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red dog 1

(32,544 posts)
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:00 PM Jan 1

What are your five favorite WW2 movies?

1) Saving Private Ryan
2) Defiance
3) Windtalkers
4) Hacksaw Ridge
5) Kelly's Heroes

61 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
What are your five favorite WW2 movies? (Original Post) red dog 1 Jan 1 OP
Casa Blanca ret5hd Jan 1 #1
The Great Escape. Easterncedar Jan 1 #2
Mine too. LoisB Jan 1 #17
Here are mine: Paladin Jan 1 #3
I'll play. justaprogressive Jan 1 #4
don't forget "Das Boot" Shellback Squid Jan 1 #5
Battle of Britain 4K on the way Omaha Steve Jan 1 #25
"Das Boot" was the first one that I thought of. Big expensive production of a great story. FadedMullet Jan 2 #36
pink submarines lapfog_1 Jan 1 #6
;-{) Enemy at the Gates Goonch Jan 1 #7
I was listening to a hockey game on the radio, maybe a couple years back... Harker Jan 1 #16
Here: Chasstev365 Jan 1 #8
Bridge Over the River Kwai. From Here to Eternity. The Great Escape. Stalag 13. Casablanca debm55 Jan 1 #9
Bridge Over the River Kwai, Casablanca, Stalag 17 we have in common, Deb! Coventina Jan 1 #33
Uhhhh...Full Metal Jacket is Vietnam Zorro Jan 1 #10
My mistake, thanks red dog 1 Monday #50
Full Metal Jacket is Vietnam Shambala Jan 1 #11
2 dweller Jan 1 #12
The Great Raid LogDog75 Jan 1 #13
Great movie! red dog 1 Jan 1 #23
To Be or Not to Be both versions mucifer Jan 1 #14
Sound of Music GreatGazoo Jan 1 #15
In no order, and subject to revision... Harker Jan 1 #18
No order: Aristus Jan 1 #19
Add to the others mentioned GP6971 Jan 1 #20
Dirty Dozen is my favorite Skittles Jan 1 #21
Five favorites displacedvermoter Jan 1 #22
Allowing for artistic license, I found The Monuments Men... 3catwoman3 Jan 1 #24
I just re-watched it the other night red dog 1 Jan 2 #47
12 o'clock high Historic NY Jan 1 #26
A lot of great movies mentioned. I would add The Thin Red Line. Borogove Jan 1 #27
My Fav Is Stalag 17. BBbats Jan 1 #28
I would add Mrs. Miniver Lulu KC Jan 1 #29
"Mrs. Miniver" was "worth a hundred battleships." Paladin Jan 2 #40
Casablanca. greatauntoftriplets Jan 1 #30
Let's say the ones i saw with my WWIi vet dad. dem4decades Jan 1 #31
I got an in person autograph from PT 109 Omaha Steve Jan 1 #32
Very cool! displacedvermoter Jan 2 #46
Squadron 303 - of course 303squadron Jan 1 #34
I like all the movies you listed, but Charlie Chapulin Jan 1 #35
Your two suggestions are great. I almost posted "The Thin Blue Line" so thanks for saving me the embarassment. FadedMullet Jan 2 #37
Thanks for the correction, Charlie, I'll fix that right now. red dog 1 Jan 2 #44
Yes and no? Charlie Chapulin Monday #49
Red Dog - Do you believe all the great suggestions that folks are coming up with? FadedMullet Jan 2 #38
Yeah, most of them are movies I've seen & liked. red dog 1 Jan 2 #43
Cross of Iron Sewa Jan 2 #39
That's a great movie! Charlie Chapulin Monday #52
I have always thought PCB66 Jan 2 #41
Hard to say. Most blockbuster WW2 movies are crap, especially if they're American malthaussen Jan 2 #42
12 O'Clock High VGNonly Jan 2 #45
Thinking hard on this one: discntnt_irny_srcsm Jan 4 #48
1) Saving Private Ryan OAITW r.2.0 Monday #51
A Bridge too Far (1977) and Midway (1976) massive casts underpants Monday #53
Midway (1976) cost only $4 million to make but made $100 million; Midway (20019) cost $100 million & made $127 million red dog 1 Monday #54
There was absolutely no reason to remake that movie underpants Monday #56
Well, I want to see it anyway red dog 1 Monday #61
n/t RedArkGuy Monday #55
Murphy's War. I really liked it. One man on lands against a U-boat underpants Monday #57
The Longest Day johnnyfins Monday #58
Enemy at the Gates CanonRay Monday #59
I could add CanonRay Monday #60

Easterncedar

(5,585 posts)
2. The Great Escape.
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:06 PM
Jan 1

I have watched it more times than I can count.

