【Amazon.co.jp限定】FURY / フューリー(ガールズ&パンツァー 特典ブルーレイディスク付) [Blu-ray]
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メーカーによる説明
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Amazon限定日本版スチールブックBD | Amazon限定海外版スチールブックBD | プレミアム・エディションBD | BD | DVD | |
カスタマーレビュー |
5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
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5つ星のうち3.4
13
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5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
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5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
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5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
|
価格 | ¥10,000¥10,000 | — | ¥7,128¥7,128 | ¥4,260¥4,260 | ¥3,682¥3,682 |
ディスク枚数 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
スチールブック | ✓ | ✓ | |||
ガルパン特典 | |||||
FURY特典BD | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
FURY特典映像 | 203分 | 203分 | 203分 | 135分 | 18分 |
解説ブックレット | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
アウターケース | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
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Amazon限定 日本版 スチールブック ガルパン付 | Amazon限定 海外版 スチールブック ガルパン付 | Amazon限定 プレミアム・エディションBD ガルパン付 | Amazon限定BD ガルパン付 | Amazon限定DVD ガルパン付 | |
カスタマーレビュー |
5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
|
5つ星のうち3.4
13
|
5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
|
5つ星のうち4.2
15,390
|
5つ星のうち3.4
13
|
価格 | — | — | — | — | — |
ディスク枚数 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
スチールブック | ✓ | ✓ | |||
ガルパン特典BD | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
FURY特典BD | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
FURY特典映像 | 203分 | 203分 | 203分 | 135分 | 18分 |
解説ブックレット | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
アウターケース | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
商品の説明
映画「FURY / フューリー」と「ガールズ&パンツァー」のコラボ企画が実現!
Amazon.co.jp限定特典として、「ガールズ&パンツァー」が映画「FURY / フューリー」のために作成した特典ブルーレイディスクが封入されます。
【Amazon.co.jp限定特典】
・ ガールズ&パンツァー 特典ブルーレイディスク
【収録ディスク】
・ 本編ディスク
・ 特典ブルーレイディスク
・ ガールズ&パンツァー 特典ブルーレイディスク
【映像特典】
[ 本編ディスク (約135分) ]
・ 未公開シーン (16種)
・ 戦地での絆
・ 監督の戦いの記録
・ 退役軍人が語る戦車戦
・ “獣”と呼ぶべき乗り物
・ フューリーの内部
・ 伝説のティーガー
・ シャーマン対ティーガー
[ ガールズ&パンツァー 特典ブルーレイディスク ] (約49分)
・ M4シャーマン in ガールズ&パンツァー
「ガールズ&パンツァー」のM4戦車とティーガーⅠ戦車の登場シーンを秋山優花里(中上育実)が解説
・ これが「フューリー号」のモデルになったM4A3E8戦車だ!
出演:中上育実(「ガールズ&パンツァー」秋山優花里役)、中江照夫(元陸上自衛隊M4A3E8戦車搭乗員)、杉山潔(「ガールズ&パンツァー」プロデューサー)
監修:浪江俊明(「FURY」日本語版監修)
協力:陸上幕僚監部広報室、陸上自衛隊武器学校、陸上自衛隊富士学校
・ 「ガールズ&パンツァー 劇場版」SPECIAL PV
胸が熱く滾る(たぎる)傑作。/1945年4月――たった5人で、300人のドイツ軍に挑んだ男たち。
1945年4月、戦車“フューリー"を駆るウォーダディーのチームに、戦闘経験の一切ない新兵ノーマンが配置された。
新人のノーマンは、想像をはるかに超えた戦場の凄惨な現実を目の当たりにしていく。
やがて行く先々に隠れ潜むドイツ軍の奇襲を切り抜け進軍する“フューリー"の乗員たちは、世界最強の独・ティーガー戦車との死闘、さらには敵の精鋭部隊300人をたった5人で迎え撃つという、絶望的なミッションに身を投じていく。
たった一輌の戦車でドイツの大軍と戦った5人の男達は、なぜ自ら死を意味する任務に挑んだのか―。
【キャスト】
ブルーレイ&DVDだけの豪華声優陣による日本語吹替
ドン・コリアー(ウォーダディー)・・・ブラッド・ピット(堀内 賢雄)
ボイド・スワン(バイブル)・・・シャイア・ラブーフ(小松 史法)
ノーマン・エリソン(新兵)・・・ローガン・ラーマン(梶 裕貴)
トリニ・ガルシア(ゴルド)・・・マイケル・ペーニャ(間宮 康弘)
グレイディ・トラビス(クーンアス)・・・ジョン・バーサル(坂詰 貴之)
エマ・・・アリシア・フォン・リットベルク(渕上 舞)
【作品の魅力】
必見の滾り(たぎ)ポイント!
