacobson8815 Год назад +2

      It's called a "mobility kill" and leaves you with a pissed off enemy tank crew.

  • @neutchain7838
    @neutchain7838 Год назад +25

    Little girl, if you do this for another year you gonna be an emotional wreck... :D I adore how quickly you get invested into characters, your emphaty is off the charts. Great vid as always, really enjoyed it. :)

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +7

      Aww that is so kind! I thankfully have a great support system around me so right after filming I'm totally okay again but I've always been a crier. I cry at the drop of a hat I get very invested haahah! 😊

    • @synshenron798
      @synshenron798 Год назад

      ​@@MovieJoob I grew up being an older brother to my friends around me. I called my two best friends my little brothers and I always took it as my job to watch out for them. I grew up with a lot of empathy for everyone around me as well. I always did my best to be everyones rock when they needed it, even if it was to my own detriment. Today I was at work listening to your reaction of this movie and hearing your tears made me remember all the time I was there for my all my friends and those who needed me. In my mind all I could think of was wanting to give ya a hug and dry those tears. It broke my heart hearin ya cry

  • @mastereppsreturns6586
    @mastereppsreturns6586 Год назад +1

    15:29 Jon Bernthal's acting is great. War has turned him into a monster and he knows and hates it. He's scary now and his innocence is long gone. Norman being liked by the pretty German girl who's terrified of him kinda faces him with how much he has changed. This is beyond jealousy. So ofcourse he takes it out on Norman.

  • @panzerwolf494
    @panzerwolf494 Год назад +6

    That was an actual real Tiger I tank. This movie adds that to it's list of achievements, this is the first time since WWII a real Tiger was used in a movie. That was Tiger 131 from the Bovington Tank Museum. They take her out on display runs twice a year, once on Tiger Day, and the other on Tankfest. The Tiger I was a legend of it's day. It had such a fearsome reputation it had it's own term called Tigerphobia.

  • @phj223
    @phj223 Год назад +9

    The sound effects and sound design was just insane watching this in a theater. o.O

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      Oh wow I can only imagine how crazy that would be!

  • @johnej8286
    @johnej8286 Год назад +12

    One thing to note about tiger tanks, they were very well designed and their guns were huge, but they were super heavy and incredibly unreliable, and often broke down. Also, they were exceedingly rare, the US only encountered them 3 times during the entire war. Great vid!

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +4

      Oooh fascinating! Thanks for the insight. And thank you so much I'm so glad you liked it!

    • @spygineer1076
      @spygineer1076 Год назад +3

      unreliable as all other heavy tanks, cars weren't around for that long, asking car producers to make heavy fighting vehicles was quite of a stretch, reason why the engines always had some problems together with transmissions, drive trains, gearboxes and wheel drives.

    • @TTTT-oc4eb
      @TTTT-oc4eb Год назад +8

      The Tiger was the most reliable late war German tank with a readiness rate of 70+% in the last half of 44. The US Army encountered Tigers plenty of times in North Africa, Italy, Belgium and Germany itself.

    • @johnej8286
      @johnej8286 Год назад

      @@TTTT-oc4eb it was a decently reliable tank for the time and compared to other German heavy tanks, but it is a verifiable fact that the us only encountered it 3-4 times in tank battles, they were rare tanks given germanys lack of resources at the time

    • @TTTT-oc4eb
      @TTTT-oc4eb Год назад +4

      @@johnej8286 These "3 Tigers" myth is taken out of context from one of Chieftain's videos. He was quoting the author Steven Zaloga, who said he could only find three confirmed meetings with the Tiger 1 in NW Europe, but also said there were probably more. However, the US Army also met the Tiger II several times in NW Europe, as well as the Tiger 1 in North Africa and Italy. Even the very rare M24 Chaffee and M26 Pershing alone met the Tiger 1 three times.

  • @ericklecker2672
    @ericklecker2672 Год назад +10

    Hi again Jade : ). Hope you are doing well. I want say thank you for showing your appreciation for us supporting on your movie/TV show journey. Your reaction along with your Hacksaw Ridge reaction were just right as in you're level-headed but display empathy. Your commentaries are relaxing but never boring. This movie is still good, despite the being things about that aren't historically accurate. Movies are best view for having fun while escaping from our own lives for awhile. Movies that might not get suggested after watching this are: Glory (1989), Windtalkers (2002), Black Hawk Down (2002) and The Last Samurai.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Your comment is so incredibly lovely thank you so much Erick!! And thank you for those great suggestions! 🙌

  • @armel2467
    @armel2467 Год назад +1

    This is my new favorite movie reactor now. She only talks when needed, she stays on the movie topic and not doing some over the top craziness like yelling "Let's go!"

