Two stars

Haskell 2022-03-19 09:01:02

This film was all directed at watching that tiger.
The tiger was captured by the British army during the North African campaign. The entire vehicle was repaired about 99 years later. It is the only movable tiger tank in the world.
In terms of history, however, this Tiger should not appear in the plot, because this is an early model, featuring special road wheels and turret control towers for the early/early model. The initial Tiger tanks were hardly retained until April 1945, and the hybrid Tigers of the Fairman battle group were also a hybrid body/turret.

In addition to the error of the model, the camouflage is wrong. The camouflage for this car is exclusively for North Africa. After 44 years, the camouflage used on the western line is a three-color camouflage, either a pinstripe or a light and shadow camouflage. The Tiger tank was discontinued in September 44, only pinstripe camouflage.

Speaking of the yellow and green two-color camouflage of this car, it is very anecdotal in history.
At that time, the German standard camouflage for North Africa was a sand yellow monochrome painting, while British and American soldiers insisted that they encountered a green tiger tank. The legend of the North African green tiger continued for nearly 60 years until the great god Jentz repaired it after 2000. When this tank was discovered, the original German camouflage painted by the British indiscriminately was found, which partially revealed the mystery of the North African Green Tiger: the German army used a yellow-green two-color camouflage.

Although the plot of the film is nonsense, for
example, the SS was clearly dispensed with a large number of iron fists during the last war, but it was not used first in the encounter. For example, the tiger's appearance and the German tactics did not match: if it was an ambush, why not Covering forces? If it is a reconnaissance war, so courageous to single out, it must be the German trump card.

But some places do well,
such as the Germans did with the horse than tanks and more (which is a lot of people do not know the facts),
such as the National Guard National hanged everywhere,
such as the last blow is Tiger Tiger's ass ( That's how the chariot ace Wittmann was killed).

What's interesting is that in the North Africa campaign, the tigers left bitter memories for both Britain and the United States. The
British immediately modified the Sherman and added 17-pounder guns to fight the tigers .
The Americans disagreed, and as a result, the unmodified Sherman continued to languish in Europe. The bureaucrats of the Weaponry Bureau far from the front are specialized in pitting soldiers in any country...

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Extended Reading
  • Julianne 2022-03-24 09:01:09

    The front is acceptable. The setting of the chain to be dropped before the tank starts to fight at the end is really a bit stupid. It not only makes the final shopping process lose the logic and weakens the action elements, but also makes the brothers start prematurely. The Langyashan Five Heroes model of Langya Mountain quickly emptied the dramatic tension.

  • Reginald 2022-03-23 09:01:09

    Qing Gong watched the 4K panoramic sound version. It’s been a long time since I watched such a cool World War II movie. The plot development and battle scenes are neat and tidy, with a strong sense of reality, good atmosphere, and great sound effects of war scenes.

Fury quotes

  • Wardaddy: [Norman has just killed his first enemy soldiers] Norman. It wasn't nothin,' right?

    Norman Ellison: Come again, Sergeant?

    Wardaddy: Rubbin' out those Heinies. Splashed 'em real good. Wasn't nothin,' right?

    Norman Ellison: [With an odd look in his eyes] Sure, Sergeant. Yeah, it wasn't nothin.' Fact, I kinda liked it.

  • Trini 'Gordo' Garcia: [Deleted scene] Our tanks are shitboxes. German guns punch through them like butter. We get hit, we're gonna burn, burn up fast. You see that hatch right behind you? We get hit, I'm gone, right through there. I'm not waiting for you, and I'm not helping you. Got that?

    Norman Ellison: Yeah, I got it. Thank you.