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Top 10 War Movies of All Time

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Top 10 War Movies of All Time

Direct Answer

The Best Overall war movie of all time is Saving Private Ryan (1998), directed by Steven Spielberg, whose harrowing 27-minute Omaha Beach opening reset the standard for combat realism and earned five Academy Awards. The Best Value pick is Come and See (1985), a punishing, hypnotic Soviet masterpiece that may be the single most rewatched-and-debated war film among serious viewers and streams free on the Criterion Channel and several ad-supported services.

This list is built for viewers who want the genre's heaviest hitters — films that combine ground-truth combat, moral weight, and craft — spanning World War II, Vietnam, World War I, and modern conflict. Every pick is a real film with a real director, release year, and runtime, verified below.

How We Ranked the Top 10

We weighted each film against what actually makes a war movie endure rather than merely entertain. We drew on IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, Letterboxd, Roger Ebert's reviews, and Academy Award records. The weighting:

A film that nails spectacle but says nothing about war drops fast. The winners pair unforgettable combat with a reason to keep thinking after the credits.

1. Saving Private Ryan (1998) 🏆 BEST OVERALL

Director: Steven Spielberg | Year: 1998 | Runtime: 169 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Paramount+ / rent on Prime Video & Apple TV

Saving Private Ryan follows Captain John Miller (Tom Hanks) leading a squad across Normandy to pull one paratrooper (Matt Damon) out of the line after his brothers are killed in action. The Omaha Beach landing that opens the film remains the benchmark for combat filmmaking — desaturated, deafening, and merciless.

The supporting ensemble includes Tom Sizemore, Barry Pepper, Giovanni Ribisi, and Vin Diesel. It won five Oscars, including Best Director for Spielberg, and holds elite critical scores across Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The complete package — craft, scale, performance, and meaning with no real weak spot.

2. Apocalypse Now (1979)

Director: Francis Ford Coppola | Year: 1979 | Runtime: 147 min (Redux 196 min) | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Apple TV

Francis Ford Coppola's Vietnam fever dream sends Captain Willard (Martin Sheen) upriver to assassinate the renegade Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando). Loosely adapting Conrad's *Heart of Darkness*, it turns the war into a descent into madness, scored by helicopters and Wagner.

Robert Duvall's surf-loving Lt. Colonel Kilgore is one of cinema's great supporting turns. It won the Palme d'Or at Cannes and two Academy Awards, and its troubled production is itself legendary.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The genre's boldest art film — hypnotic, excessive, and impossible to shake.

3. Come and See (1985) 💎 BEST VALUE

Director: Elem Klimov | Year: 1985 | Runtime: 142 min | Rated: Not Rated | Where to watch: Criterion Channel / Max / free on Kanopy

Elem Klimov's Soviet film follows a teenage Belarusian boy, Flyora (Aleksei Kravchenko), who joins the partisans and witnesses a Nazi massacre that ages him before our eyes. Shot with Steadicam and live ammunition, it is the most physically immersive depiction of atrocity ever committed to film.

It tops many critics' lists of the greatest war films and the greatest films of any kind, with a near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes record — and it streams free on multiple services, making it the value champion.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The connoisseur's pick — devastating, peerless, and free to watch.

4. Full Metal Jacket (1987)

Director: Stanley Kubrick | Year: 1987 | Runtime: 116 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Prime Video

Stanley Kubrick splits his Vietnam film in two: a savage Parris Island boot camp ruled by drill instructor R. Lee Ermey, and the urban hell of the Tet Offensive in Huế. Matthew Modine plays Joker, the cynical narrator, with Vincent D'Onofrio unforgettable as the broken recruit Pyle.

Ermey's improvised tirades alone earned a Golden Globe nomination, and the film's dehumanization theme made it a defining Vietnam picture.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A cold, brilliant dissection of how the military builds a soldier — and breaks one.

5. Platoon (1986)

Director: Oliver Stone | Year: 1986 | Runtime: 120 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Max / rent on Apple TV

Oliver Stone drew on his own infantry tour for this ground-level Vietnam drama, following green recruit Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen) torn between two sergeants — the humane Elias (Willem Dafoe) and the brutal Barnes (Tom Berenger). Dafoe's arms-raised death under fire is one of the most reproduced images in film history.

Platoon won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The essential Vietnam infantry film — raw, personal, and Oscar-validated.

6. Schindler's List (1993)

Director: Steven Spielberg | Year: 1993 | Runtime: 195 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Peacock / rent on Apple TV

Spielberg's black-and-white Holocaust epic follows industrialist Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who saves over a thousand Jewish workers from the camps. Ralph Fiennes is terrifying as commandant Amon Göth, and Ben Kingsley grounds the film as accountant Itzhak Stern.

It won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, and is widely cited among the greatest films ever made.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A monumental, essential film — war cinema at its most morally urgent.