  • @DecSteele
    @DecSteele Год назад +1

    YESSS! so happy you left the scene of Norman getting his war name. The gang finally accepting him into the “home”(tank) fucking love it.
    Best job I ever had

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      It was so beautiful!!! I loved that moment!

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      "Best job I ever had" makes me wanna cry every time I hear it!! ❤️❤️

  • @RobertH-ol6mw
    @RobertH-ol6mw Год назад +44

    I think "Jojo Rabbit" would be a great film for you to react to! It's WW2 from a 10 year old German boys' perspective. It's tragic but heartwarming and quite funny as well.👍👌

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Год назад +2

      Man that movie is so underrated.

    • @RobertH-ol6mw
      @RobertH-ol6mw Год назад +2

      @@rc59191 I wish she would have acknowledged this post, lol. I wonder if she saw it at all.

  • @DougRayPhillips
    @DougRayPhillips Год назад +4

    Brad Pitt has done a number of WWII films. "Inglourious Basterds" (Quentin Tarantino) is satirical. "Allied" is a straight hard drama.

  • @NaeemCR7Khan
    @NaeemCR7Khan Год назад

    The ending absolutely shattered me . I wasn't prepared for that . Absolutely incredible movie and legendary performances by Shia Brad and everyone

  • @themadplunderer
    @themadplunderer Год назад +3

    This has to be one of if not my all time favorite war movie.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +1

      I'm so glad you enjoy it! I hope you liked my reaction too!

    • @themadplunderer
      @themadplunderer Год назад

      @@MovieJoob I did, the perfect reaction to this heartbreaking movie

  • @zachraymond7341
    @zachraymond7341 8 месяцев назад

    This is one of my favorite movies. Some of my favorite actors, Pitt, the Punisher, Shia even Micheal all class acts in their own right.

  • @robertc.8298
    @robertc.8298 Год назад +1

    Fun fact about the movie. In the opening scene it’s said the the German riding the horse through the battlefield is supposed to represent death. “Death rides a pale horse”

  • @curtism-w6b
    @curtism-w6b Год назад

    The sound of those big sabot rounds cutting through the air is eerie. The bigger .30 cal rounds make a spine chilling sound when they go overhead as well.

  • @SilentXtract
    @SilentXtract Год назад +3

    The last full measure is a pretty unknown war movie about a man that embodies the saying of his job as a pararescueman in the Air Force “These Things we do, so that others may live” first war movie and only war movie to ever make me cry

  • @karlhaber1904
    @karlhaber1904 Год назад +1

    Fun fact. In the United States of America in 1930, one in four people on the streets of an American city were German-Speaking Immigrants from Germany, Switzerland, Austria, or Czechoslovakia. My grandfather and nine of his brothers served in World War II in The US Military, but, their father used to read from A Big Lutheran Bible in High German. There were a lot of Americans, who Were bilingual in both German and English serving in WW2.

  • @diamondhughey8277
    @diamondhughey8277 Год назад

    I love this movie and the actors that played it, they did an outstanding job playing their roles and learning everything they could about being a tanker and making sure everything was as accurate as possible for the movie. It's funny how many lines are quoted from this movie in the Tanker World. " Best job I ever had"

  • @TheHellHeadbanger
    @TheHellHeadbanger Год назад +1

    25:46 the young Waffen SS spared Norman because he was not adaptable to become a Nazi war machine. The young German SS was drafted into the Hitler Youth (Hitler Jugend) and rose up the ranks until he turned 18 to become a legitimate Waffen SS.

  • @bullpup33
    @bullpup33 Год назад

    I've seen several of your reactions to war movies. I must say I am so pleasantly surprised how and level headed you are.

  • @jimmysmith5418
    @jimmysmith5418 Год назад +2

    My grand uncle was just 20 years old when he went to fight in Egypt 🇪🇬 back in 1942 during ww2, he lived through it all, came back COMPLETELY traumatised from his experience 😢😢😢😢 about a year later he killed himself.
    He serious severe PTSD -( Post Traumatic Stress Disorder)
    He had to much resentment and regret, he couldn’t live with guilt. 😢 🙏 thanks for reacting sweetie. ❤❤❤ keep it up 👍 💋

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      I can only imagine how traumatising the experience of every single soldier would've been especially in WWII!
      Guilt, regret and resentment is such a fair enough reaction to what he would've experienced I completely understand that!!

