Fury: 2014 Imdb
Fury is a gritty World War II action drama released on October 17, 2014, starring Brad Pitt and written and directed by David Ayer. The film currently holds an IMDb rating of 7.6/10. Plot Summary
- 🎥 Director: David Ayer
- ⭐ Top review sentiment: “Intense, violent, and emotionally draining – but absolutely worth watching.”
- 🔥 Trivia: The actors spent weeks in boot camp and lived in a replica tank to prepare.
The Plot: Hell on Treads
The Fury 2014 IMDb synopsis is sparse: "A grizzled tank commander makes difficult decisions while leading his crew on a deadly mission across Germany in April 1945." fury 2014 imdb
- Title Card info (Title, Year, Rating, Runtime).
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Here is the feature film analysis for Fury (2014), formatted with data consistent with IMDb records. Fury is a gritty World War II action
Historical Age Gap: Brad Pitt was 50 during filming, significantly older than the typical non-commissioned officer of that era, who would usually be in their early 20s [24]. 🎥 Director: David Ayer ⭐ Top review sentiment:
- Pacing Issues: The film slows down noticeably in the middle act.
- Historical Accuracy Debates: Tank purists note some tactical errors, and the final battle stretches believability.
- Brad Pitt (Wardaddy): Pitt gives a restrained, weary performance. He isn't a hero; he is a killer who has become numb. The scene where he forces Norman to shoot a prisoner is chilling precisely because Pitt plays it with the mundanity of a manager training a new employee.
- Logan Lerman (Norman): The heart of the film. Lerman successfully transitions from "terrified child" to "damaged survivor." His final scene, crawling out from under the tank while the SS ignore him (mistaking him for just another dead body), is the most haunting image in the film.
- Jon Bernthal (Grady): Bernthal plays the crew’s "psycho." He threatens to kill Norman within the first hour. Yet, by the end, Bernthal manages to inject a sliver of humanity into Grady that makes his death feel tragic. Many IMDb commenters argue Bernthal was snubbed for awards consideration.
- If the film is historically "accurate" enough to watch with a veteran.
- If Jon Bernthal’s character (Grady) is as brutal as they remember.
- The exact wording of Wardaddy’s famous speech: "Ideals are peaceful. History is violent."