Fury (1936) Poster

(1936)

User Reviews

Review this title
104 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Mob Momentum
BrandtSponseller12 May 2005
Famed German director Fritz Lang's first American film, Fury, is loosely based on a story by Norman Krasna, "Mob Rule", which itself was based on the tale of California's last public lynching, in 1933, of Thomas Harold Thurmond and John M. Holmes, the kidnappers and murderers of Brooke Hart, the "son" in San Jose's L. Hart and Son Department Store. Fury is a fine exploration (although not an analysis) of the mentality of vengeance, whether from a mob, as in the first half of the film, or from an individual, as in the latter half. It is loaded with fine acting and an unusually constructed script by Lang and co-writer Bartlett Cormack, although it is not without flaws.

Joe Wilson (Spencer Tracy) is deeply in love with Katherine Grant (Sylvia Sidney). Wilson lives in the Chicago area in a small apartment with his two brothers, Charlie (Frank Albertson) and Tom (George Walcott). Wilson wants to marry Grant, but they're short on money. Despite the relationship hardships it will entail, Grant returns to Texas to work--she'll be making good money there, while Wilson tries to improve his lot in Illinois. Wilson finally manages to buy a gas station with his brothers, and earns enough to buy a car and take a road trip, with his dog Rainbow in tow, to meet Grant so they can get married. When he's almost there, Wilson is suddenly stopped by a sheriff's deputy in the small town of Strand. They question him about a kidnapping. Two minor details make him more suspicious, and so they decide to hold him in the town jail while the D.A. looks into his background. Rumors makes their way around the town and things go horribly wrong, bringing us to mob mentality, lynchings and vengeance.

Lynchings were an emerging social problem in the early 1930s. There were 60 known lynchings in the U.S. between 1930 and 1934. Beginning in 1934, the earliest of the "anti-lynching" bills was presented to the U.S. Congress, and that number grew to 140 different bills by 1940. The visual arts also voiced in on the issue--one museum held "An Art Commentary on Lynching" exhibition in 1934. So Fury was certainly pertinent to our culture at the time, and was one of many films to come, such as Mervyn LeRoy's They Won't Forget (1937) that centered on strong anti-lynching sentiments (believe it or not, there were also pro-lynching films, such as Cecil B. DeMille's This Day and Age, 1933).

It's interesting to note that although lynching was primarily a "racial"-oriented phenomenon, Lang was not allowed to comment on that very much. There are a couple shots of blacks in the film, but they are extremely innocuous. Anything even more slightly controversial was excised at MGM's (and specifically Louis B. Mayer's) behest.

Fury's structure is very unusual, contributing even more to its unpredictable, captivating nature. It begins as an almost bland romance while Lang sets up the characters and their slightly exaggerated innocence, turns into an interesting hardship film, briefly becomes a road movie, switches gears again when Wilson is arrested, and actually presents a profoundly impactful climax at the midway point--it seems as if the film could end there. The second half makes a major u-turn as what could be seen as an extended tag/dénouement becomes an in-depth courtroom drama that builds to a second climax. The second half allows Lang to explore the same vengeance mentality as the first half, except from an individual rather than the previous mob perspective.

Although the second climax denotes a fine work of art on its own--there are some very moving performances and developments towards the end of the courtroom stuff, the star attraction is the gradually building mob material in the middle. What begins as an annoyance for Wilson turns into widespread tragedy as the rumor mill gears up and easygoing conformism rears its ugly head. Of course it is well known that Lang came to America to escape Nazi Germany, where he had been asked to act as Hitler's minister of film, so Fury, although sometimes criticized as a commercial film for Lang, certainly had personal poignancy for him. Lang shows rumors gradually distending in a game of "Telephone" with serious consequences, and inserts a humorous shot of chickens to symbolize "clucking women". He shows how easily a situation can go from those kinds of increasingly misreported claims to dangerous action due to conformism. Most folks are shown as all too eager to go along with the crowd and avoid local conflict.

For a few moments, the mob mentality leads to a situation that presages John Carpenter's Assault on Precinct 13 (1976). And overall, Fury is sometimes said to have anticipated film noir. However, despite some highly stylistic shots, such as the early, shimmering reflections of rain soaked windows on opposing walls, or the almost comically exaggerated action/reaction shots of the mob in full force (some of the more poignant material in the film), much of Fury's cinematography is more pedestrian. In his interview with Peter Bogdanovich that serves as the bulk of the DVD's "director's commentary", Lang states that he prefers simple, straightforward cinematography, to emphasize realism, or "truth". That may sound odd coming from the man who gave us Metropolis (1927), but at least for Fury, it is consistent.