    • @jimmysmith5418
      @jimmysmith5418 Год назад

      @Dayspring I’m sorry I didn’t mean it 🙏

  • @savagepancake9110
    @savagepancake9110 Год назад +1

    I love this film and by far one of my favorites for several reasons. It's mostly historical accurate. But unlike other wwll films this movie is has close you're going to get to the real thing. It shows the darkness, it's savage, and dirty. War is not clean, you don't die in a glorious death. This is a war that changed history at a cost of 70 million. Our grandparents generation ( also dubbed the greatest generation) fought a war that would determine the fate of the world but generations after, and paid it at a high price. It's sad that they don't teach WW2 history in schools anymore, shame that it's being nearly forgotten. " Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it"

  • @harryshriver6223
    @harryshriver6223 Год назад +1

    Unfortunately is the sad reality of life I will just say this only a veteran can understand another veteran. Don't mean nothing, not a thing. 😢

  • @BadassRaiden
    @BadassRaiden Год назад +2

    There are two things that stick with me most about this film.. Before I get to that, you should check out We Were Soldiers. It's unfortunately the Vietnam War, not WWII but it is just as important a piece to bear witness to.
    The first, is the scene at the table. I had a physical copy of this film, and it had an alternate version of that scene, one that was much more - heart wrenching.. It was much more emotional, much more intense. The monologue about the horses. The lines were very nearly the same, but the way in which Michael Peña delivered them was was terrifically depressing. Instead of being quiet and somber about the story, he yells and cries. "All day long! Sun up to sundown just fucking shooting horses!" You can watch the alternate version here on RUclips. It's labeled as a deleted scene. I think the reason for that is because of just how real it made the scene, almost too real, all that raw emotion..
    The other thing that sticks with me is the final shot of Norman.. Sitting there in the back of the vehicle, looking through the dirty window, that shot of his face - staring at the tank, at the men he's leaving behind. The knowledge, that we as the viewer have - of course along with the rest of the event - that that last moment, being driven away from the tank, it getting smaller and smaller in his view, will forever be burned into his mind..
    I think what sets this apart from most other war films is that in other films, there might be one or two characters that have lost their humanity. One or two that are completely apathetic, whole all the rest are still endearing, still hopeful. In this, it's all the men, all except for Norman, that are no longer endearing, no longer compassionate. They've completely lost their humanity. And I think this is a better depiction of war, because this is the reality. The majority of the men back then, they had to do far more unspeakable things to survive than anything our armed services encounter today.. The only way to live through what they had to do, was to become cold, and dark, and empty..
    And what did we do? Those boys came back home, and we left them to rot alone in their own sorrow and guilt.. I don't mean to get political, but it disgusts me that those who claim so much to have cared about our men then, and claim to care about our men and women now - do absolutely nothing to help veterans reintegrate into society.. I'm not a fan of war. I unsurprisingly find it to be an absolute abomination, and I think we should work to convince those who follow orders on the other side, to disobey orders, and risk death, to stand up to their leaders who want to send them to war. In the same breath, I think we too should stand up and say no, that our service men and women should refuse any time they are to be sent to war.
    Few people are malicious, or immoral, or evil. It takes good people doing nothing to commit genocide - and I believe all war should be articulated in those terms. All it takes is people following orders, good people. Those in charge are more likely to be indifferent and immoral, and malicious and evil than any soldier on the field. Most people don't want to admit, that the overwhelming majority of people in the German military were not evil or malicious individuals. They were manipulated into believing awful things about the Jewish people, and they were forced by the threat of death, to pledge service to Hitler. I hope with all my heart, that one day the human race can get to a point, where compassion and empathy is so enshrined in our culture, and in every living soul, where the courage to risk your life to say no is instilled in every human being - so that never again will any momentary ruler command an army of men just following orders..

    • @synshenron798
      @synshenron798 Год назад

      The bass player for my church wouldnt have been born had his father not joined the German Werhmacht. He was a young man who lied about his age. He said he was 19 but he was 17. The army didnt give a damn and they sent him to training and later to the battle of Stalingrad. Before he even got to Stalingrad he was shot off his horse by a Soviet sniper and layed in the snow for about a day and half before another German unit found him still alive somehow. He ended up in a field hospital in Bavaria where he met his later wife. He was chastized by some other soldiers about something or other so he got pissed and went back out to fight. I cant remember what happened to him after that but he ended up back at that field hospital. He later married his nurse and had his two sons whom he told that he only joined out of nationalist pride and being tricked into believing that there was honor and glory in war and that he could be a hero for his home land. My bass player had said his father wept when he told him he beat an allied troop to death with a brick for shooting near him and saying he wished he could kill him, this happened when the German soldier was a prisoner in a prison camp. He had come to find out that allied soldier was only 16 years old. He told my bass player, his son, that killing another man destroyed his soul because he took that boy from his mother, father, friends and possibly girlfriend. He said many nights he could see the boys face and he had nothing but horrendous guilt for killing him. So many of the German army were just like guys in the US. Fed propaganda to fuel the war machine and tricked into believing their sacrifice would bring honor and glory to their homeland. At the end of the day war is just the young and dumb fighting for the old and bitter

