WWII Hollywood Propaganda Film “Fury” has Largest Jewish Cast Ever Assembled for Such a Movie

Daily Slave
November 2, 2014

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Fury is a new World War II Jew propaganda film starring lots and lots of Jews.

Hollywood just cannot stop producing World War II propaganda films that paint the German National Socialists as the most evil people ever to walk the earth.  The latest film in this category is called “Fury” and it features the largest cast of Jews ever assembled for such a film.  Some Jews seem disappointed that the movie does not touch upon the alleged Jewish Holocaust of 60 trillion Jews though.

The Jewish American newspaper Algemeiner noted both the movie’s huge Jew cast but lack of connection to the Holohoax.  Either way, the film is still pro-Jew and anti-German while apparently showing Brad Pitt on screen killing evil Nazis.

Algemeiner:

The cast is surprisingly good—even Shia LaBeouf—and they sink into their trope-like roles, most notably Bernthal as the jingoistic and rude Southerner. But what detracts from the film, apart from the darker side of war, is the lack of a Jewish connection. The core cast is the largest Jewish cast ever assembled for a World War II film, but the film itself doesn’t touch on the Holocaust. Concentration camp liberations took place in different parts of Germany than those traveled by the Fury tank, and by placing that tank in the middle of such liberations, the film would have irked those viewers who strive for accuracy. Yet the film’s need to be historically sound when it comes to the tank’s journey comes at a major cost—omitting the brunt of the Holocaust from World War II.

As for the members of the cast, the only religion whispered is Christianity, as Boyd (nicknamed Bible) occasionally gives last rites to fallen soldiers. The Jewish background of LaBeouf, Lerman, Bernthal, and Jason Isaacs (appearing in a minor role as a captain) doesn’t carry through to their characters. Additionally, the colors of the tracer rounds detract from the viewing experience. The red and green ammunition volleying back and forth during the battle scenes recall laser gun battles from science-fiction films of yore, even if they are meant to delineate between the Allies and the German forces.

I wonder if they will stop these films once they have made six million of them? We have to be getting close…