IMDb RATING
3.7/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Set during World War 2, a squad of American Army soldiers are sent on a mission behind lines to locate their missing commanding officer.Set during World War 2, a squad of American Army soldiers are sent on a mission behind lines to locate their missing commanding officer.Set during World War 2, a squad of American Army soldiers are sent on a mission behind lines to locate their missing commanding officer.
Dereius Armone Gaines
- Private Jackson
- (as Dereius Gaines)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I'm a big fan of some of the actors in this movie, like Michael Jai White and Tyrese Gibson. This movie has a few good points but many bad. But it's not the worst WWII movie I've seen. It does portray the stress of battle well, showing how Lt. Hayes is suffering from battle fatigue (PTSD) and how that can affect soldiers, and Hyram Murphy did a good job portraying that. Tyrese Gibson also did a good job portraying a tank commander who has seen too much. The movie did an okay job of showing how black soldiers faced prejudice during the war, such as white soldiers refusing to salute or doing so grudgingly, but I feel that could have been done better. Many of the battle scenes were poorly executed and the CGI effects, which would have been decent for the early 90s, are about unforgivable for 2022. Overall it was okay, but many moments left me groaning and asking "seriously?". There was obviously either a very poor military technical adviser or none at all, as many of the battle tactics and maneuvering were haphazard and sloppy. The story doesn't specify (or I missed it if it did) what month/year it took place, but unless it was mid-1944 or later, seeing the German ME-262 jet fighter would have not have been realistic. However, I'm willing to give the benefit of the doubt and accept that the timing could have been correct for its appearance. Overall, I rated it a 5 because I liked the story, but this movie could have been executed much better with an experienced director and military technical adviser. Worth the watch? Honestly, I can't give a positive answer.
I am a s98ker for a good war movie. I even like to watch the lesser war movies, but there is a limit to how much stupidity I can stumach, before I give up and this movie crossed that line pretty quickly...
The bad: it's a war movie and I expect to see exciting fighting scenes. But although these fighting scenes are definitely meant to be taken seriously, they achieve the exact opposite.
It's hilarious to watch these soldiers fight. Really stupid and hilarious. I can forgive a few credibility flaws, but these fighting scenes are so incredibly dumb and silly that even a blind man wouldnt take it seriously.
Not any good? Dolph Lundgren is getting old, and this is NOT a Dolph Lundgren movie, because he is only starring in a small supporting role.
The bad: it's a war movie and I expect to see exciting fighting scenes. But although these fighting scenes are definitely meant to be taken seriously, they achieve the exact opposite.
It's hilarious to watch these soldiers fight. Really stupid and hilarious. I can forgive a few credibility flaws, but these fighting scenes are so incredibly dumb and silly that even a blind man wouldnt take it seriously.
Not any good? Dolph Lundgren is getting old, and this is NOT a Dolph Lundgren movie, because he is only starring in a small supporting role.
There is a particular strain of low-budget war cinema that seeks to evoke the grandeur and grit of WWII without the financial or artistic muscle to support its ambition. The film in question attempts to embed itself within the tradition of microhistorical WWII narratives-focusing on underrepresented aspects of the war effort, particularly the contributions of African American tank crews. While the premise carries promise and historical relevance, nearly every technical and cinematic decision made here undermines what could have been a powerful entry in the genre.
From the outset, the visual language of the film struggles under the weight of incoherence. The cinematography, rather than constructing a sense of tactical geography or dramatic composition, resorts to overused shaky cam techniques that rarely enhance the immediacy of action and more often obscure the events on screen. The editing compounds this problem-disorienting cuts between unrelated shots, mismatched eyelines, and abrupt transitions fracture any narrative continuity. This approach denies the viewer any spatial orientation or emotional buildup, leaving battle sequences to feel more like chaotic montages than structured engagements. When compared to similarly budgeted works like Saints and Soldiers or Company of Heroes, both of which manage to deliver clear, disciplined action with coherent visual grammar, the shortcomings of this film are stark.