Das Boot I watched only once, but it has stayed with me through the decades ever since.

Paladin

(32,316 posts)
3. Here are mine:
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:08 PM
Jan 1

1. "Twelve O'clock High"

2. "Bridge On The River Kwai"

3. "In Which We Serve"

4. "Schindler's List"

5. "Saving Private Ryan"

justaprogressive

(6,332 posts)
4. I'll play.
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:08 PM
Jan 1

1) Is Paris Burning?
2) The Great Escape
3) 12 o'clock High
4) The Train
5) Run Silent, Run Deep

Shellback Squid

(9,884 posts)
5. don't forget "Das Boot"
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:14 PM
Jan 1

fab film

Dam Busters
Bridge over the River Kwai
Das Boot
Battle of Britain (except the dog)
Great Escape

Omaha Steve

(108,484 posts)
25. Battle of Britain 4K on the way
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 10:49 PM
Jan 1

Dear valued customer,

After our 2024 restoration and 4K release of A Bridge Too Far, we knew that following up with Battle Of Britain was the next logical step! It has been a joy watching this mammoth restoration come together, and we are very thankful for the work from the wonderful team at Fidelity In Motion for making it happen.

Our initial scan discovered a short two-minute section of the film was not present in the negative, instead replaced with white space in the middle of the reel. This, of course, sent us in hunt of the missing footage, to ensure our restoration is complete and uncompromised.

We are happy to say that a superior source for this two-minute section has now been found, and we are thrilled to see this scanned and built into the restoration.

While this means a disappointing further delay, we know that there is no other option for this key release - our proud #500 for Imprint Films.

Our new release date will be 18 February 2026. Your order, including any other titles, will be shipped together on or before this date.

Thank you for your patience and for your ongoing support of Imprint Films.

VIA VISION ENTERTAINMENT & IMPRINT FILMS

Harker

(17,450 posts)
16. I was listening to a hockey game on the radio, maybe a couple years back...
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 06:19 PM
Jan 1

and there were players involved named Zaitsev and Kulikov.

Chasstev365

(7,175 posts)
8. Here:
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:20 PM
Jan 1

The Longest Day
The Battle of Britain
A Bridge Too Far
Sink The Bismarck
Das Boot
Enemy at The Gates
Tora, Tora, Tora
Memphis Bell
Triump of the Spirt (Willem Dafoe Defoe Holocaust film)


Coventina

(29,210 posts)
33. Bridge Over the River Kwai, Casablanca, Stalag 17 we have in common, Deb!
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 11:40 PM
Jan 1

South Pacific

The Monuments Men (I'm an Art Historian, it's not a great movie, but I'm a sucker for the subject matter)

Zorro

(18,350 posts)
10. Uhhhh...Full Metal Jacket is Vietnam
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:29 PM
Jan 1

Here's a few I like:

Fury
The Guns of Navarone
The Hill
Father Goose
Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison

Shambala

(259 posts)
11. Full Metal Jacket is Vietnam
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:36 PM
Jan 1

My choices from the Pacific Theater.

From Here To Eternity
24 Eyes
Grave of the Fireflies
Tora Tora Tora
Unbroken


LogDog75

(1,117 posts)
13. The Great Raid
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 04:55 PM
Jan 1

Based on the true story of Allied Forces attacking a Japanese prisoner of war camp holding over 500 Allied prisoners in occupied Philippines. The surprise raid in January of 1945 inflicted heavy casualties on the Japanese while Allied Forces had minimal losses. The successful raid freed over 500 prisoners.

GreatGazoo

(4,492 posts)
15. Sound of Music
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 06:12 PM
Jan 1

Casablanca
Star Wars: New Hope (WW2 disguised as Sci-fi)
Wizard of Oz (preceded WW2 but uncannily prescient)
Hope and Glory

Harker

(17,450 posts)
18. In no order, and subject to revision...
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 06:25 PM
Jan 1

"Fires on the Plain"

"Das Boot"

"The Burmese Harp"

"The Bridge on the River Kwai"

"The Dirty Dozen"

Ultimately for me, the only good war movie is an anti-war movie.

