But consider that the Americans had overwhelming mobility and speed by 1945. They also had radios and by 1945 the U.S. army was well experienced in communicating and coordinating attacks. The preview also seems to tell us, or at least suggest, that they have intelligence knowing that a German attack is coming. But whatever, ugh. I guess I'll take the bait and go see the movie sometime this coming week. But I fear its going to be like a WW2 movie version of "Gravity". Cool visuals, action, a big Hollywood star, maybe a story...but ultimately not credible or believable.
agip wrote:
well we're splitting hairs here and I haven't seen the movie.
But
As one military historian once said -
"historians should never use the word 'inevitable' but in WW2 the one thing that was inevitable was the German counterattack"
The Germans were extraordinarily effective at counterattack - surely there is some way that a counterattack had to be stopped. SOme assets must be protected - you can't always retreat.
ryan foreman wrote:No. I acknowledged there was some hard fighting in April of 1945. But what your statistic doesn't show is that the Allies were on the offensive at every point, with German forces surrounded and overwhelmed. Some German hard core forces were fighting to the death and had the advantages of being dug in and on the defensive. Mostly in urban environments. But the bottom line is that they were hopelessly on the defensive based on everything I have ever read or heard about the war in the spring of 1945.
With that in mind, why do the previews for "Fury" suggest that a single American tank crew has to hold out against an overwhelming German force in open country? I suppose there could have been some localized counter attack against American forces. But even then, the Americans probably would have welcomed it. they just would have retreated a little then surrounded the counterattack.
If they dated and placed the storyline September or October 1944 in France, then yeah I can buy into that. But not April 1945.
But again, all I've seen is the previews and read a synopsis. So I don't really know. Maybe I'm off base? Or maybe I'm right but there is still a compelling reason to see the movie? I'm honestly open to persuasion.
Of course the movie is fiction. But so was Saving Private Ryan. I can accept some suspension of disbelief. But the movie promotion seems to be going out of their way to capture real life events.