  • @AstroXeno
    @AstroXeno Год назад

    The shot of the tank running over the dead German in the road is straight out of Cross Of Iron

  • @ralphjacobson8815
    @ralphjacobson8815 Год назад

    I was a tanker for a bit over 20 years. I enjoy the interaction between the crew, though their tactics are pretty sketchy.

  • @crispy_338
    @crispy_338 Год назад +9

    God this is such a good movie. The battle with the Tiger is completely unrealistic but other than that it’s one of my favorites. I love Shia in this one too. The last scene where they’re quoting bible verses is so sad

    • @morpheuslp4738
      @morpheuslp4738 Год назад +3

      Only the battle with the tiger? What about the SS battalion in the end who have never heard of flanking/blindspots or have magic disappearing panzerfausts xD

    • @crispy_338
      @crispy_338 Год назад +5

      @@morpheuslp4738 fanatical, demoralized, undertrained, and exhausted troops would not act like their early war comrades, especially if they were recruiting kids and putting them in SS uniforms

    • @TheLwaller09
      @TheLwaller09 Год назад

      You both need a hobby. Go outside.

    • @crispy_338
      @crispy_338 Год назад +3

      @@TheLwaller09 Discourse isnt allowed on the internet. Got it 🤡

    • @TheLwaller09
      @TheLwaller09 Год назад

      @@crispy_338 I just wish we all had your time man.

  • @markjohnson2079
    @markjohnson2079 Год назад +1

    Tiger 1 tanks were bad news... Fury tank has some plot armor in this film for sure. Realistically that Tiger would have taken out the Fury tank FIRST (it had 76mm M1 gun vs standard 75) then it would have taken out the rest.

  • @jeffburnham6611
    @jeffburnham6611 Год назад +7

    Nobody would disagree with you about this being a cinematic piece of film. The problem many people have is the actions and tactics used by this particular tank and crew. It's true that in June of 1944, the Germans were using tanks superior to American Sherman M4. "Fury" though was an advanced version of the M4 called an "Easy 8". It's 76mm high velocity gun had no problem penetrating the frontal armor of a German Tiger at even medium ranges, even in April of 1945.

    • @phil0934
      @phil0934 Год назад +1

      Yeah for ww2 buffs this movie has some flaws.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      Ahh that is interesting! It definitely might have inconsistencies but as a film overall it was incredibly entertaining but I totally get that! Thank you for the information!!

    • @samuelwilliams3130
      @samuelwilliams3130 Год назад

      Fury IS an M4A3E8 though....
      And late war Shermans would still easily be penetrated by the Tiger so it wouldn't have changed much

    • @spygineer1076
      @spygineer1076 Год назад

      @@samuelwilliams3130 jumbo joins the chat

    • @commanderdragco3123
      @commanderdragco3123 Год назад

      @@MovieJoob yeah in during the scene when the tiger first ambushes them fury had plot armor as they would shoot the tank in the front to stop the column also they would have instantly seen the 76mm gun on fury witch was a kill on sight due to it being able to penetrate there front.

  • @sushijuice6895
    @sushijuice6895 Год назад

    Logan, Shia and Brad's best performance by far

  • @michaelholt3222
    @michaelholt3222 Год назад

    Found your channel today, love to watch along with you, and see how you learn history, love you pure, raw emotion, and your thoughts, thank you for recognizing what us veterans go through, ppl don't realize, it's not about fighting for country, the flag, or the idiots in Washingto, it's about fighting for the person to your right and your left, u fight, for each other, war is old men making decisions, and young men dying for those decisions, I am subscribed to your channel now and will look forward to more of your content, thanks again...👍👍👍👍👍

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      So beautifully said Michael! Thank you for your service and your extremely kind comment! I'm so grateful you enjoyed and subscribed! ❤️

  • @bhowardist
    @bhowardist Год назад +1

    You are a very genuine person.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so dearly!! 🥹

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Год назад

    This movie, takes u thru Norman's Innocence to his killer growth. It makes u, him.

  • @sapphonymph8204
    @sapphonymph8204 Год назад +2

    Love your evenhanded assessment of what went on.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      Aww thank you so much!