Aristus

(71,710 posts)
19. No order:
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 06:48 PM
Jan 1

Saving Private Ryan.
Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence.
Casablanca.
The Winter War.
White Tiger.

Skittles

(169,735 posts)
21. Dirty Dozen is my favorite
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 07:07 PM
Jan 1

I don't think I could name five

I love Full Metal Jacket but that ain't no WWII

displacedvermoter

(4,156 posts)
22. Five favorites
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 07:27 PM
Jan 1

Midway (Henry Fonda version)
The Longest Day
Tora, Tora, Tora
Sink the Bismarck
Night of the Generals

red dog 1

(32,544 posts)
47. I just re-watched it the other night
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 01:52 PM
Jan 2

Very good film with a great cast, including George Clooney (as director and actor)

Lulu KC

(8,531 posts)
29. I would add Mrs. Miniver
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 11:10 PM
Jan 1

I need to rewatch it for the zillionth time. I'm a sucker for the part with Dunkirk and what happened while Mr. Miniver was gone.

Paladin

(32,316 posts)
40. "Mrs. Miniver" was "worth a hundred battleships."
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 09:23 AM
Jan 2

That was what Winston Churchill said about the profound effect of "Mrs. Miniver" on the allied war effort. No slap in cinematic history had more influence than the one Mrs. Miniver laid on that arrogant downed Luftwaffe pilot.

dem4decades

(13,734 posts)
31. Let's say the ones i saw with my WWIi vet dad.
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 11:16 PM
Jan 1

Longest Day
Guns of Naverone
PT 109
Dirty Dozen
The Great Escape

Were these the best, no but seeing them with him was special.

303squadron

(775 posts)
34. Squadron 303 - of course
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 11:51 PM
Jan 1

Squadron 303
Zone of Interest
The Imitation Game
Hacksaw Ridge
Churchill

Casablanca is the greatest movie ever made!

Charlie Chapulin

(374 posts)
35. I like all the movies you listed, but
Thu Jan 1, 2026, 11:59 PM
Jan 1

Full Metal Jacket is about Vietnam.

I would add The Thin Red Line to your list. And Letters From Iwo Jima.

FadedMullet

(721 posts)
37. Your two suggestions are great. I almost posted "The Thin Blue Line" so thanks for saving me the embarassment.
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 12:21 AM
Jan 2

red dog 1

(32,544 posts)
44. Thanks for the correction, Charlie, I'll fix that right now.
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 12:04 PM
Jan 2

I just saw The Thin Red Line (again) a couple of weeks ago

Letters from Iwo Jima is a Japanese film directed by Clint Eastwood.
Does it have subtitles?

Charlie Chapulin

(374 posts)
49. Yes and no?
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 10:52 AM
Monday

It is about Iwo Jima. The other side of Flags of Our Fathers. There are a couple scenes from both that overlap. But it is an interesting take.

Charlie Chapulin

(374 posts)
52. That's a great movie!
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 09:03 PM
Monday

Sam Peckinpah. James Coburn and Maximillian Schell.
Thanks for jogging my memory on that one.

malthaussen

(18,426 posts)
42. Hard to say. Most blockbuster WW2 movies are crap, especially if they're American
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 11:20 AM
Jan 2

Last edited Fri Jan 2, 2026, 01:01 PM - Edit history (1)

Possibilities include:

"A Time to Love and a Time to Die," based on Erich Marie Remarque's novel and featuring a cameo by Remarque
"Western Approaches," a British wartime flick that is a virtual forerunner of Reality TV, as it employs no actors, but just working sailors
"The Way Forward," one of David Niven's propaganda pieces
"The North Star" (aka "Armored Attack" ) because of its chequered propaganda history: it is the story of plucky Ukrainian partisans fighting off the Blitzkrieg in 1941, but after 1945 was edited for Cold War purposes to remind the viewer that those plucky Ukrainians were Commies and thus the evil bad guys after all
"Kelly's Heroes," because it is one of the better anti-war films I've seen
"The Fighting Lady," a docudrama about USS Yorktown (CV-10)
"Stalag 17," because it is just a good POW movie without the kind of bullshit in "The Great Escape."
"In Which We Serve," another British wartime flick about the RN. It juxstaposes scenes aboard ship with scenes on the home front, depicting the challenges faced by the sailors and their families
"Mr Roberts," because it features some great acting by Henry Fonda and Jack Lemmon, to say nothing of Jimmy Cagney and William Powell
"Operation Mad Ball," because it stars Jack Lemmon and is actually hilarious
"Red Ball Express," because it deals with a vital part of the war virtually ignored by film

