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The 10 best movies and TV shows to watch on July 4th

Every year, there are a few things that remain consistent about July 4th celebrations: there will be fireworks, there will be beer, and there will be some form of cooked animal flesh ripe for consumption. It’s the American way.

Yet the Fourth of July also involves watching movies and TV shows that celebrate the American spirit and identity in a variety of ways. From war epics like Steven Spielberg‘s Saving Private Ryan and Band of Brothers to searing social commentaries like Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing and the show The Americans, these thoughtful movies and TV shows celebrate the Fourth of July by reminding us of our shared values and histories. And yes, there are explosions galore as well.

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Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

Paramount

One of 2022’s best movies, Top Gun: Maverick was nominated for six Oscars, including Best Picture, and was a box office sensation last summer. Already a beloved picture, it’s the perfect way to celebrate July 4th with plenty of patriotism, jets, and heroic rescues to inspire even the most cynical audience members.

Set decades after the original, we find that Pete “Maverick” Mitchell (Tom Cruise) has spent more than 30 years as one of the Navy’s top pilots, intentionally dodging promotions that would ground him. Still seen as an annoyance within the Navy, his superiors bristle when an old friend, Adm. Tom “Iceman” Kazinsky (Val Kilmer). taps Maverick to train a special detachment of elite Top Gun graduates for a mission no living pilot has ever seen, let alone accomplished

Top Gun: Maverick is streaming on Paramount+.

The Right Stuff (1983)

Warner Brothers

An epic production that earned great reviews and eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, The Right Stuff never became the hit that Warner Bros. was hoping for, perhaps due to its almost arthouse sensibility and poetic visuals, which were perhaps a little too poetic for audiences during a very commercial time for movie making. The movie chronicles the early days of the American space program when the Cold War was particularly frigid and the U.S. was devoting untold treasure to competing with the Soviets in developing space and military technology. Well-known actors like Scott Glenn, Ed Harris, Sam Shepard, and Dennis Quaid play the brave test pilots who took the crazy risks that made it all possible. Those that weren’t killed became the Mercury Seven astronauts, the first men in space.

The Right Stuff still features some of the best flight footage ever shot. Top Gun: Maverick recently paid homage to the masterpiece in its opening scene, which echoes the famous sequence in which Chuck Yeager (Shepard) becomes the first person to break the sound barrier (to complete the homage, Ed Harris is even on hand as a Navy admiral). Maverick surely also took inspiration from the movie’s uncomplicated notions of American heroism. As The Hollywood Reporter said at the time, “The Right Stuff emerges as the picture of the year, one that its producers can be proud of, the industry can be proud of, and which Americans can be proud of. Why? Because for once Americans, in their modesty, are shown as heroes, and heroes that we can all identify with.”

You can rent The Right Stuff on digital platforms like Prime Video.

Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Inglourious Basterds Image used with permission by copyright holder

Quentin Tarantino’s fascination with changing history started with Inglourious Basterds, and it may be his very best movie. Following a troop of Jewish soldiers who are tasked with hunting Nazis and collecting their scalps, the movie is remarkably tense and features at least 10 all-time great Tarantino performances.

Every sequence in Basterds is immaculate, but the best may be the prolonged conversation between an undercover British officer and a German officer in an underground bar. It’s tense, thrilling, and hilarious, all at the same time, and a great way to celebrate Independence Day by seeing some Nazis get their just desserts.

Inglourious Basterds is streaming for free on Amazon Freevee.

Saving Private Ryan (1998)

Saving Private Ryan Image used with permission by copyright holder

Nothing can prepare audiences for this film, which is considered one of the best war movies ever made. The opening battle on Omaha Beach alone made Saving Private Ryan a horrifying landmark of cinema, capturing the brutal and disturbing chaos that actual soldiers faced on the shores of Normandy.

This film’s depiction of the war was so realistic that it triggered PTSD in veterans who fought on D-Day. It also inspired other storytellers in how they portrayed war and action in media, ultimately changing how many people perceive armed combat. It’s perhaps the most moving way you can celebrate the Fourth of July, and it’s an experience you won’t likely forget anytime soon.

Saving Private Ryan is now streaming on Paramount+.

The Pacific (2010)

HBO

While it never quite got the attention of its forerunner, Band of Brothers, The Pacific remains one of the most harrowing evocations of war ever put on screen. Band of Brothers was surely great in its own right, but it also benefited from a national wave of nostalgia about World War II, which included patriotic war movies such as Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan and Terrence Malick’s The Thin Red Line (both 1998), along with celebratory books like Tom Brokaw’s The Greatest Generation and Stephen E. Ambrose’s Band of Brothers (upon which the miniseries was based) and Citizen Soldiers. Band of Brothers also debuted two days before 9/11 and it became a rallying point for Americans to come together against a common enemy.

Nine years and two “forever wars” later, the appetite for American military power in the world had diminished considerably, which may explain why The Pacific never quite caught on in the public consciousness. But as a document that visualizes the experience of island hopping conquest and combat for American men fighting the Japanese — as well as a dramatization of how fierce, bloody, and terrible that fighting was — The Pacific is incomparable, and a more riveting experience than the lyrical The Thin Red Line, which covers similar territory. Americans often disagree with the political goals and ambitions of the leaders that send soldiers to fight. But at the end of the day, our countrymen — often conscripted against their will — still bled out on foreign shores for our freedom. The Pacific both honors their experiences and gives them vivid, stunning life.