But this isn't a flawless film. A few dramatic transitions are awkward, including two very important ones--the initial "capture" of Wilson, which is fairly inexplicable, and the final scene of the film, which leaves a significant dangling thread. But the underlying concepts, the performances and more often than not the technical aspects of the film work extremely well, making Fury an important film to watch.
88 out of 94 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Tormentors and the tormented given Lang's gifted touch.
hitchcockthelegend4 March 2008
Out of MGM, Fury is directed by Fritz Lang and stars Spencer Tracy and Sylvia Sidney and features Walter Abel, Bruce Cabot, Edward Ellis and Walter Brennan in support. It's adapted by Lang and Bartlett Cormack from the story "Mob Rule" written by Norman Krasna. Loosely based around the events that surrounded both the "Brooke Hart" murder in 1933 and the "Lindbergh" kidnapping/murder case in 1932, the story sees Tracy as Joe Wilson, an innocent man who is jailed and apparently killed in a fire started by a rampaging lynch mob. However, as the lynch mob go on trial for his murder, Joe surfaces but is twisted by thoughts of revenge on those who happily watched him burn.

Widely and rightly considered a classic, this first Hollywood outing from director Fritz Lang is a remarkable look at mob violence and one man's limit pushed to its breaking point - and then some. That Lang survived studio interference to craft such a penetrating study of injustice is a minor miracle. Fury is neatly put together as a story, the calm before the storm as Joe & Kath are brought to us as the happy face of Americana. Then it's the middle section as rumours run out of control, the dangers of idle prattling rammed home as things start to escalate out of control - culminating in the savage assault on the jail (a gusto infused action sequence indeed). Then the fall out of mob rule actions, the court case and Joe's malevolent force of vengeance, that in turn comes under scrutiny.

The film was said to have been Lang's favourite American film, which is understandable given it bares all his trademarks. The expressionistic touches, shadow play dalliances and supreme cross-cutting between tormentors and the tormented, for sure this is prime Lang, with no frame wasted. While it's no stretch of the imagination to think that Lang, having fled Nazi Germany, was pondering what he left behind as he moulded the picture together. Of the cast, Tracy is majestic as our main protagonist, while Sidney is brightly big eyed and hugely effective as the moral centre of Joe's universe.

Controversial at the time, the film has naturally lost some of that controversial power over the decades. However, as the film points out with the lynching statistics, there was once a time when inhumanity was able to rear its ugly head in the blink of an eye. Fury serves to remind two-fold that not only is it a potent social commentary, but also that it's a damn fine piece of skilled cinema. 9/10
40 out of 44 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Dated but still powerful drama
BJJManchester26 April 2007
Fritz Lang's first US film is arguably the best he made there,containing elements of his most celebrated film,M,though this time here the mentality of mob violence does not have a genuinely evil monster (so brilliantly portrayed in M by Peter Lorre) as it's point of retribution,but a decent,ordinary man in the shape of an equally superb Spencer Tracy.The first reel or so of FURY is somewhat dull,with Tracy and his fiancé Sylvia Sidney struggling to raise money for their wedding in what seems a straight-forward domestic story.But the film soon gets into gear when Tracy is mistaken for a kidnapper and held in a small town jail,and is lynched by most of the town's population,led by waster and bad boy Bruce Cabot.Or it seems he is lynched......Tracy somehow escapes,and totally hardened by the experience,is determined on exacting revenge against the perpetrators.

The film wasn't a particular critical or box-office triumph in it's day,maybe because it told some unpalatable truths in aspects of American life at the time.While not necessarily Hollywood's best-loved or most effective leading man,Tracy was arguably it's best actor from a technical viewpoint,and his performance is outstanding here.His transformation from an innocuous everyman to vicious criminal is totally convincing.After he makes his way back home to his brother's apartment,his speech detailing his ordeal and his thirst for vengeance is a quite brilliant piece of screen acting.Tracy had this and other memorable big screen monologues to his credit in a distinguished career (watch other fine examples in such films as STANLEY AND LIVINGSTONE,STATE OF THE UNION,INHERIT THE WIND and GUESS WHO'S COMING HOME TO DINNER),and there were few,if any,that could equal him in similar circumstances.There are no forced histrionics,no exaggerated hand or facial gestures,no bellowing out of words,just a careful and believable building up of rage until he explodes on the final word he comes to.......,DEATH!

Aside from Tracy's excellence,the film is at it's most effective in the setting up and brief aftermath of the lynching itself.Lang's penchant for Germanic expressionism and moody lighting is very effective here,especially in the scene where the converging of the mob on the police station is represented by a subjective tracking shot,a remarkably powerful scene which is the film's highpoint.

The film goes slightly downhill in the courtroom sequence,which although has interesting elements (the use of newsreel footage as evidence),tends to get over-melodramatic and obviously contrived(Tracy's peanut habit and word misspelling are not too convincing plot devices),and Lang was reportedly very opposed to the somewhat sappy ending tagged on by MGM(as Hollywood's moral code demanded in the 30's).That aside,fine support performances(Ms Sidney,Walter Brennan,Edward Ellis,Walter Abel,etc.),a good musical score(Franz Waxman),stylish visuals(Joesph Ruttenberg)and bravura direction by Lang still make FURY,despite dated elements,a powerful and effective essay on lynch mob rule seven decades later,which most of it's contemporaries can certainly not boast.

