Real War Movies
A combination of 45 combat videos from Iraq, most gun camera footage from Apache helicopters killing insurgents with 30mm fire and Hellfire missiles. Latest war Movies: Check out the list of all latest war movies released in 2020 along with trailers and reviews. Also find details of theaters in which latest war movies are playing along with.
Other ▼.is software designed to make developing games easy and fun. Resources ▼.
There are a ton of good movies up for awards at the 2020 Oscars. But one film that’s getting a lot of attention this year is 1917.The thrilling World War I account follows two British soldiers, Lance Corporal Blake and Lance Corporal Schofield, who are tasked with the impossible order of running across No Man’s Land to deliver a message to their troops. If one or both of them don’t make it in time, “it will be a massacre” for 1,600 soldiers—one of who is Blake’s brother.The cinematography and acting by Dean-Charles Chapman (Blake), George MacKay (Schofield), Colin Firth, and Benedict Cumberbatch are incredible, but it’s the harrowing story that makes 1917 particularly powerful. Which is probably why it’s nominated for.
Last Updated: April 15thWar films have long-captivated audiences, showcasing tales of both humanity’s cruelty and its nobility. There is no shortage of good military films on, ranging from Hollywood classics to modern, genre-bending pictures. Here are some of the best war movies on Netflix right now to stream.Related: Netflix Outlaw King (2018)Run Time: 121 min IMDb:Chris Pine goes full-on Braveheart in this historical action epic about Scottish nobleman Robert the Bruce, who led a rebellion against England. Pine plays the famous “Outlaw King,” a soft-spoken good guy who thwacks his enemies with his ax and believes in freedom for Scotland above all else. His sidekick, played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson, is a bit more complicated, a nobleman looking to win back his title through bloodshed. There’s plenty of the expected fare here: Beards, Scottish brogue, majestic scenery, men wrestling in the mud, and Chris Pine’s peen. Honestly, if you come for nothing else, come for Chris Pine’s peen.
Netflix The King (2019)Run Time: 140 min IMDb:Timothee Chalamet is everywhere right now so really, are you that surprised he’s playing a boyish, rebellious King Henry V in this big-budget Shakespeare adaptation from Joel Edgerton? Chalamet and his bowl-cut bring Hal to life, the wayward prince forced to assume the throne after his father’s death. Hal has to grow up quickly to lead his men into battle against a bloodthirsty French foe (Robert Pattinson having too much fun with his overdramatic accent) and preserve England’s reign. Ben Mendelsohn and Lily-Rose Depp also star. The Weinstein Company Inglorious Basterds (2009)Run Time: 153 min IMDb:Brad Pitt, Diane Kruger, Christoph Waltz, and Eli Roth star in Quentin Tarantino’s imaginative World War II drama about a group of Jewish U.S. Soldiers with a plan to assassinate Hitler. The film flip-flops between Pitt’s Southern-accented Lt.
Aldo Raine’s mission to scalp Nazis and blow-up an exclusive event for SS officers in Paris and French actress Melanie Laurent, who plays a theater-owner with a devious plan of her own. It’s full of mesmerizing performances and Tarantino’s unique brand of humor – oh, and a lot of Nazi killing. Triple Frontier (2019)Run Time: 125 min IMDb:Netflix’s latest entry into the big-budget action flick universe is this heist thriller starring a who’s-who of Hollywood hunks. Ben Affleck, Oscar Isaac, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund, and Pedro Pascal play a group a former special ops guys who reunite to take down an infamous cartel kingpin and steal his profits in the process. Isaac and Affleck look to be the leaders of the team, two men fed up with risking their necks for a country that doesn’t look after them once they’re back on home soil, and Isaac’s A Most Violent Year director, J.C. Chandor, is at the helm, which means a couple of plot twists and some high-stakes action are in store.
Paramount Defiance (2008)Run Time: 137 min IMDb:Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, and Jamie Bell star in this war drama based on a true story about a trio of brothers who lead a group of Jewish refugees to freedom during World War II. The Bieliski brothers rescue Jews from the Ghetto before they’re sent to concentration camps, fleeing deep into the Belarussian forests as the Nazi’s invade Eastern Europe. Craig’s Tuvia builds a community there, teaching the people how to fight and survive while Shreiber’s Zus joins a group of Russian resistance fighters. Their harrowing journey to freedom doesn’t happen until the end of the film, but it’s worth sticking around to see. Netflix First They Killed My Father (2017)Run Time: 136 min IMDb:Angelina Jolie directs this war epic, based on a true story by author Loung Ung. The film follows Ung as a 5-year-old girl growing up in Cambodia during the country’s civil war.
She’s forced to seek refuge at labor camps set up by communist forces hoping to take control from the Vietnamese, eventually becoming a child soldier and witnessing the horrors of war first hand. It’s by no means a “fun” watch, but it is an excellent piece of filmmaking supported by a gripping story of survival. Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures War Horse (2011)Run Time: 146 min IMDb:Steven Spielberg’s World War I epic gives us a unique spin on the genre. There’s plenty of front-line action here, but it’s filtered through the lens of a young boy named Albert (Jeremy Irvine) and his connection to his beloved horse.
When the animal is sold to the cavalry, Albert enlists and leaves his small English village to track down his best friend. Tom Hiddleston and David Thewlis also star as Spielberg uses sweeping shots of tattered battlefields to give us a birds-eye-view of the devastation war can cause.