◆圧倒的クオリティに胸滾! (むねたぎ)
戦争映画の歴史を塗り替える傑作誕生! 徹底したリアリティ&圧倒的アクション!
→世界で唯一現存するティガ戦車ーが映画史上初登場するなど本物の戦車やプロップが贅沢に登場!
CGをほぼ使わないリアルな演出も加わり、あの「プライベート・ライアン」を超える大傑作が完成!
◆魂震えるストーリーに胸滾! (むねたぎ)
男たちの熱き絆と生き様を描いた骨太なストーリーが展開!
→現代にも通じる不朽のテーマ「男の絆や生き様」を描いた胸滾るストーリーで魂が震えるほどの感動を!
◆豪華布陣に胸滾! (むねたぎ)
ブラッド・ピット主演・製作×元軍人デヴィッド・エアー監督の最強コラボ!
→ハリウッドを代表する名優とアクション映画の鬼才による強力タッグが放つ衝撃と感動が見るものを<打ちのめす>!
※ジャケット写真、商品仕様、映像特典などは予告なく変更となる場合がございますのでご了承ください。
イメージ付きのレビュー

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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
見応えありました。
最後にブラピが… ちょっと寂しいけど。
映画は虚構エンタメなんだから楽しめればいいんだよ。
あと情緒表現がどうとか見方が浅いからブラピのセリフや演技がわからないんだ。
戦争時はみんな狂ってるっつうの。
ブラット・ピット
主演作品です。
第二次世界大戦、戦車乗員の物語り。
若干ネタバレありです。
フランス人母娘の最後が儚い。
心交わした後に無情にも・・・。
何度観ても素晴らしい。
他の国からのトップレビュー


van de verkoper ( uiterst tevreden )
:-):-):-)



And notice that I'm not saying "best war movies..." but
Best movies.
The horror of the final months of World War II in Germany has never been depicted this well, and I only wish some more of the men who had been there were still around to discuss it, now that this movie was with us. One of those men was my father.
But first, a bit about the authenticity.
One of the worst things about many of the later World War II movies (most silly among them, "Patton") is that they got little or nothing right. American tank soldiers fought inside Sherman tanks, not those later American tanks (like the "Pattons" utilized in the movie "Patton"). And the Shermans were decent tanks -- except against the best of the Nazi armor. In order to do a decent job with the movie, "Fury" had to locate real Shermans (and a real German Tiger tank) that could be used. Otherwise, everything else would have been lost to the lack of authenticity, which is what the movie had to have.
But more than that, the movie had to be authentic to the reality of the men who ended their war in Germany (and Austria and Czechslovakia, the last three countries to be taken -- and that's the correct word, not the Cold War "liberated" -- from the hands of the Nazi leadership) in May 1945. For the soldiers on the job with the U.S. forces during those months, the job was killing "Krauts", "Heinies..." etc. And the job of the "Krauts" was killing Americans (and British, Canadian, and French invaders coming from the West; or Russians from the East). Both sides got very good at their jobs.
