The 50 greatest war films of all time
50. INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS (2009)
Quentin Tarantino makes the WWII film his own: violent, verbose and endlessly entertaining. There’s plenty of bloodshed, but this gloriously demented pulp fiction is more about the destructive power of words. In QT’s universe, the right turn of phrase—especially when tripping from the malevolently multilingual tongue of Nazi commandant Hans Landa—can kill both body and spirit.—KU
49. RIDE WITH THE DEVIL (1999)
You wouldn’t expect anything less complex from director Ang Lee (The Ice Storm, Brokeback Mountain), whose oblique take on the Civil War—specifically guerrilla fighting in Missouri—thrilled critics and mystified crowds. A pre-Spidey Tobey Maguire anchors the movie in sympathy, while Jeffrey Wright electrifies as a liberated slave.—JR
48. TWELVE O’CLOCK HIGH (1949)
Gregory Peck had already arrived as a magnetic onscreen presence by the time this minutely detailed WWII Air Force drama gave him his most ambitious role to date, as a stern disciplinarian whose leadership transforms a bomber unit into a well-oiled machine. The ultimate praise: The movie was required viewing at military-service academies for decades—JR
47. HELL IN THE PACIFIC (1968)
Two soldiers—one American, the other Japanese—are marooned on an uninhabited island in the Pacific Ocean during the height of WWII and must work together to survive. Director John Boorman crafts a potent existential parable out of their plight (Jean-Paul Sartre would be proud) while also allowing the great Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune to rage with crowd-pleasing gusto.—KU
46. IN WHICH WE SERVE (1942)
Let’s give it up for wit-of-all-trades Noël Coward, who wrote, codirected (with David Lean), starred in and even composed the score for this veddy British WWII naval tale, about a shipwrecked crew and their valiant efforts to carry on with stiff upper lips.—JR
45. SANDS OF IWO JIMA (1949)
John Wayne was born to the swagger of a certain kind of war film, neither especially negative nor devoid of a soldier’s vulnerability. This celebratory recreation of the title’s WWII Allied triumph accommodates plenty of heart-thumping jingoism but also the fatalism of sniper fire.—JR
44. BALLAD OF A SOLDIER (1959)
A delicate Russian-made tribute to that nation’s staggering sacrifice during WWII, Grigori Chukhrai’s drama concerns a teenage infantryman’s journey back home for a six-day break, a reward for taking out two German tanks. He marvels at the rape of the land—and also connects with a beautiful girl. It’s a film about the value of the fight.—JR
43. THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE (1951)
The verdict is still out what could have been the full edit of this Civil War picture, which was drastically cut to under 70 minutes after poor test screenings. Given the talent of the director—John Huston, whose next film was The African Queen—we’re inclined to believe he was onto something special with Stephen Crane’s classic. Enough of Huston’s noirish vision remains.—JR
42. THE GREAT ESCAPE (1963)
Made at the peak of Hollywood’s studio system and a flawless example of robust mainstream entertainment, John Sturgess’s protoblockbuster turned Steve McQueen into a marquee idol—he gobbles up the lens even before he jumps the barbed-wire fence of his WWII POW camp on a motorcycle. Amazingly, the story is a real-life one.—JR
41. THE SUN (2005)
In the final days of WWII, twitchy Japanese Emperor Hirohito (Issei Ogata in a spectacularly oddball performance) holes himself up in an underground bunker while Douglas MacArthur and his troops inch closer to the palace. Russian director Alexander Sokurov’s haunting character study is a dreamy and disquieting look at an enigmatic man sliding from power.—KU




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