7. 1917 (2019)

Director: Sam Mendes | Year: 2019 | Runtime: 119 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Showtime/Paramount+ / rent on Prime Video

Sam Mendes stages this World War I mission as one continuous shot, following two young British soldiers (George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman) racing across no man's land to call off a doomed attack. Roger Deakins' seamless camerawork won the Best Cinematography Oscar, one of three the film took home, and the ticking-clock structure makes it the most propulsive entry here.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The most immersive WWI film — a technical marvel with a beating heart.

8. Das Boot (1981)

Director: Wolfgang Petersen | Year: 1981 | Runtime: 149 min (Director's Cut 209 min) | Rated: R | Where to watch: rent on Apple TV & Prime Video

Wolfgang Petersen's German submarine epic traps the crew of U-96 in the claustrophobic steel hull of a U-boat during the Battle of the Atlantic. Jürgen Prochnow leads as the weary captain. The film's depth-charge sequences — silent, sweating, every rivet groaning — are unbearably tense, and it earned six Academy Award nominations, rare for a foreign-language film of its era.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The definitive submarine war film — pure, sustained dread.

9. The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)

Director: David Lean | Year: 1957 | Runtime: 161 min | Rated: PG | Where to watch: rent on Apple TV & Prime Video

David Lean's epic strands British POWs in a Japanese camp where Colonel Nicholson (Alec Guinness) becomes obsessed with building a railway bridge — to prove his men's discipline — even as Allied commandos plan to blow it up. Guinness won Best Actor in a film that took seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

Its whistled "Colonel Bogey March" is instantly recognizable.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A towering classic — the war film as tragedy of misplaced honor.

10. Dunkirk (2017)

Director: Christopher Nolan | Year: 2017 | Runtime: 106 min | Rated: PG-13 | Where to watch: Max / rent on Apple TV

Christopher Nolan tells the 1940 Dunkirk evacuation across three interlocking timelines — land, sea, and air — with minimal dialogue and maximum tension. Fionn Whitehead, Mark Rylance, Tom Hardy, and Kenneth Branagh populate a film driven by Hans Zimmer's ticking score.

It won three Academy Awards and stands as the most formally daring mainstream war film of recent years.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A lean, experimental survival thriller — Nolan's most disciplined film.

Which One Should You Watch Tonight?

flowchart TD A[Start: What are you in the mood for?] --- B{Want maximum realism?} B -- Yes, ground combat --- C[Saving Private Ryan or Platoon] B -- Not tonight --- D{Have under two hours?} D -- Yes --- E[Dunkirk or 1917] D -- No, got time --- F{Prefer art or epic?} F -- Art-house and heavy --- G[Come and See or Apocalypse Now] F -- Classic epic --- H[Bridge on the River Kwai or Schindler's List] C --- I{Watching with someone new to the genre?} I -- Yes --- J[Start with Dunkirk - accessible and short] I -- No, go deep --- K[Full Metal Jacket or Das Boot]

What Makes a Great War Movie

What matters less than the hype: body count, explosion size, and historical-trivia accuracy. A film can fudge a detail and still tell a truer story than a technically perfect one with nothing to say.

FAQ

What is the best war movie of all time? Saving Private Ryan (1998) earns our top spot for combining the most influential combat sequence ever filmed with Tom Hanks' grounded lead and a genuine moral core. It won five Oscars including Best Director for Steven Spielberg.

What is the best hidden-gem war movie? Come and See (1985) by Elem Klimov is our Best Value pick — a devastating Soviet masterpiece that streams free on Kanopy and rotates onto Max, and is considered by many critics the greatest anti-war film ever made.

What is the best World War I movie? 1917 (2019) by Christopher Nolan's peer Sam Mendes is the most immersive WWI film, staged as one continuous shot and winner of three Academy Awards. All Quiet on the Western Front is a strong alternative.

What is the best Vietnam War movie? Apocalypse Now, Platoon, and Full Metal Jacket form the essential trio. *Platoon* offers the most authentic infantry view, *Apocalypse Now* the boldest artistry, and *Full Metal Jacket* the sharpest satire.

Are these war movies appropriate for kids? Most are R-rated and intensely violent. Dunkirk (PG-13) and The Bridge on the River Kwai (PG) are the most teen-appropriate, though even those depict the realities of war.

Which war movie should I watch first? If you are new to the genre, start with Dunkirk — at 106 minutes it is short, accessible, and PG-13. Then graduate to Saving Private Ryan and the heavier art films like Come and See.

Bottom Line

For all-time greatness, Saving Private Ryan (1998) is our Best Overall war movie — Spielberg's five-Oscar landmark wins on craft, scale, performance, and meaning. Come and See (1985) is our Best Value, a free-to-stream masterpiece that may be the most powerful anti-war film ever made.

If you want a shorter night, top-tier WWI immersion, or a claustrophobic submarine thriller, use the decision tree above to route yourself to Dunkirk, 1917, or Das Boot instead. Watch for honesty and craft over body count, and any pick here will stay with you.

Sources

*War movies review — best war films, rankings, ratings, where to stream, and a review of the top war movie picks.*

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