RATING:7 and a half out of 10
21 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Fritz Lang's first American classic
theowinthrop27 April 2004
If Fritz Lang had died or been killed by the Nazis (whom he detested and opposed)in 1933 or 1934, it is stunning to realize that his position as a great film director would have been assured. He would have already had METROPOLIS, SPIES, DR. MABUSE, and M down to establish his credentials as a master of cinematic art. But he left Germany to escape the real villains who were coming to power. And he ended up, after briefly staying in France, coming to the U.S. Most of his later films would be made in the U.S. FURY is his first American masterpiece - a study of mob violence, and the destructive forces it unleases in even the most decent people. Here, it is Spencer Tracy, the erstwhile victim of a lynch mob, who becomes demonic in retaliation for his own mistreatment at their hands. It would be a theme Lang would return to again and again in later films - Edward G. Robinson turning on Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea in SCARLET STREET is a good example.

Like many great crime films it is based on an actual incident that occurred in San Jose, California in 1933. Brooke Harte, the son of a wealthy department store owner, was kidnapped by two rather stupid men, Harold Thurmond and Jack Holmes, for a ransom, and drowned when they collected the money. Brooke had been a very popular young man, and when the men were caught a mob attacked the jail, and killed them (hanging at least Thurmond when he was still alive - Holmes was beaten to death in the jail). The incident gained notoriety around the globe (the Nazis had the nerve to use it to suggest Americans were violent degenerates - and frequently republished photos of the dead men as propaganda in World War II). It was hard to hide the story - the mobs were filmed attacking the jail, and (as mentioned above) the swinging bodies of the two kidnappers were photographed. Most people in America were appalled by the incident, but it had defenders. Governor James Rolph (former Mayor of San Francisco) defended the lynch mob beyond any reasonable point (Rolph was running for re-election, and in ill health - he would die before the reelection was held).

A fine account of the crime, SWIFT JUSTICE by Harry Farrell, only touches lightly on the Lang movie. The similarities with the newsreel trucks and even a Rolph-clone (Clarence Kolb, in a small but sinister role as a powerful man trying to convince the Sheriff - Edward Ellis - to leave the jail underprotected from the mob)are there. But Lang allows Tracy to survive, unlike Thurmond and Holmes. Also, in reality the newsreel footage was not clear enough (like that in the film) to be used against the defendants in their trial. In fact, nobody was ever indicted for the lynch murders of Thurmond and Holmes.
72 out of 80 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Tracy hits his stride
bkoganbing2 April 2004
Warning: Spoilers
In what was his fourth film on his new MGM contract Spencer Tracy finally broke through the ranks and became an A picture star. Tracy had been in Hollywood for six years five of them with Fox. Most of his work there was relegated to B picture second features. In this, the first American film by Fritz Lang, Tracy emerges with a powerhouse performance of a man who nearly destroys himself in a quest for vengeance against the mob that nearly kills him by setting a jail on fire where he's being held on a suspicion of kidnapping.

Remember that this was the 30s with news of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping trial fresh in the minds of the movie-going public. Probably the most hated man in America was Bruno Hauptman, the Lindbergh kidnapping suspect. That's a dimension that can hardly be appreciated by seeing the video today. But Lang's direction of the mob scenes still retains the power to frighten.

Sylvia Sydney registers well as Tracy's fiancé and Bruce Cabot stands out as the local town bully who whips up the mob in the first place against the innocent Tracy being held in the town jail.

In the first of many climactic monologues Tracy comes forward and redeems himself from the twisted personality his victimization by the town mob has left. The speech is simple, direct, profound; pure Spencer Tracy. And that's as good as it ever gets.
47 out of 53 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
At first it seems like it is meaninglessly meandering...
AlsExGal5 November 2021
... because you have this typical Depression era love story with a young couple in love but not enough money to get married at a time when married women were not expected to work after marriage. The guy, Joe WIlson (Spencer Tracy) is an optimistic fellow, living with his pseudo gangster brother and his baby brother that the gangster brother is trying to influence.

Joe quits a dead end job and buys a gas station and starts to make plenty of money. His fiancee (Sylvia Sidney) has been away from him a year working as a teacher to also save money. And then the day comes for them to reunite - there finally is enough money. He drives a car across country to meet up with her. And she waits and waits for him. Joe is never late. But little does she know that things have gone terribly wrong. That's where this tale goes to a very dark place.

Without giving away too much, a chain of events are set off that rips all optimism away from Joe and leaves him a changed and bitter guy, and he sets off on a really terrible yet understandable road of revenge.

This is probably the first real meaty role at MGM that Spencer Tracy got, and others followed soon after. It's also a rare 1930s message picture from that studio, dealing with mob mentality and violence. Although most mob violence was directed at African Americans during that time, so it does not quite have the courage of its convictions, it is still engaging.
24 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Lang's first American film is a visceral experience
zetes28 January 2002
An idealist sets out to visit his girlfriend, whom he hasn't seen for a year, but he is picked up by the cops for no real reason and thrown into a cell because a flimsy piece of evidence hints that he might be the kidnapper of a young woman. A rumor flares in the small town and soon most of the populace is standing outside the police office demanding retribution.

