‘Fury,’ Starring Brad Pitt, a Raw Look at Warfare
LOS ANGELES — In the first minutes of the writer-director David Ayer’s “Fury,”
about American soldiers slogging through Europe in the final days of
World War II, Brad Pitt, as the tanker Don Collier, slides his knife
behind the eye of a German lieutenant.
“Piercing
his brainpan with a CRACK,” is how Mr. Ayer’s screenplay describes the
move. (In Dolby Digital sound, it will be a very loud crack.) Mr. Pitt,
our hero, then calmly wipes his blade clean on the German’s uniform.
The Good War this is not.
In
what promises to be one of the most daring studio movies in an awards
season that will bring several World War II films, Mr. Ayer, Mr. Pitt
and a band of producers backed by Sony Pictures Entertainment are poised
to deliver what the popular culture has rarely seen. That is, a
relentlessly authentic portrayal — one stuntman was run through with a bayonet on the set — of the extremes endured, and inflicted, by Allied troops who entered Germany in the spring of 1945.
Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds,”
which also starred Mr. Pitt, was brutal but surreal. Few believed that a
real-life counterpart to his blood-crazed Lt. Aldo Raine had collected
Nazi scalps by the hundred.
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