"Fury" takes that job seriously, depicting the job by portraying the five-man crew of one Sherman tank during that last month before Adolf Hitler's suicide and the final surrender of the remnants of the Nazi empire. It the simplest way, "Fury" is another "War Movie" (caps necessary), a buddy movies, and more. A tank crew is led by Brad Pitt (as US Army S/Sgt. Don "Wardaddy" Collier. As the movie begins, the crew consists of Shia LaBeouf as Boyd "Bible" Swan, Michael Peña as Cpl. Trini "Gordo" Garcia, and Jon Bernthal as Pfc. Grady "Coon-Ass" Travis. In the first nasty battle portrayed in the film, they have lost one of their crew, "Red." They receive a young replacement, Logan Lerman playing Pvt. Norman "Ellison (who doesn't get his non de guerre -- Machine" -- until nearly the end of the story). The tank platoon starts the movie with ten tanks, and by the end there is one. The film depicts how that comes about. The portrayal of the men doing the tank work should earn any of them at least an Oscar nomination, and their lives together inside that bucket of steel is portrayed in the claustrophobic horror that was actually experienced by U.S. tankers during those years -- and especially those final months. All that said, "Fury" might just have been another one of those war movies where the "kid"learns to be a good soldier thanks to the work of the "old man." But this isn't "Sand of Iwo Jima" or any of a dozen of the sanitized bedtime stories we were told as children in the 1950s and 1960s using Hollywood propaganda that began in the 1940s.
In order to do his job, the "kid" has to be taught to be a killer, and he resists. Trained for a mere eight weeks to be a clerk typist, "Logan" is snatched from a replacement truck and ordered to be the machine gunner on "Fury." When he protests that his only military skill is typing "60 words a minute," Wardaddy begins the replacement's new training, with the help of the rest of the family who work inside "Fury." Norman has to become a killer to be a good worker and a fellow soldier, so that by the time the other men bestow on him his war name -- "Machine" -- he has learned his trade and is doing it well. "Idealism is peaceful," Brad Pitt's character tells Norman at one point. "History is violence." And that violence is depicted as almost never before in an American film (and rarely in others, one of which comes to mind -- the Russian "Stalingrad"... but that's another discussion for another time).
By the time of that final battle scene, all the stages have been set, and all the cliches and pieties of previous American war movies have been obliterated or at least severely damaged. Wardaddy's life and fate are not out of "Sand of Iwo Jima" or any of a dozen other war myths that come to mind with alittle thought.
This is important.
One of the most pernicious bits of the historiography from the final months of World War II was the claim that the Americans were fighting "old men and kids" after the German Army "lost" its remaining major reserves in the Battle of the Bulge and Nordwind. Left out of that story is the fact that those "kids", some as young as 14 and 15, were fanatical Nazis who had been trained from the day they entered school under Hitler's versions of reality. As a result, they were as deadly as the men who had raped their way across Poland, France, and Russia a few years earlier.
I have a hunch that "Fury" will get good reviews from the remaining men (and few women) who are still around who actually lived the combat of those months at the "end" of World War II in both Europe and "The Pacific." Sadly, I won't get to have those conversations with my parents, because both -- both combat veterans -- are long dead.
My father ended his war after fighting through Germany into Austria with the 44th Infantry Division, one of the 80 or so U.S. divisions that never made it to Hollywood. He came home with one desire -- to begin that family he and my mother had promised each other when they got married a few months before Pearl Harbor. By April 1945, he was in the Army in Germany and she was in the Army (Army Nurse Corps) on Okinawa. The year 1945 was different for each of millions of men and women across the planet, but one of the jokes in our family was that they really understood the meaning of SNAFU. My mother enlisted in the Army Nurse Corps because the enlistment office promised her that she'd be there -- in Europe -- to patch up my Dad if he was hurt. Naturally, as soon as the paperwork was in, she was sent to the other side of the planet.
But they did get together by December 1945, after the G.I. protests in "The Pacific" demanding that "Bring the Boys Home." (They didn't mention the girls; there weren't many of them).
And so they got their dreams, and in September 1946 I was the first of the four children they had, keeping that promise from early 1941.
But there were mysteries we never could solve.