  • @teeheeteeheeish
    @teeheeteeheeish Год назад

    He brought his gun in the bedroom because they teach us in the Army to never have our weapon out of arm's reach. Its so ingrained that the thought terrifies. I'm an Army career guy and sometimes I wake up trying to find my rifle until I wake up fully.

  • @tduffy5
    @tduffy5 Год назад

    This was my first experience with your reaction. You didn't talk too much as so many do. Good job!

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so much! I'm very grateful you enjoyed. It's so hard to talk when I get lost in the emotions. 💔

  • @isaiahmayle4706
    @isaiahmayle4706 Год назад

    "What haunts a man most isn't what he was ordered to do. It's what he wasn't ordered to do."

  • @Lock-Vlog
    @Lock-Vlog 3 месяца назад

    The Trauma of an soldier is so worth

  • @joeschmoe233
    @joeschmoe233 Год назад

    Shaia put in an Oscar worthy performance, wish he would have got nominated.

  • @rfletch62
    @rfletch62 7 месяцев назад

    I'll add "Cross of Iron" to the list. It's from the '70's, but works. Subbed!

  • @Fez135
    @Fez135 Год назад

    This is one of my favourite war movies, it gets across the intensity so well.
    But the whole scene with the Tiger is so aggravating. Neither side would do what they did here because it makes no tactical sense whatsoever and they'd both know it!

  • @zmani4379
    @zmani4379 Год назад +1

    I would love to see you react to Thin Red Line - IMO it looks at the WW2 from a very different angle, deeper and more contemplative, also very emotional - and the film is beautiful and poetic - even if you feel differently, it would be fascinating to see your take on a movie like this - but, either way, keep doing what you love, and all the best

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Год назад +1

    Great reaction, shows how nice and sweet you are. I scrolled through your videos and didn't see Lone Survivor or Platoon.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so much! So glad you enjoyed!

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +1

      I haven't seen them but thank you for the suggestions!

  • @aussie6910
    @aussie6910 Год назад

    A good illustration of why the Tigers were so feared is the Franz Staudegger contact.
    It also shows that Russian tank tactics were just as bad 80yrs ago as now.
    8JUL43 one Tiger (with infantry) was attacked by 50 T34's. The Tiger killed 27 of them & took 67 hits before the Russians withdrew. The Tiger then fell back for repairs, it was still mobile.

  • @Mac-Music-Gamer
    @Mac-Music-Gamer Год назад

    Your smile can light up a room :) great video Amazing movie

  • @feudist
    @feudist Год назад

    Norman was in the same situation as Upham in SPR. Essentially a civilian with 8 weeks of Boot Camp thrown into a meatgrinder without the training and indoctrination to prepare him for combat.

  • @RobertH-ol6mw
    @RobertH-ol6mw Год назад +2

    Awesome reaction! You're one of my favorites! I'm tired of "Marvel" and "Star Wars" related content! I now that's what's popular but there are so many great options! i like that you are interested in and so moved by historical content. If you would like a western, "Tombstone" would be a good place to start! Val Kilmer is amazing as "Doc Holiday". It's real characters from the old west but in a mainly fictional plot.

  • @xdestoration7816
    @xdestoration7816 Год назад

    I appreciate your sincere reactions. We will always support you.

  • @JBat-Gaming
    @JBat-Gaming Год назад +1

    I remember this one. It’s been awhile since I’ve seen it but it’s another great one

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +1

      I really enjoyed it so much!! 🙌

  • @LexyThomas134
    @LexyThomas134 Год назад +1

    ♡ great reaction!!

  • @JuanJohnSmith
    @JuanJohnSmith Год назад +1

    If possible, I recommend watching these good war movies in order. All would be in order of the War in the Pacific. The Great War of Archimedes (2019) - Pearl Harbor (2001) - Midway (2019) - Flags of our Fathers (2006) - Emperor (2012)

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so much for the recommendations!!

  • @randywebb2100
    @randywebb2100 Год назад

    Jade I always enjoy your reaction videos of film and television. I always come and join the journey whenever I am off or when I get home from work. I hope you know that I appreciate the effort made in your reaction videos, you are absolutely beautiful. Television suggestion from me would be The Bad Batch surrounding the likes of Clone Force 99

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so incredibly much! That means the world to me! And thank you so much for the suggestion! 🙌

  • @Waryan1
    @Waryan1 Год назад

    Actually the fact Americans could build tanks small enough and in enough numbers to fit on a ship to cross an ocean. Not to mention the logistics behind it is incredible. 😊

  • @kasrowi2427
    @kasrowi2427 Год назад

    good reaction video jade, also your hair looks amazing 👍

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you! I'm so glad you enjoyed! And aww thank you!

