Director: David Ayer
Cast: Brad Pitt, Shia Le
Beouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Pena
The bloody World War II
action film “Fury” takes its name from the sobriquet of
a Sherman tank, its barrel emblazoned with — and its mission defined by — that
angry word. But it’s inside the battered vehicle, among the members of its
tight-knit crew, where the movie’s real action takes place. It has a crew which
may seem sinister and grotesque at times but is actually battle tired and are almost mentally doomed.
Set in 1945, during the
Allies’ final push into Germany — an endgame marked by desperation and moral
compromise on both sides — “Fury” is a tale whose message can be summed up as
follows: “Ideals are peaceful; history is violent.” But the better and more hard-hitting
story centers on the man who delivers that nihilistic assessment, the
battle-scarred tank commander known as Wardaddy (Brad Pitt), and his
relationship with his four-man crew. As his nickname implies, Pitt’s character has
a demolished father figure, tough and tender in equal measure.
As rendered by filmmaker
David Ayer the combat narrative in “Fury” makes for the more familiar of two
competing story lines. Although filmed with a visceral — and often shockingly
grisly — beauty, as well as pulse-quickening drama, the movie is only passably
interesting as a war movie, especially when measured against classics such as “Paths of
Glory, Saving Private Ryan, and Apocalypse Now”. Still, it’s engaging and watchable, even as it
marches toward a seemingly suicidal climax.
It heavily narrates the
physical and mental torture of the soldiers in this hell-like battleship,
arguing the right and wrong humanity subjects, stresses on the horror and
darkness consequences of war towards those heroes who fight rather than
questioning their heroic aspects. Pitt is riveting as the
film’s antihero. Wardaddy’s successes and failures as a parent and leader are
the most engrossing and novel things about “Fury.” What enticed me most was the
confrontation scene of US Sherman tanks to Germany’s heavily armored but slow Tiger
Tanks. It is a well shot scene in which the truth of war: Death is celebrated.
Wardaddy’s success is evident
in the fact that the crew has survived three years of fighting with only one
casualty, in a war notable for its American Tank losses. Having rolled from Africa to France to
Germany, the weathered crew consists of Boyd “Bible” Swan (Shia LaBeouf); Trini
“Gordo” Garcia (Michael Peña) and Grady “Coon-Ass” Travis (Jon Bernthal). As
the film opens, an untested clerk-typist named Norman Ellison (Logan Lerman)
has just joined them, replacing a dead gunner.
His first assignment?
Swabbing out his predecessor’s blood and guts from inside the tank. As with all
his films, Ayer doesn’t shy from graphic imagery. Unlike the other crew
members, who are known almost exclusively by their “war names,” Norman hasn’t
yet taken on a nickname, though he will by the end of the movie. He also will take on more
than that. Also the movie is true in facts and staying true to history, also
the movie shows one lesson: Wardaddy is just a man, and in some ways a very
poor role model. A key interlude in the middle of the story, set in the home of
two German women (Anamarina Marinca and Alicia von Rittberg) whose apartment
has been commandeered for a meal, is particularly telling.
In it, Wardaddy allows his
men to misbehave, at times grotesquely — the implication being that he turns a
blind eye to actions approaching the criminal out of expedience. In another
scene, Wardaddy forces a reluctant Norman to execute a captured S.S. officer.
The uncomfortable dynamic is an obscene parody of a father back home, teaching
his son how to kill and yes the low value of human life.
With the general exception of
the Nazi fighters — only one of whom is shown to have any compassion — few
characters in “Fury” are depicted as wholly good or wholly evil. It’s easy to
see the movie as a story of how war makes monsters out of men. But it’s a good
deal more complicated than that. The film suggests that it
isn’t war that does that, but people like Wardaddy. This is a man who knows the
price of keeping his men alive to fight, or to die another day, and is willing
to pay for it.
It is a good watch, but in my
view cannot be compared to classics I mentioned earlier in the article, Nice
action, gory details, nihilism, drama, grief all are depicted in colors of war.
A good flick to watch once.
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