I could relate to the new soldier in the movie who six weeks before had been studying typing. The first time I was shot at in my life was that 88 round coming through the armor-totally mind-boggling. And the film conveys the excitement of combat. And in April 1945 Germans shot my third tank with a pair of Panzerfausts.įury does show accurately how Shermans went into battle: spread out. Coincidentally, I was in a Sherman hit by an 88 (it lodged in the engine compartment without exploding, and we had no casualties), and another Sherman that set off a Teller mine-two mines stacked, actually. Fury shows 88mm rounds and Panzerfausts hitting Shermans, and a mine blowing the tread off a Sherman. In April 1945 I was a GI in Germany fighting in a Sherman tank, and I wondered how close the film gets to what I remember. I’m glad a young friend-when you’re 90, somebody 64 is young-invited me to see Fury, the movie about GIs in Sherman tanks fighting in Germany in April 1945. Current subscribers who wish to add a digital subscription in addition to print should contact our customer service team at 1-80. For more help with subscriptions, please read our Digital Edition FAQ. New subscribers interested in the iPad edition can subscribe in the HistoryNet shop. To learn more, check out the World War II magazine app in the iTunes app store.
This review of the film Fury appears in the January/February issue of our new interactive iPad edition, along with other exciting bonus content.