Fury
Fury was simply an average war film laced with some good effects and some graphic realism on the grit of conflict. The acting was sadly very wooden and the script telltale...(US soldiers interacting with females but nevertheless showing their human side in the tide of war..(please...), SS soldiers being simplisticly portrayed in interpretation., and overly condensed battle sequences (the scene where the Shermans are taking on German PAK in a field is horribly done..with soldiers firing in such close pan in the film shot giving one no sense of the scope of that engagement...) The film certainly is no Private Ryan, Das Boat or Der Untergang. Sadly, the Tiger scene was anti climatic, and I personally view the final battle sequence as very unrealistic but to each their own as to their opinion on that matter..
I don't feel I wasted my time seeing the film as there were some good moments and frankly I appreciate seeing Hollywood make a movie that is not about superheroes or zombies, but I do not hold the movie as an icon of cinematography or atmospheric
I am still awaiting some German director to tackle Guy Sajer's The Forgotten Soldier, but believe the candor and matter of fact view of the book's narration to easily intimidate anyone to embrace the project.
Fury was simply an average war film laced with some good effects and some graphic realism on the grit of conflict. The acting was sadly very wooden and the script telltale...(US soldiers interacting with females but nevertheless showing their human side in the tide of war..(please...), SS soldiers being simplisticly portrayed in interpretation., and overly condensed battle sequences (the scene where the Shermans are taking on German PAK in a field is horribly done..with soldiers firing in such close pan in the film shot giving one no sense of the scope of that engagement...) The film certainly is no Private Ryan, Das Boat or Der Untergang. Sadly, the Tiger scene was anti climatic, and I personally view the final battle sequence as very unrealistic but to each their own as to their opinion on that matter..
I don't feel I wasted my time seeing the film as there were some good moments and frankly I appreciate seeing Hollywood make a movie that is not about superheroes or zombies, but I do not hold the movie as an icon of cinematography or atmospheric
I am still awaiting some German director to tackle Guy Sajer's The Forgotten Soldier, but believe the candor and matter of fact view of the book's narration to easily intimidate anyone to embrace the project.
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