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Год назад +3

    Sometimes it's hard being a veteran. I remember, for about 10-15 years after I got out, I looked at people around me, with a certain resentment. Thinking to myself, y'all have no idea, what most of the world thinks of u, or would do to u.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      Honestly I completely understand that. As awful of a feeling that is and as much as it was none of those people around you's fault it would be hard not to harbor resentment after such an experience! I hope things have gotten easier and gentler for you!

    • @synshenron798
      @synshenron798 Год назад +1

      Its so sad too because me and a lot of the people I suround myself with all understand that being a soldier is a job most people dont understand the horrors of. Yes we know of the horrors but we do not fully understand them. I wish I could just to be there for people I see suffering. I apprrciate what you guys do and I know theres many others of us who appreciate it more than words can tell. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart

    • @olekanuriel9359
      @olekanuriel9359 Год назад +1

      i wonder why?

    • @philmullineaux5405
      @philmullineaux5405 Год назад

      @@olekanuriel9359 I guess a good way to explain it would be, u know something, u know it to be absolutely correct, truth, scientific method, right, etc., And u could argue these things for years. Not only would no one around u get it, but seem to either purposely ignore it, or are oblivious.

  • @edgardofernandez7511
    @edgardofernandez7511 7 месяцев назад

    Fury is my most favorite ww2 movie then saving private Ryan n pearl harbor and midway u are so right that towards the end of this movie it becomes more emotional since u are embraced n are attached to the characters who are in the fury tank n u see them die one by one

  • @jimmyt9345
    @jimmyt9345 Год назад

    Hi Jade...thank you again for a wonderful reaction. There are so many on YT , but I want you to know I truly think you're one of the best. Not because of technical knowledge or whatever a critic may bring, but because you are you.... who you are. You don't try to be anything but that and you don't hide your feelings or babble on incessantly. You give a thoughtful personal perspective.
    I had messaged you in another video ( Hacksaw Ridge ) and let you know I subscribed and how much I enjoyed your channel. But just wanted to say hi and thanks again. I have a lot of things going on in my life as so many of us do, but you have become a real bright spot in the day when I can watch. It just becomes more obvious what a wonderful soul you are, it just shines through. I hope things will be amazing for you in all you do. Your channel is sure to grow and you will gain many more subscribers, but more than that, because of who you are they will really be friends and "family". You have one here for sure....my friend. 😊💙 Stay well and be blessed

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Oh wow Jimmy I cannot thank you enough for this beautiful comment! I'm so grateful to be a brightness at all! Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm so sorry you're going through tough times but thank you for being my friend and making my day! I hope you have an amazing day and that things get infinitely better!! 😊❤️

    • @jimmyt9345
      @jimmyt9345 Год назад

      @@MovieJoob Thank you so much for your sweet response. I appreciate it. I wasn't able to respond sooner, but I will tell you this was a bright spot in the day and helped alot. I think I am learning everyday, that it is one of the big reasons we are here...to bring some kindness and happiness to others. Not long ago, I would have thought that was pretty "sugary", but things and circumstances in life make us look at things differently.
      Anyway, I hope you see this and are having an amazing day. Hope to "talk" to you again soon, my friend. Be well ❤✌

  • @jesperthryse6651
    @jesperthryse6651 Год назад

    you should check out ¨land of mine¨ (under sandet) its a danish movie where its shown the treatment of young german POW and the cleanup of the danish coast after WW2, great video

  • @freddieboo.45
    @freddieboo.45 Год назад +1

    Bible is my favorite character in this movie, this is a great movie 👍🏽

  • @chrisbanks5925
    @chrisbanks5925 Год назад

    Nice reaction Jade.

  • @AstroXeno
    @AstroXeno Год назад

    The Tiger tanks in Saving Private Ryan were T-34s dressed up to look like Tigers, but in Fury they used a real Tiger tank- The last one in the world that still runs.
    If you'd like to get a sense of how freakin' BIG this thing actually is, here's a video of them driving it around at the Bovington Tank Museum: ruclips.net/video/dXP0QhbBDC8/видео.html

  • @mot0rhe4d40
    @mot0rhe4d40 Год назад

    A lot of our vets won't speak with non veterans folks about their experiences. People that haven't served in combat have no frame of reference to understand those experiences.
    So vets tend to only talk to other vets about those times in combat.

  • @phantomfreq
    @phantomfreq Год назад

    The cast had to live in a tank for 4 weeks before filming the movie.They wanted the genuine experience.