You can stream The Pacific on HBO Max and rent it on other digital platforms.

Do the Right Thing (1989)

Do The Right Thing Image used with permission by copyright holder

“I have today’s forecast for you … hot!” exclaims the local DJ, Mr. Senor Love Daddy (Samuel L. Jackson), during his morning broadcast. Unfortunately, it’s only going to get hotter, both in terms of temperature and the simmering racial tensions in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. But this episodic narrative chronicling one day in an interracial neighborhood is hardly just suffering and tragedy, even though it ends with one. There is relief too, as kids scamper through the gushing water of a hydrant, neighbors crack open frosty beers on their stoops, and a man rubs ice cubes on the body of his lover.

Spike Lee’s classic is one of the great summer movies, partially because the heat is so palpable. Lee wanted his cinematographer Ernest Dickerson to evoke Lawrence of Arabia, and he more than succeeds, drenching the film in deep oranges and yellows that are a natural match for all the saturated primary colors and neon that characterized late 198os fashions. Do the Right Thing may be famous for its depiction of violence but there is a lot of joy in it as well as reminders of the simple pleasures of a diverse community. It’s a celebration of an America that is made for all of us, no matter where we come from.

You can rent Do the Right Thing on Apple TV and other digital platforms.

The Patriot (2000)

Image used with permission by copyright holder

There’s a surprising dearth of Revolutionary War movies in Hollywood, but Roland Emmerich’s epic, The Patriot, does more than enough to scratch the itch. After earning glory and respect on the battlefield during the French and Indian War, Benjamin Martin (Mel Gibson) has retired to lead a simple life on a South Carolina farm with his family. When talk of revolution reaches Charleston, he votes against getting involved with the Continental Army, only for the war to come to his doorstep nonetheless two years later, sweeping his son Gabriel (The Dark Knight‘s Heath Ledger) into the patriotic fervor.

When Gabriel returns home bloodied after a nearby engagement, the Martins care for both him and wounded British soldiers who wander by looking for help. But British Colonel William Tavington (Jason Isaacs) rewards Martin by arresting Gabriel, executing the remaining wounded Continental soldiers, and murdering Martin’s younger son in cold blood. Fueled by vengeance and bloodlust, Benjamin resumes his mythic mantle, “The Ghost,” as he forms a militia and wages brutal guerrilla warfare against the British.

The Patriot is now streaming on Pluto TV.

The Americans (2013-2018)

F/X

Despite running for six seasons on F/X and earning consistent raves as one of the best shows on television, The Americans was never much of a popular success. Not surprising, given that its spy thrills are more cerebral than visceral — less James Bond and more John le Carré. The shows stars Cocaine Bear‘s Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys as Elizabeth and Phillip Jennings, Soviet agents masquerading as everyday Americans living in a D.C. suburb in the early 1980s (one of the most dangerous eras of the Cold War). The twist is that the couple is so deeply embedded in their covert operation that even their children don’t know that their parents are spies … and killers.

Well, at first anyway. Once their daughter Paige (Holly Taylor) learns the truth, the show develops fascinating new depths. What do you do when your parents are sworn to live and die for Mother Russia and you’re an American teenager through and through? You can’t exactly lean on your friends for support. The show brilliantly uses the premise to both criticize and celebrate American culture and values. Even Phillip eventually admits that living in a big house and driving a hot new Camaro beats the hell out of the lifeless gray gulag behind the Iron Curtain. In other words, while our country is far from perfect, many of us have been luckier than most.

Stream all six seasons of The Americans on Hulu.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014)

Disney

I concede that some people don’t want a history lesson after gorging themselves on grilled pig in the sun all day, and may instead prefer some good old-fashioned rah-rah jingoism and blowing-stuff-up. Fine, but I’m still not recommending Independence Day, which remains a terrible movie. Clear and Present Danger, in which Jack Ryan (Harrison Ford) tells the President he won’t lie to Congress about his secret war (yay for scruples!) is still the best adaptation of Tom Clancy, but even that thriller is too slow for today’s action audiences.

So, then there’s Marvel. The Winter Soldier is the best MCU movie after Thor: Ragnarok and the most thoughtful Marvel exploration of American power and constitutional values. It also contains some of the best action. In what producer Kevin Feige described as a “political thriller,” Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) works to unravel a conspiracy that goes to the highest levels of the government. In a homage to his classic paranoid thrillers of yore (Three Days of the Condor, All the President’s Men, Sneakers, Spy Game) Robert Redford plays Alexander Pierce, a senior S.H.I.E.L.D. official who may not be what he seems. Like all good movies that question the use of American power, Winter Soldier sets up a thematic debate about whether freedom or “security” at the cost of basic rights is better for democracy. And, well, like all good movies that question the use of American power, it comes down firmly on the side of freedom. Happy Fourth, y’all!

You can stream Captain America: The Winter Soldier on Disney+ and rent it on other digital platforms.

Band of Brothers (2001)

Band of Brothers .

What’s more patriotic than an in-depth mini-series about America’s involvement in World War II? Band of Brothers is the first show in HBO’s history that was created by Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg after their collaboration on the 1998 movie Saving Private Ryan.

Erik Jendresen wrote and executive produced the miniseries that dramatized the story of the 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, which is better known as Easy Company. Each episode puts a different character in the spotlight and incorporates real history as Easy Company experiences every stage of war, from the beginning all the way to the end.

Stream Band of Brothers on Max.

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