I won't outline the plot any further, because there are many twists and turns to come. Fury is basically a study in justice, guilt, revenge, and mindless fury. Spencer Tracy and Sylvia Sydney star and are exceptional. The supporting cast is excellent also. Lang's direction is often amazing. It is always stylistic, expressionistic and it challenges you every step of the way. Watch for one scene near the center of the film where Lang cuts together a series of close-ups. His timing is incredible here. The script is imperfect. In fact, there are a lot of instances of unbelievability and silliness in the film. It is a testament to the rest of the script (and the other aspects of the film, too) that Fury ends up being such a great film. I like it nearly as much as M. It may not be quite as good, but it moves at a brisker pace and is thus often more exciting and suspenseful. 9/10.
27 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Unfortunately, Fury is still relevant.
jm-5079923 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
There is a subtle, yet nevertheless disturbing moment from a barber in Fritz Lang's "Fury." As he is shaving one of his customers throats, he begins discussing the fine line between civilized behaviour and the urge to do something transgressive. Although the character may appear perfectly innocent, he admits that, on multiple occasions, he has had the urge to brutally murder some of his customers. There's no apparent motivation, he just has an urge for violence. Initially, this passage may seem just like a comical interlude but if you consider Lang's filmography, this inconsequential scene could epitomize Lang's cynical principles. In virtually all his films, Lang has presented audience with a brutally bitter and cynical view of humanity where the concept of 'civilized' is fraught with ambiguity. "Fury," a film which functions as a cold and powerful indictment of mob violence, undeniably continues Lang's trend of challenging the notion of civilized humanity by showing the tragic consequences that occur when a mob is possessed by a belief that is completely based on fiction and irrationality. Unfortunately, "Fury" still shares a powerful resonance with the modern world and is the fundamental reason why it's still relevant and disturbing. As we watch on and see the joyful and satisfied faces of the mob harming the innocent because they believe they are morally justified, we cannot help but see the similarities to recent media imagery that evokes the exact same sentiment. Individuals, who being possessed by an irrational ideology, seem perfectly free of guilt and remorse when committing violence against perfectly innocent people - so much for a civilized society. Lang, who made the film in 1936 with most likely the intention of using his film to stop such behaviour, would turn in his grave knowing that "Fury" still shares an obvious connection to the modern world.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A mob of All-American peasants are out to burn Spencer Tracy at the stake (and his little dog too)
Ham_and_Egger11 February 2006
A compelling "message picture" with good performances from both Sylvia Sidney and Spencer Tracy and deft direction from Fritz Lang. 'Fury' is tautly dramatic and not without lessons for a modern audience, but it still falls just a little short of masterpiece status.

This was Lang's first American film, the studios were presumably in fierce competition to sign him to a contract and seems clear that MGM was quite proud of itself and thought they could safely fit the Austrian master into their mold while also revisiting some of his past successes. 'Fury' is by no means a remake of 'M' but it does share some key themes. However, the style is a marked departure from the director's German work and the Hollywood treatment keeps this film from being as compelling as its older brother.

Hailing from the Midwest as I do, the Hooterville Junction take on small-town America rankled with me a bit. Gossipy housewives and self-important businessmen are played for laughs and then suddenly turn into a howling mob bent on the death of a man against whom the "evidence" is literally peanuts. It's a serious matter, as we're later reminded by the prosecutor's speech about the number of lynchings in America's then recent history, it should never have been treated lightly.

Do watch it though, and keep an eye out for a very familiar Cairn terrier. Also, early on when Joe and Katherine are looking at bedroom furniture there's a distinct chuckle at the expense of the Hays Code (which was enforced starting in '34).
16 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Electrifying
monkeyface_si13 July 2001
Tracy is fantastic as salt-of-the-earth whose soul is incinerated by fiery destruction of lynch mob. In the wake of the kidnaping of the Lindbergh baby, this was an especially emotional topic in 1936. Tracy's performance is riveting and even more-worthy of the Oscar than his Oscar winning performance that year in Captains Courageous.

Sylvia Sydney is excellent as Tracy's love interest, and Frank Albertson is superb as his hard-edged brother. Edward Ellis (title star of the Thin Man) does a good turn as the reasonable Sheriff. And Walter Brennan does an excellent job as a deputy. There are also two contrastingly poignant scenes in bars. Overall, score a home run for Fritz Lang in his first US film.
37 out of 45 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Compelling, though flawed
gbill-7487710 April 2021
"When a mob takes it upon itself to identify, try, condemn, and punish, it is a destroyer of a government that patriots have died to establish and defend."

A couple of blowhards without moral compasses whip a crowd up into a frenzy of hate, leading to an institution of government being stormed and destroyed. The mob is more willing to believe an unsubstantiated rumor than let the facts play out in a court of law. Thank god there was video evidence that could be used to help identify the culprits. It's trite to ask whether that sounds familiar, but it's impossible not to see the similarity to the real-life events of 1/6/21.

The script for this film was based on the 1933 lynching of two suspects being held in a San Jose jail for the kidnapping and murder of Brooke Hart. What was horrifying about it was that California Governor James Rolph actually endorsed the lynching, saying he would pardon anyone who was convicted. It's particularly onerous when those in positions of power subvert the rule of law so blatantly - and we see a representation of Rolph in a character who stops the National Guard from being sent out to protect the jail. (Again, ringing any bells?) It's a little unfortunate that this wasn't an African-American lynching case given the statistics spouted in the courtroom scene had to be stilted in that direction, but I don't fault the film for that because it was 1936, and the case selected was itself compelling.