  • @Tyler-yn5xe
    @Tyler-yn5xe Год назад

    If I'm not mistaken the last part of this is based on part of Audy Murphy's story

  • @Slenderriffic
    @Slenderriffic Год назад

    My mother has often asked me what I did when I was deployed because I didn’t have a lot of pictures of my time in the service and I don’t talk about it when she asks why I just tell her she’d never be able to see me as her son ever again

  • @tristanbrockett6563
    @tristanbrockett6563 Год назад

    fun fact the tank furys ( M4A2E8 SHERMAN)main gun could go through the tigers front armour(100mm thick) very easily The HVAP round was able to penetrate 178 mm (7.0 in) at 1,000 m

  • @ShaneH5150
    @ShaneH5150 Год назад

    Germans have indeed always been great at producing amazing machines. The disparity between the two nations tanks in WWII was mostly because of logistics and to a lesser degree, politics. America had to ship all their tanks over the Atlantic ocean where as Germany could just build them and drive them to wherever they were needed.

  • @forsureman1239
    @forsureman1239 Год назад

    That tiger tank should have taken out all of those tanks with ease

  • @_lynx_8632
    @_lynx_8632 Год назад +1

    You need to Watch "Das Boot" it's about a German UBoat and it's crew
    One of those movies that show the other side of the war.
    There are sadly so few reactions of this really awesome movie.
    😍

  • @Tommybn11
    @Tommybn11 Год назад

    Saludó desde la República Dominicana excelente vídeo

  • @the-wordplay-dojo
    @the-wordplay-dojo Год назад

    There's an interesting dynamic playing out in EVERY war. On one hand the people actually DOING the fighting are conditioned that not only are they the best army, the best trained, the most advanced etc to hype up fighting spirit. They are conditioned that the enemy are just vicious animals who will brutalise your women and children back home if they aren't killed. That's just part of it.
    War is the driver of innovation. War is what makes an entire country, funnel it's entire producing capacity into stuff for the war, to keep your side supplied. There's highly skilled people at HQ on all sides, who's job it is to design and create even deadlier versions of what they already have. They're ALWAYS trying to get an edge. They're aware that their enemies are doing the EXACT SAME, so if you don't, you'll fall further and further behind. You WILL lose the war, it's only a matter of how long, and how many of your men have to die before it happens.
    Imagine being in the field in a tank. You know the capabilities of YOUR tank. You know the capabilities of your KNOWN enemy tanks. Once you confirm you're facing X model, you can decide your tactics accordingly; ie reverse back out of THEIR range, but still inside YOURS, and pummel them into the ground. If their engineers suddenly invented an upgrade to extend their range, now that tactic you HAD relied on, is in question. Now YOU can't hit them if you're far enough back to be out of THEIR range. You're also unknowingly in the target zone, until you get hit and find out.
    Tanks were the solution to the problem of barbed wire on the Western Front in WWI. ALL wars have that dynamic playing out in their own ways. It's intentional evolution. This is the argument the Military Industrial Complex always use to ensure lots of money; that they are falling behind our potential enemies, so no matter how much money, it's never enough and can never be reduced, because THEY are constantly evolving THEIR capabilities, we have no choice but to do the same, but better.

  • @craigmorris4083
    @craigmorris4083 Год назад

    The real star of this movie is Tiger 131. Beautiful machine. :)

  • @ivansvalker7025
    @ivansvalker7025 Год назад

    The egg part was an important scene. At the time the Germans basically had no eggs, so he gave them German ladies a delicacy

  • @boyscouts83712
    @boyscouts83712 Год назад

    Great movie. The sad truth is that during ww2, U.S tanks weren't even in the same league as the german tanks like the Panzers, Panthers, Tigers. The only difference is that while german tanks became harder and harder to devolpe as the was dragged on, the allies could just mass produce the sherman tank in the hundreds

  • @JAG244
    @JAG244 Год назад

    Children from the ages ranging from 13 and went to fight and very few came back but every single one did as a volunteer of there own free will and we thank them for there service, and knowing what they went through, it would be horrifying but I would do it. cause to me they do not get enough appreciation for what they did. knowing the odds knowing you have the least possible chance to come back home would? (There is no need to comment just have do read it and no need for likes, this is something that went through my head and as appreciation token to just thank them for there service and there great and sometimes unspoken sacrifice.

