Fury was a collection of cliche's and one-note characters that happened to have to tight fighting scenes. Still sucked out loud. Good movies either have great stories, good writing, or competing characters. Documentaries are accurate, and lots of those about tanks in WWII.
To make things worse, the whole thing was decked out in cliches and underwritten dialog that could at best be described as terse. When Tom hank's character died in Saving Private Ryan you cared about him. When Brad Pitt's character died in Fury I was relieved, it meant that the damn thing was ending soon.
The saddest thing, Brad Pitt has been in two recent WWII movies. Inglorious Bastards was barely a movie, more a collection of vignettes that happened to revolve around a central set of very, very well written characters. And because it was very well written, it was an excellent movie I would happily watch again. Fury did have some good fighting scenes going for it, but that was about it. Not enough to make a whole movie, which is really a pity. A movie about a tank crew confined in a tight space having to relate to each other because of and despite their experiences could have been really really good if written well. Instead they just wrote an orgy of violence with a scene in an apartment thrown in for reasons I can't even fathom.
Better off watching a documentary about WWII. You'll get more out if it and it might even be more compelling. Fury isn't the worst movie ever, but I'd call it a long, long way from good.