Warning, spoilers from here on.

It's all very riveting, but I think where the film missteps is when it has the victim of this violence (Spencer Tracy) secretly survive, and then attempt to get mob members tried for murder anyway. The intention was likely to show his own lust for revenge getting the better of dispassionate rule of law, but it defies belief, and undercuts the power of the film. It would have been far more artistically truthful had he died, and his fiancée (Sylvia Sidney) used to carry on the prosecution of the thugs responsible. It doesn't ring true at all when she points out to him how the members of the mob probably regret their actions of that day. Ha! The film seems to want to take a little left turn into happy-land, with Tracy and Sidney ending up smooching, the townsfolk all having learned some lesson (you know, rather than being tried for attempted murder), and our faith in humanity restored because Tracy didn't let these people get convicted. It's all ridiculous.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Superb...part of what made Tracy a true star
vincentlynch-moonoi29 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
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.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Salted Peanuts
sol-5 July 2016
Curiously titled, there are two lots of "fury" to consider in this film as an angry mob burn down the jail where an innocent stranger is being held on circumstantial evidence, while subsequently the stranger survives and in a fit of anger decides to keep his survival a secret in order that the lynch mob can be prosecuted for first degree murder. It is an interesting premise and Spencer Tracy is superb in the lead role, playing a character who becomes ever-so-slowly less sympathetic with his increasingly bloodthirsty desire for revenge. Walter Abel also provides good support as the district attorney in charge of the case who maintains a sense of humour in court, while Sylvia Sidney is effective as Tracy's girlfriend, shown in striking close-up at several key points. The completely silent scene in which she rushes to see the jail alight is an utterly breathtaking sequence and with Fritz Lang at the helm the film looks as good as one would expect. For all its virtues, 'Fury' is not a subtle film though, and it is hard to say what comes off as more detrimental: the loud thunderstorms that only start up as Tracy argues with his brothers near the end, or Tracy's preachy speech in the final scene. The plot is also a little hard to buy at times (would Tracy really be locked up over such sketchy evidence?), but if nothing else, 'Fury' will definitely make you think twice about carrying salted peanuts in your pocket. The intense scenes of the angry mob in action also offer a stark reminder of just how irrational we, as human beings, can be in the wrong set of circumstances.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
disappointing
rupie13 March 2003
I watched this because of the presence of Spencer Tracy, and learned only after the fact that this was Fritz Lang's first American film. I found the whole thing to be an exercise in contrivance. Nothing in the film seems really believable. Further, a movie that deals with mob violence (the jail burning is treated as a "lynching") and that avoids putting it in a racial context seems to be making a calculated exercise in avoidance. The Tracy character's change in character from a nice guy to, after his traumatic experience, a vicious and cynical man thirsting for revenge is just too pat to be believable. And then there is the business of those hugely unsubtle plot hints to the viewer. On the whole I found the film worth watching only for its historical value, not for any inherent virtues.

It was interesting to catch Walter Brennan in what I thought was an early role, until I learned via IMDB that he had made 120 movies in the eleven years he was working in Hollywood prior to this flick!

One other Lang movie I have seen - the excellent Woman in the Window - shows that he had vastly sharpened his skills for the American audience by 1946.
15 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
22?23?25? What's the matter?
dbdumonteil1 July 2004
Warning: Spoilers
"Fury" was Lang's first American work after a short stint in France where he directed "Liliom" .It's one of his strongest works ,that is to say one of the strongest works of the whole cinema.It displays a connection with "M" where the underworld wanted to punish a criminal.

SPOILERS

Here the mob replaces the underworld ,but it does not make a big difference.A supporting character speaks of "impulse" ,which is the key to Lang's canon.Every man is a potential criminal and in "fury" everyone bar one becomes a criminal.The first pictures display happiness,love and these precious times which reveal frailty.Some details which seem trivial (Sylvia Sidney mending Tracy's pocket,the confusion about the word "memento")are actually vital for the plot.After Tracy's arrest (because of peanuts,what a derision!),the tension rises,slowly but inexorably and reaches a climax that other directors have yet to surpass:particularly impressive the women's gossips are (which Lang compares to a barnyard);and the journalist in search of a scoop predates Kirk Douglas character in Wilder's "the big carnival " by fifteen years.Every sequence,every picture is sensational,and I will name only three:the dumb boy singing Popeye's song,the woman showing her child to her husband and threatening to disown him if he does not show he's a man,and the beaming faces watching an innocent burning.A crowd does not think,Sidney will say later.

But Lang's movie would not be the masterpiece it is without its terrific second part.Tracy's character who was that of a good man,respectful of law and justice,who was dreaming of a simple life with Sydney,becomes a monster thirsting for revenge.His world has collapsed and now he relishes in listening to the 22 defendants ' fear(why 22? his fiancée will scream why not 23? or 25? or more?)on the radio.It's quite possible Victor Fleming cast Tracy as "Dr Jekill and Mister Hyde" a couple of years later because of the actor's tour- de -force in "fury".

