Set within the onslaught of WWII,
Fury provides a practical and raw
depiction of warfare and the cruelty of mankind. Highly inappropriate in terms
of language and realistic carnage, Fury
succeeds as an emotionally striking film designed for the audience to be
overwhelmed by shock along with the experience of the characters surviving in a
chaotic swirl of savagery, abuse and forgotten morals.
Appreciatively, the historical
accuracy of military units and weaponry were utilized as a main element, examples of WWII era trademarks such as grenades, smoke
bombs, mortars, rapid fire and a mass of US tanks proceeding
|
Allied fire appears as red lasers to assist the audience's sight |
in converging
columns through a series of hedgerows weeks after the commencement of D-Day. A prominent
example of US firepower was displayed through a glimpse of the air force which
passed by overhead while a battalion of Sherman tanks led by tank Fury
confronted a German Tiger and an SS brigade as the Allied forces strove to
conclude the war by subduing town after town as the unit continued to press on
into Germany.
|
Norman's introduction to Don & tank unit: Fury |
However, the direction of the
plot intended not to glorify the military but to expose trampled virtue. This
theme is emphasized through the demoralization of Norman Ellison, a youth who’s loss of
innocence is continually stressed throughout the course of the film. Introduced
as a bumbling clerk-typist disgusted by injustice, he is swiftly taught a
lesson by his commander, Don "Wardaddy" Collier, who physically forces him to murder a captured German
POW, an act signifying the first tainting of his character with
his first shedding of blood.
|
Don orders Norman to finish the POW, arguing that war is "to kill or be killed." |
From this point, he is further instructed to
engage in improper relations with a German girl, the diminishing of their
purity, and finally through the manner in which he strikes down his enemies
with artillery fire while chanting curses at the oncoming barrage of Nazi
forces before his tank. During the finale, his companions entitled him “machine”
as that is what he has become, a machine of war devoid of compassion; the young
soldier no longer seeing his enemy as a human being but rather as a target to
be extinguished for the sole purpose of an end goal swamped with vengeance.
|
Norman stands atop his gunner hatch |
Surprisingly, Fury highlights that it is but a German
soldier who is to be merciful upon Norman. Ironically, the soldier appears to
be roughly the same age, a fact that not all Germans are monsters and that many
are caught up within the throes of war, similarly sharing Norman’s fate. The
German’s compassionate gesture harkens the trace of what Norman has lost; that
noble former self he had intended to maintain. His inner commitment to
displaying justice regardless of the immorality around him is expounded by how
Norman’s terrified eyes stare up in desperation at the German soldier who
kindly smiles and deliberately chooses to spare the life of the young boy
covered in mud and the blood of his fallen comrades.
An impactful theme laced
throughout Fury is the portrayal of
tarnished morality. This motif is visible in Norman and through the example of
a character Boyd Snicknamed “Bible,” a Christian who poses as the moral compass of
the tank. Although Bible displays grace and is a channel pointing towards salvation,
he additionally serves as an overpowering presence in certain instances,
specifically in the scene where he aloofly sits on the tank, refraining from looting while soldiers plunder the captured town and while at the dinner table in the German home. His presence
reminds his platoon leader that they have a duty to respond to, one of which
does not allow a pretense of peace while at war.
|
Boyd "Bible" Swan receives orders that Fury is to proceed further into the Rhine |
However, Bible’s consequential
nature also falters in the face of moral indignity, wherein he remained silent
when there were appropriate times in which he should have stood resolutely for
an actual execution of ethics instead of standing disapprovingly by as his
company devalue and humiliate the German ladies and in another instance when
they cuss, jeer and erupt into praise over the massacre of Nazis with the desire
to extend their suffering. Ultimately, Bible’s character offered the dim light
of salvation and a purpose beyond the harsh reality experienced in Europe, 1945.
His unexpected demise could even be argued as a pardon from God, concealing
Bible within Himself in order for the Christian to not experience as much pain
in his instant death compared to the lingering doom awaiting those remaining
within Fury.
|
I heard the voice of the Lord calling, "Who will go for Us?" And I said, "Send me." |
While this film does not receive
a high recommendation, as the characters were difficult to find endearing, I
appreciated the director’s attempt to portray a realistic account. Despite the
artistic intention, I found myself hardly caring whether they survived for I
had become disenchanted by their adverse behavior, deplorable logic, inhumane
treatment of women and thoroughly disgusted at the militant culture that
subjected its own soldiers to promote such brutality to simply prove the point
that its either your death or your enemy’s in war, regardless of how practical
and base that notion is.
Conclusively, Fury presents a harsh exposé of American
soldiers during WWII – showing how a fierce, typically drunk and foul-mouthed,
mismatched band of soldiers were able to loosely unify around the tank that
they were willing to sweat, bleed and die within in order to protect one
another and preserve the pursuit championed by the Allied forces. The film climaxes
with Norman being heralded as a hero yet such praise starkly resonates with the fact that
they are indeed heroes, but heroes that compromised their morality for the sake
of unrealized ideals accomplished through anything but just means due to succumbing
to animalistic tendencies and debase ethics justified by war. Their sacrifice, no
matter how gallant a demise, does not justify previous brutality and the
battalion’s blatant disregard of righteousness.
No comments:
Post a Comment