My father came home with a Bronze Star, a Combat Infantry Badge, and a "yearbook" from his regiment. My mother came home with a little mimeographed booklet of home addresses for all the men and women who had served on the island with her field hospital. Every Christmas, our home was filled with Christmas cards from all over, most of them the men and women Mom and Dad had "served" with.
How does that relate to "Fury"?
Like most boys growing up during the John Wayne 1950s, I wanted the stories. We read "Sergeant Rock" comics and say all those movies about World War II (which got less and less real as the Cold War decade went onward).
No matter how many times I asked my Dad how he got his Bronze Star, the only answer he ever gave was "I got lost one night and I got lucky..."
My mother, remembering her war, had nightmares until they took her over the edge. But since "PTSD" wasn't well known then -- and the American Dream said that women hadn't been in combat anyway -- her healing was more difficult than Dad's. He worked, his post "service" service being the U.S. Post Office.
But the questions remained, and over the years they only grew. What were those wars in 1945 like?
Well, little by little Hollywood is catching up with the facts that were reported early after the war, then suppressed in the lies of the Cold War.
And one of the best things about the movie "Fury" is that it gets those who are paying attention back to that real war that American (and British, Canadian, and French) soldiers actually had to fight after they entered Der Vaterland in early 1945, following the termination of "The Bulge".
The one thing that was certain, the Germans were not being "liberated" as the French and Belgians had been. The Germans were fighting -- virtually all of them -- and dying fanatically for the Reich. And as "Fury" depicts, those who had second thoughts were lynched by their own fellow citizens.
That's why, as our fathers did explain, in very few words, every major city in Germany had to be reduced to rubble. By air and artillery, and finally house to house. Not all the Germans in 1945 were Nazis supporting Hitler's last festungs. Just the majority -- male and female, adults and "children."
Fury does as good a job showing what those final weeks of the war in Europe were. As good as "were like" can offer. Because if we were paying attention, our parents taught us that war IS -- and not "like" anything else. Hollywood can only do so much, once Hollywood decides to try and tell a story honestly.
I wish my Dad were still around so we could watch this movie and talk about it together, but he was buried 19 years ago alongside the brewery in Newark, New Jersey. My Mom had died ten years before that, never fully recovering from the nightmares she brought home with her from Okinawa. Medicated, she wrote hundreds of notes on slips of paper about he lives, by the end believing the Jesus was speaking to her -- between bouts of writing about the broken men, women and children she used her nursing skills for between April and September 1945.
So now, Hollywood has brought us "Fury." It's about tankers, specifically the 2nd U.S, Armored Division fighting through Germany in April 1945. By then, Europe was a killing field from "East" (where the Russians were heading into Berlin) to the "West," where my father and a million young men like him were heading through Germany.
One of the best things about "Fury" is that the men who play the tankers in it trained for their acting roles in two ways. They listened to the men who were still alive (not many) from the Second Armored Division. And then they got some "basic training" from Navy SEALS to give them a bit of a sense of what some of it was "like." I think they did a decent job in telling a brutal story that doesn't hedge on the realities those men faced in those days.
As the movie notes at the beginning, most of the U.S. tankers in Europe were doomed men. The German armor was better than the U.S. tanks, and so, as "Fury" shows, Sherman tanks fighting German Tiger tanks were as a serious -- and suicidal -- disadvantage. There are dozens of scenes so authentic in the movie as to make you cringe, and the dialogue is as close to "reality" as possible. Men at war use the "F" word a lot, and in all its variations. None of the dialogue is cleaned up in "Fury" for some politically correct later day.
There are a dozen scenes that make the movie memorable, and at least eight actors who deserve to be recognized for their work.
But perhaps the final scene does as much as could be imagined.
The lone survivor (I know, spoiler alert) is the kid' Norman, who at first refused to be a killer, as the war demanded.
"You're a hero buddy. You know that?" the soldiers who put him in the ambulance say as the scene ends the movie. And I have a hunch that most of the men who came home from those brutal months knew that a "Hero" was just a young many who had gotten lost one night and "got lucky."