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FURY looks good


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Do the Sherman tanks look like Easy 8's?, most surely not short-barreled 75mm, although some may have been that type. Also the Tiger looked as if it had smoke dischargers on the turret, weren't they gone in later models?

Trialers always have the best looking scenes, one cannot make a judgement until you have seen the whole movie. War movies are always entertaining, because the dead guys get up after the scene is shot. Also in today's war movie making, the drive for realism in period uniforms and equipment is very strong.

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Also the Tiger looked as if it had smoke dischargers on the turret, weren't they gone in later models?

Jesus F Christ. They get the ONLY actual working Tiger, In. The. World., for the movie, and you complain about the freaking smoke launchers?

Who are you, Dorosh?

(FWIW, that Tiger was captured in Tunisia in early 1943, and was from of one of the earlier production batches, so the nit you picked is probably technically correct. But JFC ... wood for the trees, much?)

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Jesus F Christ. They get the ONLY actual working Tiger, In. The. World., for the movie, and you complain about the freaking smoke launchers?

Who are you, Dorosh?

(FWIW, that Tiger was captured in Tunisia in early 1943, and was from of one of the earlier production batches, so the nit you picked is probably technically correct. But JFC ... wood for the trees, much?)

They should have used the proper model Tiger for the time the film covers.

When this happens in films the results can be fantastic. Check out these Tigers from the old 60's flick 'Battle of the Bulge'. Not a smoke launcher in sight!

BattleoftheBulgeMovie-Still4.jpg?partner=allmovie_soap

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Also the Tiger looked as if it had smoke dischargers on the turret, weren't they gone in later models?

They we're omitted from production starting in June 1943. The Nahverteidigungswaffe replaced them starting in January 44.

They should have used the proper model Tiger for the time the film covers.

There is no proper model available. The one operational Tiger in the world is Tiger 131 captured by the British in Tunisia in April 43. I'm not sure that Bovington were keen to let the film makers upgrade it to late production with a new mantlet, road wheels, turret roof, cupola etc.

Really they should have used one of the Panthers running around. There are more to choose from and are probably more appropriate to the timeframe than a Tiger 1.

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Jesus F Christ. They get the ONLY actual working Tiger, In. The. World., for the movie, and you complain about the freaking smoke launchers?

Who are you, Dorosh?

(FWIW, that Tiger was captured in Tunisia in early 1943, and was from of one of the earlier production batches, so the nit you picked is probably technically correct. But JFC ... wood for the trees, much?)

Coffee spat all over the screen ... that is the funniest thing I've read on this forum for a long while.

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Grenade down the barrel, one arm blown off, cigar clenched in teeth, turning to wink at his men as fireball engulfs him.

Pitt is cliche.

Lol :D Yeah, yeah! and, right before the fireball kills him in the last shot he pulls a pic out of Jolie. He looks, says something corny(close up of face), Drops the photo(close up of photo). it burns, but slowly, and nicely from the edges. The end. Cut to credits, ending song is something very melodramatic like the end of "Platoon".

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Grenade down the barrel, one arm blown off, cigar clenched in teeth, turning to wink at his men as fireball engulfs him.

Pitt is cliche.

So it looks like they base that ending on one of your AAR's? Your troops

were nothing if heroic with you whipping them into a frenzy..... They would have killed that Tiger whilst drinking tea - and without raising a sweat.

Noba.

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Could there be any more cliches in the dialogue?!

Whenever they give us war movies without clichés war movie fans tend to turn on the film like a pack of dogs (my first thought was 1998's 'The Thin Red Line'). Genre movie fans don't like the unexpected, they prefer having their expectations fulfilled.

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Thin Red Line is one of my favourites.

Whenever they give us war movies without clichés war movie fans tend to turn on the film like a pack of dogs (my first thought was 1998's 'The Thin Red Line'). Genre movie fans don't like the unexpected, they prefer having their expectations fulfilled.
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