Fury

NR 7.8
1936 1 hr 32 min Drama , Crime

Joe, who owns a gas station along with his brothers and is about to marry Katherine, travels to the small town where she lives to visit her, but is wrongly mistaken for a wanted kidnapper and arrested.

  • Cast:
    Sylvia Sidney , Spencer Tracy , Walter Abel , Bruce Cabot , Edward Ellis , Walter Brennan , Frank Albertson

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Reviews

Mjeteconer
1936/06/05

Just perfect...

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Stoutor
1936/06/06

It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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Josephina
1936/06/07

Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.

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Dana
1936/06/08

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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Roger Burke
1936/06/09

Eighty years after its first release, this story of mob violence in USA is a savage indictment of the American system of mob "justice" from the 1880s to the 1960s. The fictional events of this movie, based upon a true incident, took place in the 1930s. Produced by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, directed by Fritz Lang, it stars Spencer Tracy and Sylvia Sidney in the key roles; with an excellent supporting cast, this is a story that stands the test of time.I won't comment much on the plot and the story, both of which have been adequately addressed by the storyline on the main IMDb page, and a ton of detailed reviews here.However, without Lang and Mankiewicz on this production, the dramatic irony would not, I think, have been as effectively portrayed - for two reasons. First, Lang coming from a Germany where Nazism was ascendant, knew all too well what injustice was all about and how people can prostitute their principles for what is perceived as justifiable retribution. Second, Mankiewicz was a highly experienced actor/producer/director who has shown, throughout his career, that injustice in all its forms must be shown for the evil it is. With such a combination at the reel wheel, this movie was guaranteed to be hard-hitting.Lang's direction is very much on form, using lighting and shadow for full effect; using close up, quick editing in mob scenes; using the camera in extreme close up to ensure viewers note a particular item; and cross-cutting and inter-cutting scenes to heighten suspense. Not the first director to use those techniques, but Lang was a master at it. For the most part, the script and dialog are excellent. My only critique centers upon the courtroom scenes and dialog which, by today's standards, are somewhat stagy; the repartee, between the prosecution and defense counsels, is particularly so, too often for this viewer. And the very last scene, seemingly preachy and even corny, which involves a long verbal exchange between the judge (Burton) and one of the main characters, can only be fully appreciated in the context of the times: a long history of lynching across the USA, an economy in the midst of a Great Depression and a nation on the cusp of another world war.For Lang enthusiasts, Fury is a must see movie, despite the presence of a couple of handy coincidences, an improbable result with the use of dynamite and a glaring loose end - at the very end. Still, this is a movie that should be seen by all, and one I heartily recommend. Eight out of ten.April 24, 2015

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vincentlynch-moonoi
1936/06/10

I just finished reading the section of the new Spencer Tracy biography which discusses the making and success of "Fury", long one of my favorite Tracy films. In fact, before this early MGM film of his, his only truly notable films had been "The Power And The Glory" and "Dante's Inferno". The shooting schedules for Tracy's "Fury" and Tracy and Gable's "San Francisco" overlapped. Apparently, Fritz Lang was a pain in the patutty...a virtual tyrant directing this film, to the point where Tracy and Lang barely spoke. Nevertheless, the results then (much bigger box office than MGM had anticipated) and now (as this is seen to be an early Tracy milestone) speak for themselves.The story begins easily enough -- a guy (Tracy) and a gal (Sylvia Sydney) are hoping to marry, but to earn more money (this was in the middle of the Great Depression) they separate temporarily (which turns out to be over a year). He does all right, opening a gas station. He buys a car and goes to meet and marry Sydney.Then things turn dark. He is picked up on suspicion of kidnapping, which of course he was not guilty of. Placed in jail, while a hick deputy sheriff (Walter Brennan) blabs around the community. A mob develops, but instead of lynching him, they burn the jail down, with Tracy and his little dog in it. Burned to death as his fiancé watches.Or was he? Tracy suddenly appears as a dark, malevolent specter before his brothers...alive...and ready to exact his justice simply by letting the leaders of the lynch mob be found guilty and condemned to death in a court room. But, through an excellent trial sequence, Tracy slowly goes nearly mad with revenge, and ultimately his brothers begin to turn against him. But meanwhile, the guilt of 22 men and women is pretty much proved through newsreel footage. And then, when a surprise (and clever) bit of evidence is brought forward, Sydney realizes Tracy is still alive. The question is, will Tracy come forward, or remain silent. Apparently Lang was very angry over the edits MGM made to the film, particularly the final scene...and perhaps a kiss in front of the judge was taking it just a bit too far...perhaps embracing would have been enough.Tracy is superb here. No longer a "junior" actor, but a calculated actor who masters his role. Sydney is just as wonderful.Walter Abel performs well as the district attorney trying the men leading the mob. Bruce Cabot is fine as the worst of the mob leaders. Edward Ellis is excellent as the hard, but fair sheriff battling against overwhelming odds. It's unlikely you'll recognize many of the other supporting actors here, but they all play their parts well and lend a believability to the story.A part of my DVD collection, and one of the rare films I will award an "8" to. A must if you love cinema.

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solarblast
1936/06/11

An oldie, but a good one. Tracy shines as usual. I found the statement during the court trial about the total number of mob lynchings in the US back then surprisingly high, but convictions low. The book that's the basis of the movie probably would reveal more about that. Undoubtedly the majority of lynching cases involved the lynching of blacks.As I understand it, the ending was controversial for its weakness, or possibly incompleteness. The controversy was mostly amongst the studio heads and film makers. The story began seemingly devoid of complexities, but that changed after the Tracy character's arrest.

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gavin6942
1936/06/12

Auto mechanic Joe Wilson (Spencer Tracy) is accused of a kidnapping because of his love of peanuts. When he barely survives a lynch mob attack and is presumed dead, Wilson vindictively decides to frame the mob for his murder.Spencer Tracy is a big name in Hollywood, but strangely enough not one I am really familiar with -- I could not pick him out in a line-up.Fritz Lang directs, and it is odd having a German direct a film that involves the American legal system. According to modern sources, Fritz Lang was the first filmmaker to use newsreel footage as a courtroom device in a motion picture, and may have done so before it was used in an actual court case. This was also Fritz Lang's first American movie, having arrived from a year in Paris after he fled the Nazi regime in Germany.The style is almost film noir, though the subject matter says it is not. This is not surprising, given Lang's dip in to noir.Also notable is the appearance of the dog that played Toto in "The Wizard of Oz" -- that guy gets around!

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