Jon Bernthal Bully Scene | Fury | CLIP

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Published 2022-06-22

All Comments (21)
  • @GK1976A
    Jon Bernthal is very good at playing psychologically deranged characters. I’ll give him that.
  • An actor that makes you hate his character has successfully showcased his acting capabilities.🏆
  • The way that Pitt took over like a father at a dinner table is very believable.
  • @ryanhunt9652
    What I loved about this movie is that it feels like the actor's are genuinely provoking each other and genuinely reacting. It's rare to see.
  • @LIBREPUB
    Jon Bernthal makes me hate his guts…which is the point. So good and I’m glad he is the Punisher. He killed it in that series.
  • @meghanmonroe
    "I'm just drunk, I'm sorry" lmao It's perfectly timed, hilarious, sad, and another good representation of PTSD. Peña knocked it out of the park here.
  • I think a lot of people are really missing the mark on Jon's character. We're not supposed to hate him. His character wasn't a despicable person. He was someone trying to process and adjust to war. This scene nails it for the entire tank. They're all just trying to process and they feel betrayed that Don took out the new guy to have a pleasant meal while the rest of his family, the ones that have been there through it all, weren't. Not just that, but it was with "the enemy." It was a moment of tension that was settled. Every character reacts to their insecurities. Imagine watching your friends die, killing animals for three days, trying to hold onto your humanity and then seeing your commander sitting in a house with the new guy eating eggs with the people you're fighting. And in the end, while Don was trying to find a bit of peace for a second, he answers the challenge. He slams his fist down (literally) and answers the challenge by spitting at them. As soon as he shows the war is still real the group backs down. Just wanting to know that he still felt what they did. It's a hell of a scene for a reason, and calling Bernthal's character a bully or reflecting the group in a negative light is really selling the whole thing short for what it was.
  • @bubbahead383
    Michael Peña is such an amazing actor. He has the range of Fury to End of Watch, while being able to be absolutely hilarious in Antman
  • @hazmatt3250
    “Your eyes see it, but your head can’t make no sense of it.” Gotta be one of the most accurate summaries of the horrors of war.
  • @MrPhotodoc
    That was like living in someone's PTSD family. And it felt very real.
  • @1976brenden
    This scene is cinematic genius! The monsters Brad Pitt had to create in order for them to survive are seeing in the new guy what they used to be and they hate being reminded of what they have lost…but at the exact same time, they know they would all be dead if Brad Pitts character hadn’t transformed them into the savages they are. Brad pitts character despises having to ruin these men, but he knows it’s the ultimate lesser of two evils…so he wants the young kid to experience innocence for possibly the last time before he is made into a monster.
  • @emdocc
    This scene is incredible and so well acted by everyone in it. They come barging in all loud and obnoxious, and you want to hate them for it, but as the scene goes on, you start to realize that they aren't being spiteful or immature, they feel betrayed. They're upset, because they've spent years going through hell with each other and dodging death at every turn, just to be left outside in the rain while Boss Man and the New Guy go inside and have a nice meal with some nice clean ladies. Jon's frustration, Shia's sadness, and Michael choking back tears while telling the story about the horses, incredible scene in an incredible film.
  • The subtle actions that Jon Bernthal does is so underrated. The fact he scratches his head with a utensil like a stick goes to show how disassociated and disconnected his character is in comparison to a Logan's innocently pure character who's never seen the horrors of the battlefield. Dude's a legend in my eyes.
  • @amberturd1975
    The heartbreak in Shia's eyes for not being invited hit hard. It meant that much to them because they had been putting their asses on the line far before the newbie.
  • @MrBlack252
    Their respect for their captain Don runs deep because even when they're pressing him he doesn't have to raise his voice he just slams the table and spits towards them and they quickly backtrack.
  • @TheDefJamm
    A fine example of PTSD in soldiers. They're not really bad people, they are just stressed beyond anything imaginable.
  • I deal with PTSD and I can remember when I use to drink saying "I'm just drunk I'm sorry" exactly how he did in that regretful tone. To me, this scene really encapsulated PTSD quite well. The tension, the forgetting to breathe for what feels like minutes, remembering details that you never thought you'd remember, especially smells. For me the smells always stood out most.
  • @Jake4211-
    I personally like the director's cut version where Michael Pena''s character is sobbing and cmhysterical as he tells the story. It's very powerful and intense. He is very much an underrated actor
  • @MrBlack252
    This perfectly encapsulates how a soldier seeing thousands of harsh things and walking with death on a daily basis can change you into something you thought youd never become