  • @scottruch76
    @scottruch76 Год назад

    Fun fact- four tanks is a lot when the enemy hardly has any at this point in the war

  • @BENITO_SWAGOLINI21
    @BENITO_SWAGOLINI21 Год назад +1

    It’s sad that they removed a scene that shows what ptsd can do a solider

  • @faultier8166
    @faultier8166 Год назад +1

    my grandpa was in the tiger he also had to fight four shermans and they destroyed all 4 tanks with one shot per tank and the tiger comes through every corner so in the film they would have destroyed all 4

    • @groundbranch3637
      @groundbranch3637 Год назад

      At the distance in the film the Sherman's could have destroyed the tiger without flanking it. The Tiger dominance was distance and fire power of the 88m gun.

    • @spygineer1076
      @spygineer1076 Год назад

      was it an american sherman platoon or british ?

  • @thewin9459
    @thewin9459 Год назад

    Americans back then and even today have been known for collecting trophies.
    Also there's a deleted scene where Wardaddy explains his scars. Why wasn't that scene kept in!?

  • @tylerboyce4081
    @tylerboyce4081 Год назад

    I notice Jade is on a bit of a WW2 kick lately? If I can make a recommendation, "The Resistance Banker" on Netflix was a surprisingly good WW2 drama. It's a 2018 Dutch film about the Dutch Resistance against the Nazi occupation, specifically the Dutch bankers who helped fund the resistance fighters and saboteurs, right under the noses of the Gestapo. There are other great stories about anti-Nazi resistance on the Continent, but that film is the first one that springs to mind.

  • @TheForsakenEagle
    @TheForsakenEagle Год назад +2

    After all these war movies, you are going to become... jaded. Forgive me.
    This movie shows a lot of the desperate, messed up things Germans did during the final months of the war. They were so low in fighting strength, they recruited old men and children into the "casserole divisions", being they were made of "old meat and green vegetables". A lot of Allied soldiers were forced to kill children and took their anger out of any SS member they came across. It got to the point where officers were told to stop the killing so they can instead be put on trial.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +2

      Wow that is so true and was so heartbreaking to watch! I can only imagine how fed up the Allied soldiers would've been with having to aim weapons and children and elderly that they just became enraged with SS members! 💔😢

  • @kalt7990
    @kalt7990 Год назад

    "Humans are the most brutal of all creatures.”
    Lion: I eat my food while it's still alive and struggling.
    Parasites: Hey, so do I.

  • @jimmysmith5418
    @jimmysmith5418 Год назад +2

    My grandfathers very much went through the same thing when they went to war in 1942 in Egypt they were only 19 years old so young and they were killing other young soldiers 😢😢. They were in the 28th Maori battalion of NZ 🇳🇿army.
    Sadly both killed in action (K.I.A) they never once had the chance to return still to this day they are buried in European battle grounds.
    One died in Casino Italy 🇮🇹
    One died in Berlin Germany 🇩🇪 (from my understanding by way of a German tiger tank)
    They were my inspiration to become a soldier of NZ 🇳🇿
    Thank you guys ❤❤❤❤

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much for the super chat Jimmy!!
      That is so amazing and I'm so sorry for your families losses! Thank you for all that you do! ❤️❤️

    • @jimmysmith5418
      @jimmysmith5418 Год назад

      @@MovieJoob love you jade

  • @Simon-ms6zo
    @Simon-ms6zo Год назад

    I would totally recommend "All quiet on the western front" to watch, it takes place mostly in the final days of WW1 and is based on a book. The movie is a great anti war movie. These are fictional characters but based on the experiences of the book author who was a actual war veteran. The visuals are excellent but also hard to watch. And the movie is I think a Oscar Nominee in the category Best Movie. If you should watch this movie, pls watch the original version with german audio and english subtitles, that way you notice the emotions of the soldiers far better.
    Sorry for my english, its not my first language.

  • @dmwalker24
    @dmwalker24 Год назад +1

    Your reactions are great, and are very much appreciated. I won't say this is the best WWII film (probably Saving Private Ryan), but it is my favorite. Particularly for the way it just dives into the deep end of how horrible that war actually was.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much!! I did react to Saving Private Ryan first! ruclips.net/video/paOQxAT8cT4/видео.html Hope you enjoy it!

  • @demonicrebellion6903
    @demonicrebellion6903 Год назад

    "This is beautifully shot" a moment or two later dude gets knifed in the face.

  • @jeffstark8449
    @jeffstark8449 Год назад

    Great reaction as always jade. Have you seen American Sniper? That would be a good one.

    • @MovieJoob
      @MovieJoob  Год назад

      Thank you so much! And no I have not, thank you for the suggestion!

  • @LexyThomas134
    @LexyThomas134 Год назад

    Behind Enemy Lines is another good movie. Like no one has reacted to it yet.

  • @pavelslama5543
    @pavelslama5543 Год назад

    On a similar note to this, I would highly recommend the German movie Das Boot.