The rape scene in Brad Pitt's Fury no-one is talking about

The trouble with "Fury" is that while stocking up on all the little details, Ayer has failed to provide much of a narrative for them to hang upon.

Fury is a good, solid World War II movie, nothing more and nothing less. Rugged, macho, violent and with a story sufficiently unusual to grab and hold interest, it's a modern version of the sort of movie Hollywood turned out 

TONY Abbott's chief of staff, Peta Credlin, says one of her motivations for setting up a women's group was the silence from the “sisterhood” when Clive Palmer launched a sexist attack against her. The Fairfax MP had claimed, incorrectly, that Mr Abbott

There is really nothing new in Fury—from the battle hardened commander to the bible thumper and the little green boy, the pretty brittle girls, the brave women, the carnage, the nasty Nazis and the grim countryside. The film is nevertheless engaging

Fury is a good, solid World War II movie, nothing more and nothing less. Rugged, macho, violent and with a story sufficiently unusual to grab and hold interest, it's a modern version of the sort of movie Hollywood turned out