Sylvia Sydney's part is no less important:she epitomizes purity,honesty and compassion,and all her interventions are deeply moving ;she 's the Just without whom the fire would have destroyed Sodom.And it makes the ending all the more frightening:although the last pictures retain a certain hope .But this hope remains ambiguous ,that of a man who no longer believes in the society's rules.Tracy had still the choice of redeeming himself but some future Lang heroes would not have it .

With "furie",Lang came into the American cinema blaring,and with "beyond a reasonable doubt" ,went out the same way.
13 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Where we see how injustice always breeds more of the same.
RJBurke194223 April 2015
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
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Dehumanization of a Good Man
claudio_carvalho7 October 2011
The hard worker Joseph "Joe" Wilson (Spencer Tracy) and the teacher Katherine Grant (Sylvia Sidney) are in love with each other, but they do not have enough money to get married. Katherine gets a better job in Washington and together with Joe, they save money to get married one year later. Joe quits his job in the factory and uses his savings to buy a gas station, working with his brothers Charlie (Frank Albertson) and Tom (George Walcott). He makes enough money to get married with Katherine and buys a car. While driving with his dog Rainbow to meet his fiancée, Joe is stopped in Strand by the redneck Deputy "Bugs" Meyers (Walter Brennan) as suspect of kidnapping a boy in the Peabody Case. When they find peanuts in his pocket and a five-dollar bill in his pocket with the numeration of the money paid for ransom, Joe is arrested in jail for investigation.

"Bugs" Meyers makes a comment in the barbershop about the prisoner and sooner the gossip is spread in the little town. As a tale never loses in the telling, Joe is accused by the population of kidnapper and they try to invade the police station to lynch him. For political reason, Governor Burt (Howard Hickman) does not send the National Guard to help Sheriff Tad Hummel to protect Joe and the Police Station is burnt down by the vigilantes. Katherine witnesses the action and has a breakdown.

Joe is presumed dead but out of the blue he appears at his brothers' apartment seeking justice. He had learnt that in accordance with the laws, Lynch Law is murder in the first degree and his brothers open a case against twenty-two dwellers of Strand. The prosecutor Mr. Adams accepts the case and Katherine Grant is the prime witness. Joe's revenge is set in motion.

"Fury" tells the heartbreaking story of dehumanization of a good man and hard worker that believes in the justice and loves his country through the imprisonment and subsequent lynching by despicable people moved by gossip. Fritz Lang makes another excellent feature in his first American work, and I enjoyed the gossip sequence that ends in a brood of hens.

The story is engaging with a great revenge of the bitter Joe. I would love to see the twenty-two defendants going to the gallows, but the moralist conclusion works perfectly in the story. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Fúria" ("Fury")
18 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Welcome to America, Fritz!
boris-2628 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
During the first fifteen minutes of FURY, you'll swear you are watching an amazingly bland romantic drama involving some average Joe. But as soon as Joe (Spencer Tracy) approaches the sleepy town of Strand, while driving to his own wedding, FURY takes a scary turn. Remember, this is the first Hollywood film directed by that German prince of dark cinema, Fritz Lang.

From 1919 to 1933, Lang's German films, such as DR. MABUSE, METROPOLIS, SPIES and M focused on the dark side of humanity, often showing vicious gangs or mobs at their worst. In FURY, a small town sheriff believes passing traveller Joe Wilson to be a wanted kidnapper. Following law and rational, the sheriff holds Joe until the District Attorney can determine his guilt or innocence. (The sheriff is played by Edward Ellis, who was Paul Muni's best prison pal in I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG)

Outside the prison, rumors spin out of control. The ordinary citizens believe the real kidnapper is jailed. A justice-hungry mob, led by the local bad-ass (Bruce Cabot) storm the jail, beat up the sheriff and dynamite the jail. We are only half-way through FURY, the second half involves a few hair-raising twists, and a real examination of how black-hearted even decent people can become.

Lang often mixed realism with distorted expressionism (Just take a look at his best film, M) The storming of the jail is often filmed in a documentary style, as if the camera peers at the chaos from some safe haven. He would mix in harshly lit close-ups of the thrill-crazed mob watching Joe burn in prison. While Joe is trapped behind bars, waiting to roast alive, he holds his frightened dog. (The dog is played by the same canine who played Toto in WIZARD OF OZ. Of course, this being a Fritz Lang film, the local witches aren't just talk, they really get Tracy and his little dog, too!)
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
a marvelously tense work of storytelling; one of Lang's great American films
Quinoa198431 January 2006
Oh, human nature- how can it stand side-by-side with the Law, which is exacting, unforgiving, but always on the side of fact? Human beings tend to be impulsive, and very easily led along when becoming followers of the pack. Is this more to truth or fiction, writer/director Fritz Lang might be asking. This film, for it's time, is a rather complex kind of moral drama, swerving into (good) melodrama at times, but also with the ideal of an early film-noir. What's the Joe Nobody who minds his own business got going for him in the world? While one could even go as far as to look at the philosophical nature behind the film, it's really a simple story that dwells in the dark times of the depression. At the same time, it has that incredible pull of Lang's best German-set films (and what a magnificently raging use of crowds).