Honorable mention to "Teahouse of the August Moon," because while it deals with the Occupation of Okinawa and not directly with WW2, it features Marlon Brando playing an Okinawan houseboy, and you can't get funnier than that.

Others may come to mind. I tend towards the relatively obscure and older films, made either during or immediately after the war when memory was still fresh. There are a number already recommended that I am not including in this list.

-- Mal

VGNonly

(8,396 posts)
45. 12 O'Clock High
Fri Jan 2, 2026, 01:16 PM
Jan 2

The Bridge on the River Kwai
Come and See
The Pianist
Hope and Glory
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
Das Boot
The Longest Day

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,729 posts)
48. Thinking hard on this one:
Sun Jan 4, 2026, 02:04 PM
Jan 4

1) Defiance
2) Sisu
3) Kelly's Heroes
4) Enemy at the Gates
5) Saving Private Ryan

~no particular order.

OAITW r.2.0

(31,577 posts)
51. 1) Saving Private Ryan
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 08:59 PM
Monday

Especially when the German soldier kills the American soldier. That was the reality of war.

underpants

(195,092 posts)
53. A Bridge too Far (1977) and Midway (1976) massive casts
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 09:17 PM
Monday

I remember laying on our bellies with all my cousins in WV watching big it on HBO. Remarkably West Virginia got cable real early.

We’d keep looking back at Pappaw but he was stoic.
Dinner was going in the kitchen.
Johnnie spent time over a year recuperating at the VA hospital at The Greenbrier. I remember him reading constantly. Full text of the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire.

A Bridge Too Far
It stars an ensemble cast, featuring Dirk Bogarde, James Caan, Michael Caine, Sean Connery, Edward Fox, Elliott Gould, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Hardy Krüger, Laurence Olivier, Ryan O'Neal, Robert Redford, Maximilian Schell and Liv Ullmann.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Bridge_Too_Far_(film)


Midway
the film starred Charlton Heston and Henry Fonda, supported by a large international cast of guest stars including James Coburn, Glenn Ford, Ed Nelson, Hal Holbrook, Robert Webber, Toshiro Mifune, Robert Mitchum, Cliff Robertson, Robert Wagner, Pat Morita, Dabney Coleman, Erik Estrada and Tom Selleck.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midway_(1976_film)

red dog 1

(32,544 posts)
54. Midway (1976) cost only $4 million to make but made $100 million; Midway (20019) cost $100 million & made $127 million
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 09:34 PM
Monday

I saw the original Midway & liked it; but I want to see the 2019 (remake) version, which was directed by "Master of Disaster" Roland Emmerich.
Henry Fonda played Admiral Nimitz in the original British film, and Woody Harrelson played him in the remake.
In the 2019 version, Aaron Eckhart played Lt. Colonel Jimmy Doolittle.
Eckhart was born in Cupertino, CA in 1968....I grew up in Cupertino (about 15 years earlier than Eckhart)

RedArkGuy

(875 posts)
55. n/t
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 09:44 PM
Monday

1) From Here to Eternity
2) The Best Years of Our Lives
3) Schindler's List
4) The Sorrow and the Pity
5) The Zone of Interest

underpants

(195,092 posts)
57. Murphy's War. I really liked it. One man on lands against a U-boat
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 09:55 PM
Monday

Murphy's War is an Eastmancolor 1971 Panavision war film starring Peter O'Toole and Siân Phillips. It was directed by Peter Yates, based on the 1969 novel by Max Catto. The film's cinematographer was Douglas Slocombe.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy%27s_War

CanonRay

(15,972 posts)
59. Enemy at the Gates
Mon Jan 12, 2026, 10:49 PM
Monday

Saving Private Ryan
Letters from Iwo Jima
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
The Best Years of Our Lives

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