The Brutalities Of War Bring Surprising Angles To 'Fury'

A great movie lets you know you're in safe hands from the beginning. In “Fury,” as the crew, led by their Sergeant (Brad Pitt), rolls into headquarters, writer-director David Ayer cuts to images of the surroundings, such as a forlorn steer, separated

Fury, David Ayer's brutal, reflective, wholly absorbing World War II movie, is about tank-to-tank combat and the way war degrades everyone it touches, but for about a minute it looks like a Western. A rider on a white horse crosses a misty field in no

David Ayer's graphic World War II film, "Fury," had its final press screening on Thursday night at Lincoln Center before its wide theatrical release today. The director and his star-studded cast have been all over the place 

Gone Girl may have had a cozy two weeks at the top of the box office, but there's a new contender in town: Fury. Brad Pitt stars in the David Ayer-directed WWII pic that's expected to march to the top spot by the weekend's close, in spite of the

By the end of “Fury,” I was rooting for Brad Pitt to get shot between the incisors. This is a problem, because he's the hero of the film — a hard-charging sergeant who eats lead and craps shrapnel. Yet he's a vainglorious bastard — vindictive, stupid