It starts off even more deceptively simple, with its curve-balls getting warmed up. It's got the love story element right away, with Spencer Tracy as the lead Joe and as his love and fiancé the notable Sylvia Sydney in one of her earliest roles as Katherine. They'll get married soon, once Joe's got enough money. But he gets spotted out in the midst of a kidnapping investigation by the police and thrown into jail. Then in a virtuoso kind of brick-by-brick storytelling, we see how the town grows into its frenzy. Not only is it realistic for its time, but it crosses past those imaginary boundaries by the current kind of dramatic film-making that says more elaborately 'emotional' music and overtly big and slow-motion angles get the job done. That it just lays down its medium shots and brief pans works up the momentum. But then a certain twist keeps the second half of the film- following the burning of the jail-house- into a tight suspension.

In a way I found an immense pull into the film because I realized what Lang took forth with the subject matter. This is the opposite of the town and man-in-question scenario in M- this time the story brings together the Law not as a procedural, but as something to gnaw on hard. Where's the humanity in vengeance, one might ask? The courtroom scenes are fantastic in the duality of it- who do you side with more, defense or prosecution, and how will Lang's (solid) manipulation of the story work out? It comes down to an ending that was possibly expectable, maybe not as well written as other parts of the script, but it is a strong one. And through this the emotional drive in the host of character actors is on the note, even for its early sound times. Tracy, as well, seems to somehow show if not layers then at least some soul in his performance. He makes this man, who reveals just as the mob does the split between good and evil, and their calculating extremes, all the more human.

And like M there are some good twists that work in favor of the crises facing both lead and supporting characters; I felt the same rush in some scenes as I did in that great moment when the blind balloon vendor comes into play again. Again, possibilities for manipulation. But Lang controls it into something potent and unsentimental at the same time. It's a kind of 'social' drama, reflective of issues that are possibly closer than one may think in its period, and makes points that are universal, and rather important. It also doesn't pander to its crowd wanting a good Hollywood story of love in times of peril. It's lean, memorable Golden-age cinema.
12 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
"You can't hurt a dead man"
Steffi_P31 May 2009
When Fritz Lang moved to America, he did his best to understand the place in all its diversity, riding trains, hobnobbing with taxi-drivers and even spending six weeks with a group of Navajos. With Fury, his first Hollywood picture and one of the few for which he took a writing credit, you can see he is doing his damndedest to speak about American society in the way he spoke of German society in M or the Mabuse films.

Unfortunately Lang no longer had the input of Thea von Harbou, who despite being a nazi stooge was very good at shaping Lang's more fantastical ideas into coherent stories. Instead he gets Bartlett Cormack, who rose to some sort of prominence penning several of Cecil B. DeMille's worst-written features. Oddly, the original story is by the comedy-writer Norman Krasna (who was Oscar-nominated for it), and while structurally it's fairly tight it is marred by Cormack's trite dialogue and Lang's simplistic characterisation.

But really, it wasn't Lang's business to be a great screenwriter. He was an incredibly powerful and expressive visual director, and surprisingly much of his formal style has survived intact. He may no longer be able to have the nightmare architecture and cast of uber-hams that make his German films so unique, but Fury is still recognizably Langian. The picture actually begins in fairly typical Hollywood style, with plenty of conventional camera angles and straight acting. Once the story moves out to the hick town however we are suddenly transported into Lang country, with shot compositions of bold diagonals, actors playing straight into the camera and a rogues gallery of bizarre characters. The switch in style is fairly effective, although as with M the hysterical tone doesn't fit with the real world subject matter. One very effective bit of Lang technique though comes in the form of two lengthy point-of-view shots, one from the perspective of Tracy when he is stopped in his car, the second from that of the mob as it approaches the jail. Putting the audience into these two opposing positions at such crucial moments elicits sympathy for both parties.

Where the movie really falls apart is in the second act, and all the business with the trial and Tracy's revenge. It's full of plot holes and stretches of credibility. For example, we know the footage used as court evidence was shot by amateurs from a balcony, yet it impossibly features low angles. Tracy becomes a huffing and puffing caricature, both as written and as played, with the only example of bad acting I have ever seen from him. This exaggerated sketch of a man mad with revenge may make a good point but it makes weak drama.

Lang's tendency towards over-the-top performances may have harmed his more serious pictures, but at least here he gets a good line-up to do the job. Highlights include Walter Brennan as the shotgun-toting deputy, and silent star Raymond Hatton as the "muderous impulses" barber. Edward Ellis (the sheriff) is great too. He reminds me of Victor Meldrew from One Foot in the Grave. Fury has its share of bad hams as well though, such as those two jokers playing Tracy's brothers. Sylvia Sidney is the only member of the cast who is really allowed to play it straight all the way through, and she does a fine job, although I have seen her do much better still (in Dead End, for example).

