Brad Pitt hopes Fury 'respects' World War Two soldiers

Fury, the WWII film starring Brad Pitt, opens in theaters today. The story follows a five-man tank crew as they make the last push into Nazi Germany in April 1945. And to get things right, the filmmakers brought in a military 

I am quite grateful that Fury, the new World War II tank-set drama starring Brad Pitt, didn't bomb this weekend at the box office, mostly so I didn't have to resist the urge to headline the pieces this weekend something along the lines of “Brad Pitt

Fury is the World World II version of Apocalypse Now, only without Kurtz, and the nuance. While writer/director David Ayer elicits strong performances from his cast and delivers intense (but sensationally gory) set pieces, 

The new World War II film “Fury” starring Brad Pitt battled to the top of the weekend box office, pulling in an estimated $23.5 million in the U.S. and Canada and pushing “Gone Girl” out of the No. 1 spot. Strong reviews and word of mouth propelled

'Fury' writer/director David Ayer talks to us about the movie's climatic moment – and what some viewers may not get about it.