Technically, the production oscillates between anachronistic detail and cosmetic mimicry. Authentic WWII-era vehicles are present-Sherman tanks, German half-tracks, and even a Tiger-but their inclusion appears more as ornamental dressing than functional parts of the mise-en-scène. Battle choreography fails to utilize the assets meaningfully: tanks remain stationary during supposed combat sequences, artillery fire lacks any kinetic realism, and visual effects often resemble those from an early-2000s game engine. The ME-262 jet sequence, likely intended as a set piece, feels entirely disconnected from both realism and the surrounding narrative fabric, lacking context, buildup, or tactical logic.
The use of CGI is both excessive and ineffective. Muzzle flashes appear as floating overlays; explosions look as though they were copy-pasted from stock libraries without attention to lighting integration or scale. There is a distinct lack of interaction between actors and environment-the terrain is clean, uniforms remain inexplicably pristine even in the aftermath of shelling, and props show no wear that would convey battlefield exhaustion. Even wartime staples such as dirt, mud, and smoke are rendered with minimal effort or authenticity.
The sound design, far from immersing the viewer in the combat environment, often distracts. Gunfire is exaggerated and repetitive, lacking spatial realism or appropriate reverb, while musical cues aim for grandeur but feel overbearing and misplaced. Most egregiously, the audio mix buries dialogue beneath overzealous scoring and ambient noise, which only draws further attention to the weak writing.
Dialogue, when intelligible, is hampered by a script that veers between banal platitudes and awkward exposition. Characters speak in declarative clichés, often invoking patriotic slogans devoid of nuance or context. A misquotation of Patton's famous line serves as a particularly grating example-not just historically inaccurate, but emblematic of a broader disregard for textual fidelity and period tone. These script deficiencies rob the performers of any chance to ground their portrayals in believable human stakes.
The performances themselves are uneven. Some actors-particularly those in leading roles-attempt to salvage dignity from the material, with brief glimpses of internal struggle or emotional restraint. Tyrese Gibson and Michael Jai White do show signs of having envisioned more grounded portrayals, but the script consistently undermines them. Others deliver performances better suited to melodrama or parody, possibly due to a lack of directorial control or unclear tonal direction. There is no cohesion in performance style; scenes often feel like isolated rehearsals stitched together in post-production.
Where the film most blatantly falters is in its depiction of military tactics and behavior. Assaults are staged without regard for cover, line of sight, or coordination. Soldiers shout commands with no tactical awareness, flanking maneuvers are nonexistent, and critical concepts like suppressive fire or unit cohesion are ignored entirely. A supposed ambush unfolds with participants casually walking into open fire zones, lobbing grenades at implausible distances. These errors transcend budgetary limitation and signal a fundamental lack of research or consultation with military advisors. Even low-budget productions like Red Tails or Fury (though far larger in scale) demonstrate how accurate consulting can vastly enhance a film's tactical credibility.
While the film aspires to honor the 761st Tank Battalion-an invaluable and long-overlooked part of American military history-it stumbles over its own narrative missteps. The story gestures toward racial dynamics within the military, but does so with such cursory treatment that it feels more like a checkbox than a theme. Character interactions meant to highlight the racism endured by Black soldiers are rendered with such superficiality that their intended poignancy is lost in flat delivery and pedestrian direction.
What is perhaps most disappointing is that there are moments-fleeting, buried moments-where a more capable hand could have coaxed something affecting from this material. A lingering shot on a shell-shocked soldier, a whispered moment of doubt before battle, or a glimmer of camaraderie between tank crew members hint at what might have been achieved. Unfortunately, these moments are drowned out by the surrounding noise-both literal and cinematic.
In the end, this film serves as an unfortunate example of a missed opportunity: a worthy subject treated with insufficient craftsmanship. It attempts to join the lineage of WWII cinema that blends battlefield storytelling with overlooked historical perspectives, but its execution-marked by subpar visuals, disjointed narrative structure, poor technical control, and a lack of historical veracity-fails to meet even the modest standards set by its contemporaries. For those who seek films that evoke the true pathos, complexity, and intensity of the Second World War, this offering is likely to provoke only frustration.
From the outset, the visual language of the film struggles under the weight of incoherence. The cinematography, rather than constructing a sense of tactical geography or dramatic composition, resorts to overused shaky cam techniques that rarely enhance the immediacy of action and more often obscure the events on screen. The editing compounds this problem-disorienting cuts between unrelated shots, mismatched eyelines, and abrupt transitions fracture any narrative continuity. This approach denies the viewer any spatial orientation or emotional buildup, leaving battle sequences to feel more like chaotic montages than structured engagements. When compared to similarly budgeted works like Saints and Soldiers or Company of Heroes, both of which manage to deliver clear, disciplined action with coherent visual grammar, the shortcomings of this film are stark.
Technically, the production oscillates between anachronistic detail and cosmetic mimicry. Authentic WWII-era vehicles are present-Sherman tanks, German half-tracks, and even a Tiger-but their inclusion appears more as ornamental dressing than functional parts of the mise-en-scène. Battle choreography fails to utilize the assets meaningfully: tanks remain stationary during supposed combat sequences, artillery fire lacks any kinetic realism, and visual effects often resemble those from an early-2000s game engine. The ME-262 jet sequence, likely intended as a set piece, feels entirely disconnected from both realism and the surrounding narrative fabric, lacking context, buildup, or tactical logic.
The use of CGI is both excessive and ineffective. Muzzle flashes appear as floating overlays; explosions look as though they were copy-pasted from stock libraries without attention to lighting integration or scale. There is a distinct lack of interaction between actors and environment-the terrain is clean, uniforms remain inexplicably pristine even in the aftermath of shelling, and props show no wear that would convey battlefield exhaustion. Even wartime staples such as dirt, mud, and smoke are rendered with minimal effort or authenticity.
The sound design, far from immersing the viewer in the combat environment, often distracts. Gunfire is exaggerated and repetitive, lacking spatial realism or appropriate reverb, while musical cues aim for grandeur but feel overbearing and misplaced. Most egregiously, the audio mix buries dialogue beneath overzealous scoring and ambient noise, which only draws further attention to the weak writing.
Dialogue, when intelligible, is hampered by a script that veers between banal platitudes and awkward exposition. Characters speak in declarative clichés, often invoking patriotic slogans devoid of nuance or context. A misquotation of Patton's famous line serves as a particularly grating example-not just historically inaccurate, but emblematic of a broader disregard for textual fidelity and period tone. These script deficiencies rob the performers of any chance to ground their portrayals in believable human stakes.
The performances themselves are uneven. Some actors-particularly those in leading roles-attempt to salvage dignity from the material, with brief glimpses of internal struggle or emotional restraint. Tyrese Gibson and Michael Jai White do show signs of having envisioned more grounded portrayals, but the script consistently undermines them. Others deliver performances better suited to melodrama or parody, possibly due to a lack of directorial control or unclear tonal direction. There is no cohesion in performance style; scenes often feel like isolated rehearsals stitched together in post-production.
Where the film most blatantly falters is in its depiction of military tactics and behavior. Assaults are staged without regard for cover, line of sight, or coordination. Soldiers shout commands with no tactical awareness, flanking maneuvers are nonexistent, and critical concepts like suppressive fire or unit cohesion are ignored entirely. A supposed ambush unfolds with participants casually walking into open fire zones, lobbing grenades at implausible distances. These errors transcend budgetary limitation and signal a fundamental lack of research or consultation with military advisors. Even low-budget productions like Red Tails or Fury (though far larger in scale) demonstrate how accurate consulting can vastly enhance a film's tactical credibility.
While the film aspires to honor the 761st Tank Battalion-an invaluable and long-overlooked part of American military history-it stumbles over its own narrative missteps. The story gestures toward racial dynamics within the military, but does so with such cursory treatment that it feels more like a checkbox than a theme. Character interactions meant to highlight the racism endured by Black soldiers are rendered with such superficiality that their intended poignancy is lost in flat delivery and pedestrian direction.
What is perhaps most disappointing is that there are moments-fleeting, buried moments-where a more capable hand could have coaxed something affecting from this material. A lingering shot on a shell-shocked soldier, a whispered moment of doubt before battle, or a glimmer of camaraderie between tank crew members hint at what might have been achieved. Unfortunately, these moments are drowned out by the surrounding noise-both literal and cinematic.
In the end, this film serves as an unfortunate example of a missed opportunity: a worthy subject treated with insufficient craftsmanship. It attempts to join the lineage of WWII cinema that blends battlefield storytelling with overlooked historical perspectives, but its execution-marked by subpar visuals, disjointed narrative structure, poor technical control, and a lack of historical veracity-fails to meet even the modest standards set by its contemporaries. For those who seek films that evoke the true pathos, complexity, and intensity of the Second World War, this offering is likely to provoke only frustration.
This movie Come Out Fighting is a disgrace to the Black soldiers in which this movie is loosely based! First off this movie suffers from a white savior complex from the White actors listed ahead of the Black actors much like the movie glory! The movie was written and directed by a white Director which by itself is not the main problem with the movie but explains a lot. The 761 Tank battalion also known as the Original Black Panthers of the United States Army was a separate Tank battalion consisting of Black Soldiers. The 761 Tank Battalion had numerous exploits that the director could have used for his movie but chose to dishonor these heroic soldiers with a badly written script. The Black Actors through no fault of their own did the best they could with the weak script given to them. Hollywood deserves to give the Black Soldiers of the 761 Tank battalion a big budget movie so the world can give them the praise they deserved!
The storyline is typical, 'rescue your commanding officer from behind enemy lines'. The acting for the most part was terrible. The use of CGI, special effects were abysmal. And they portrayed the Germans as very inept. If I didn't pay $6 to rent off Fandango I would have turned it off. I suppose the makers of this film rented the vehicles used from collectors or museums, none seemed destroyed during the fight scenes. Just sparks and puffs of smoke when impacted by bazookas or artillery. No field officers could read a map. It was a sadly made movie. I gave it 4 stars only because I like WWII movies.
Did you know
- TriviaIn one of the minefields that is detected there are two types of antipersonnel mines represented - the SMi-35 (S-Mine/Bouncing Betty) and the Glasmine 43, a basically all glass mine that was not readily detectable using an electronic mine detector.
- GoofsDolph Lundgren plays a major, but in every scene he salutes first the non-com and the enlisted men who return the salute to him. In reality, the enlisted men and the officers with a lower rank salute first and they hold the salute until the officer with the higher rank returns the salute.
- Quotes
Lieutenant Robert A. Hayes: A friend of mine once told me the best thing you can do in a war is to not fear. You just got to let the cards fall where they fall.
- Crazy creditsAlmost none-nor little of the designers are 'ACTUALLY' present in this movie.
- SoundtracksBattle Hymth
Performed by Kellan Lutz, Hiram A. Murray, David Clobes, Aaron Courteau, Nate Courteau, Amanda Day, Casey Pearson, Maggie Dickey, Caroline Prun, Emilio Medina, Anthony Rios, Anthony Richards, Chase Otis, Anthony Richardson, Gary David Least, Josh Courteau, Cody Fleary, Steven Luke, Cody Fleury, Rob Stamos, Vicellous Shannon and Andrew Stecker
- How long is Come Out Fighting?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Hymth
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $23,000
- May 22, 2023
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
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