After this, Lang made a few more attempts at writing and producing in Hollywood, it seems in the genuine hope of creating something of profound meaning for the American people, for which I admire him. In the end though he was passed from studio to studio and lumbered with b-pictures, in which he simply retreated into his personal style of shot composition. These efforts tend to be poorly scripted and appallingly acted, but at least you can play "spot the diagonal shadow". And it was also touching to see the innocent enthusiasm with which he approached genres like the western or the war flick. Fury on the other hand, for all its good intentions, is a mediocre mishmash, and a very disappointing watch.
8 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
lynch victim comes back from the dead to torment his killers
RanchoTuVu20 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
A mob forms to take justice into its own hands when a stranger is wrongly accused of kidnapping a young girl. The small, friendly town becomes a seething cauldron as normally decent people get caught up in the gossip and rabble rousing. While the viewer's sympathies are with Spencer Tracy as the unfortunate prisoner, Lang's portrayal of social breakdown is disturbing enough, with the mob assembling at night and the camera going from one crazed face to the next. But there is much more, as the ensuing trial of the ringleaders, both men and women, proceeds, as well as the transformation of Tracy from likable to vengeful, so much so that he scares his own brothers. His reappearance, covered with the ashes of the fire, in the doorway of his brother's apartment is a classic scene. The trial of the ringleaders is beautifully done and dramatically closes out the film.
11 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Mob Melodrama
kenjha7 May 2006
Tracy escapes from the mob's attempt to burn down the prison he's being kept in and seeks revenge. An interesting study of mob mentality from Lang, making his first American film. It starts off well but takes a turn for the worse after the prison escape. It becomes melodramatic and preachy. Tracy is understandably bitter but the sudden change in his behavior is not believable. Tracy portrays this change in his character with really bad overacting. Brennan is fun to watch as a sheriff's deputy. Revisiting many of the themes from this film in his next, "You Only Live Once," Lang cut down on the melodrama and the overacting, producing a better film.
12 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Misrule of the mob.
brogmiller4 May 2020
Fritz Lang left Germany in 1934 although his exit was neither as speedy nor as perilous as he later recounted. One learnt to take everything he said with a barrelful of salt. He arrived in Hollywood via Paris and for a while it looked as though he might suffer the same fate as many of his fellow exiles but thanks to Joseph L. Mankiewicz he was assigned the task of directing 'Fury', a story written by Norman Krasna based upon an actual lynching. It was adapted by Lang and Bartlett Cormack. Eighty-five years on this film still packs a punch. Grahame Greene, never too liberal with his compliments, called it 'great' and singled out for praise Sylvia Sidney. She liked and admired Lang and was to make two more films with him. The same could not be said for Spencer Tracy who developed for the director a visceral loathing. Lang only bullied those who couldn't fight back but with the 'stars' he simply threw his weight about. His constant demand for retakes was anathema to an instinctive actor like Tracy. It cannot be denied however that this film and his performance in it did Tracy's career no harm at all. Lang found it tough to adjust to the fact that in Hollywood the producer was king and he bitterly resented the films happy ending imposed by Mankiewicz. His subsequent battles with producers have become part of Hollywood folklore. This brilliant, timeless film ensured that Lang was on his way but it was to be a bumpy road. The greatest line in the film goes to Sidney:'The mob doesn't think; it doesn't have time to think'. History can certainly testify to that!
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Spencer Tracy excels as a man seeking vengeance...
Doylenf2 May 2009
While I have no reservations about the performances of SPENCER TRACY and SYLVIA SIDNEY in Fritz Lang's FURY, I did find it hard to believe the sudden rush to judgment on the part of the townspeople who wanted vigilante justice on virtually no real evidence, urged on by people like BRUCE CABOT.

That seemed to be a weakness stemming from Norman Krasna's original story--and director Lang does not overcome that fault. The casting of the nasty small-town troublemakers who want blood is not realistic enough to suggest that these people would have stooped to such violent behavior on the face of almost no evidence at all. I simply couldn't buy this aspect of the story because of the way it was presented.

But if you can get beyond that fact, the story is a compelling one, especially after the jail is torched and everyone believes Tracy perished in the fire. The plot takes a few unusual twists which culminate in a final courtroom scene that will keep you glued to the screen until the finish.

WALTER ABEL indulges in histrionics as the District Attorney building his case against the townspeople but then so do some attorneys in real life. But it's one of Spencer Tracy's finest performances, running swiftly through a gamut of emotions, one of his strongest roles and he takes full advantage of it. Likewise, Sylvia Sidney plays her role with great restraint and heartfelt sincerity.

Unusual for a film coming from the glossy MGM studio. As someone else suggested, perhaps the results would have been more convincing if the film had been made at Warner Brothers where they specialized in gritty stories of social significance. Still, it's definitely a gripping story and well worth watching.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Fritz Lang at his most heavy-handed
Carl_Tait23 February 2003
Fritz Lang's direction in "Fury" is often superb from a visual standpoint. The stark Expressionism of "M" is much in evidence -- more so than in most of Lang's later films. Unfortunately, "Fury" is irreparably harmed by absurd overacting and a trite, preachy script overloaded with melodrama. The film has dated badly and is now little more than a curio.

For a first-rate film noir on mob violence, see "Try and Get Me!" There are fewer histrionics and platitudes, and the effect is much stronger.
14 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed