Doss looking over a ledge and looking dirty in Hacksaw RidgeImage via Lionsgate
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Luc Haasbroek
Published 36 minutes ago
Luc Haasbroek is a writer and videographer from Durban, South Africa. He has been writing professionally about pop culture for eight years. Luc's areas of interest are broad: he's just as passionate about psychology and history as he is about movies and TV. He's especially drawn to the places where these topics overlap.
Luc is also an avid producer of video essays and looks forward to expanding his writing career. When not writing, he can be found hiking, playing Dungeons & Dragons, hanging out with his cats, and doing deep dives on whatever topic happens to have captured his interest that week.
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War movies rank among cinema's most enduring genres, dating back to Hollywood's earliest days and still bringing large audiences to the cineplex today. That said, war films have evolved dramatically over the decades. Once about glory and victory, they now tend to be more blunt, even traumatic, usually trying to convey war's costs.
The last decade and a half has been solid for the genre, producing more than a few modern classics. The titles below span continents and centuries, from the trenches of Europe to the deserts of Afghanistan, but all feature believable characters and kinetic filmmaking.
10 ‘Fury’ (2014)
Brad Pitt as Wardaddy in 'Fury' (2014).Image via Sony Pictures Releasing
"Ideals are peaceful. History is violent." Fury is a grimy, claustrophobic portrait of warfare in its final days. Set in Nazi Germany in 1945, the story revolves around a battle-hardened tank crew led by Don "Wardaddy" Collier (Brad Pitt) as they grind their way through the crumbling Third Reich. The tank, nicknamed Fury, is their best weapon, but it's also a kind of coffin, a steel tomb rolling through hell.
While the movie falls a little short of its ambition, it stands out from most entries in the genre thanks to its focus on the characters' psychology. They feel like real people trapped by duty and brutal circumstances. Pitt’s performance is chillingly controlled, while Logan Lerman’s wide-eyed rookie offers a devastating contrast. The direction is fittingly physical and raw, leaning into the mud, noise, and claustrophobic terror. This isn't a movie about glory and heroics. Just survival at the edge of morality.
9 ‘Hacksaw Ridge’ (2016)
A bruised Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield) on the battlefield in 'Hacksaw Ridge.'Image via Lionsgate Films
"Please, Lord, help me get one more. Help me get one more." With Hacksaw Ridge, Mel Gibson returned to filmmaking with his trademark intensity. The story of real-life combat medic Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield) is one of the most astonishing true tales in military history. A conscientious objector who refused to carry a weapon, Doss nonetheless saved seventy-five men during the Battle of Okinawa. The first half builds Doss’s quiet conviction, exploring his character and beliefs; the second half descends into visceral chaos, with some of the most brutal battle sequences ever filmed.
Garfield gives a luminous performance in the part. He's likable and compelling, nicely capturing the man's unusual blend of innocence and unyielding faith. In a genre often defined by cynicism, Hacksaw Ridge stands apart as a war movie about belief (even if some viewers might find it a little too earnest). Here, compassion is strong enough to withstand the inferno.
8 ‘Beasts of No Nation’ (2015)
The Commandant talks to a child soldier while insurgents gather around themImage via Netflix
"I saw terrible things… and I did terrible things." Cary Joji Fukunaga’s Beasts of No Nation strips war of politics and patriotism, revealing it instead as pure devastation. Set in an unnamed African nation, it follows a young boy, Agu (Abraham Attah), who is forced to become a child soldier under the command of a charismatic warlord (Idris Elba). Elba is mesmerizing in the part, a father figure and a monster all at once. The result is a harrowing story in the tradition of Come and See, a study of innocence lost.
Beasts of No Nation is not your standard movie about warring countries or governments. Instead, it's about the collapse of childhood, the corrosion of identity, and the moral cost of survival in such a 'dog-eat-dog' world. Every moment feels lived, every atrocity too real. Fukunaga’s direction melds beauty with brutality, a tricky balance to strike. The jungle glows with color even as it becomes a stage for madness.
7 ‘Lone Survivor’ (2013)
Image via Universal Pictures
"I can fight. I’m good to go." Lone Survivor is brutal, exhausting, and deeply human. Based on the true story of Operation Red Wings, it centers on four Navy SEALs ambushed by Taliban fighters in the mountains of Afghanistan. Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch, Ben Foster, and Emile Hirsch deliver raw, physical performances that make you feel every gasp for breath and bone-shattering fall. The movie's main strength is its realism. It really immerses you in the combat. Peter Berg’s direction is relentless, effectively capturing the chaos of battle.
While not groundbreaking or hugely ambitious, Lone Survivor deserves props for being a solid, well-crafted war movie whose reach never exceeds its grasp. It's also got a lot of empathy to it, with a lot to say about the bonds that form in the face of annihilation. The ending, grounded in unexpected compassion, reframes the story not as tragedy but as a testament to endurance and, above all, brotherhood.
6 ‘American Sniper’ (2014)
Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle in military gear taking aim in American Sniper
Image via Warner Bros.
"I’m willing to meet my Creator and answer for every shot that I took." Bradley Cooper, nearly unrecognizable as Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle, leads this one as a man torn between heroism and trauma. The movie's war sequences are taut and visceral, but it’s the quiet domestic moments that linger, the disconnect between battlefield and home, purpose and peace. Rather than being a myth or a symbol, Clint Eastwood portrays Kyle as just a human being struggling with faith, obsession, and guilt.
Cooper’s performance is fittingly understated, simply studying the character rather than glorifying or condemning him. He rightly received an Oscar nod for his efforts. The final moments, culminating in Kyle’s death at home, drive home the central tragedy: the war may end, but often the soldier’s battle does not. It’s about the cost of being the best, and what's left when the mission's over. A haunting real-world portrait of war's toll.
5 ‘All Quiet on the Western Front’ (2022)
Felix Kammerer as Paul in All Quiet On The Western FrontImage via Netflix
"I will fight until the last man standing." Reimagining a classic is always a daunting task, but Edward Berger did a fine job with his take on All Quiet on the Western Front. This adaptation reimagines Erich Maria Remarque’s anti-war classic for a new century. Told from the German perspective, it follows young soldier Paul Bäumer (Felix Kammerer) as he’s devoured by the machine of World War I. Through him, the movie truly conveys the horror of that war. The imagery is horrifying, all mud, blood, and fire.
Berger’s camera lingers on the inhumanity of mechanized warfare, on faces frozen in fear and landscapes reduced to ruin. The score, with its industrial dread, feels like the sound of civilization collapsing. In the eye of the storm, Kammerer gives a heartbreaking performance as Paul. He becomes a stand-in for a whole generation, for countless young men consumed by ideology and sold out by an uncaring system.
4 ‘Allied’ (2016)
Max and Marianne, played by actors Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard, stand together smiling down at someone in Allied.Image via Paramount Pictures
"I love you. And I will love you until I die." Brad Pitt at it again. He clearly loves World War II. Here, he stars opposite Marion Cotillard as intelligence officers whose love affair unfolds against a backdrop of schemes and spycraft. Their entwined story is part wartime thriller, part doomed romance, paying homage to the classic Hollywood spy dramas of an earlier era. When suspicion creeps in (that one of them might be a German spy), the film transforms from a conventional espionage tale to a full-blown tragedy.
The movie was directed by Robert Zemeckis, who ensures that the plot moves briskly and every shot looks great. Beneath the polished surfaces, Allied explores the psychological strain of living behind masks, of loving someone whose truth might destroy you. These are complex, three-dimensional protagonists, and the stars rise to the challenge. Cotillard’s performance is layered with mystery and longing, while Pitt's quiet anguish keeps the movie grounded.
3 ‘Darkest Hour’ (2017)
Gary Oldman addresses the nation as Winston Churchill in 'Darkest Hour'Image via Focus Features
"We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds… we shall never surrender." Crackpot World War II revisionism appears to be on the rise online, and Darkest Hour is a fantastic rebuke to them. An Oscar-winning Gary Oldman, buried beneath prosthetics yet fully alive inside them, gives one of the most commanding performances of his career as Winston Churchill in Britain’s darkest days of the war. The film charts the days leading up to Dunkirk, when Churchill must choose between negotiation and defiance.
Oldman and director Joe Wright humanize the famous Prime Minister, reminding us that, beneath the wit and bombast, he was just a person, and he wrestled with his own doubts. Churchill faced a potential leadership challenge within his own party from those pressuring him to make a deal with Hitler. He had to find a way to silence them using only his own courage and soaring oratory. The result is a portrait not of greatness achieved easily, but of greatness wrestled from fear.
2 ‘1917’ (2019)
Soldiers running away from explosions on the battlefield in 1917.Image via Universal Pictures
"Hope is a dangerous thing." 1917 is both a technical miracle and an emotional gut punch. Designed to look like a single continuous shot, it follows two young British soldiers (played by George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapma) on a mission to deliver a message that could save hundreds of lives. The camera never blinks, trapping us in real time within the nightmare of World War I. Sam Mendes and cinematographer Roger Deakins shoot the battlefields and trenches in a fluid, immersive style, one that manages to be beautiful and frightening at the same time.
While the tension is relentless, what really lingers is the humanity: a glance, a touch, a song amid the ruins. 1917 isn’t about heroics; it’s about persistence, the sheer will to keep moving through the impossible. By the end, the journey feels less like a mission accomplished and more like a prayer answered. A moving tribute to the men who lost their lives in this brutal, shocking conflict.
1 ‘Dunkirk’ (2017)
Three soldiers running in the water in Dunkirk.Image via Warner Bros. Pictures
"Survival is not fair." Dunkirk is the finest war movie of the last 15 years, and it's not close. Here, Christopher Nolan constructs a masterpiece of pure sensation. Dispensing with backstory and exposition, he gives us a symphony of survival told across three timelines and elements (land, sea, and air), all converging in a moment of desperate grace. Nolan’s use of IMAX photography and Hans Zimmer’s ticking, nerve-shredding score combine to near-unbearable tension.
The cast, including Fionn Whitehead, Tom Hardy, and Mark Rylance, serve as fragments of a collective experience rather than traditional characters. The miracle at Dunkirk wasn't the work of any single hero but scores of them, each doing their part. There are no villains, no speeches, no catharsis; only chaos and courage. In the end, when the soldiers finally make it home, the relief feels fragile and fleeting, but earned. Few war movies have ever felt so immediate, or so transcendent.
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