The best war movies streaming on Amazon Prime
From “Apocalypto” to “Zulu,” these epics are worth a few hours of your time.
The best war movies streaming on Amazon Prime
From "Apocalypto" to "Zulu," these epics are worth a few hours of your time.
By Jordan Hoffman
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Jordan Hoffman
Jordan Hoffman is a writer at **, mostly covering nostalgia. He has been writing about entertainment since 2007.
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April 18, 2026 12:00 p.m. ET
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Adrien Brody in 'The Pianist,' Tony Leung in 'Red Cliff,' Burt Lancaster in 'The Train'. Credit:
Tubi; Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection; Tubi
The meaning and purpose of war is a subject that has puzzled thinkers from Sun Tzu and Niccolò Machiavelli to Count Leo Tolstoy — and, most toe-tappingly, Edwin Starr. We’re not here to dictate opinions or philosophical ethics on the matter, but we *can* make suggestions for those wondering about the best war movies currently streaming on Amazon Prime.
Just a click away are a few hand-picked choices, each of which balances bravery and heroism with an unflinching gaze at man’s inhumanity to man.
This isn’t exactly the most *upbeat *collection of motion pictures out there, but retelling violent tales is one of the human race’s earliest activities, an act that often transforms reporting into art. (Those cave paintings of rampaging mastodons are just prequels to what’s in cinemas today.) So damn the torpedoes, and into the breach!
Apocalypto (2006)
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Raoul Trujillo in 'Apocalypto'.
Thanks to alphabetical order, we kick off with a brutal investigation of violence from one of Hollywood’s more controversial directors, Mel Gibson. *Apocalypto *was Gibson's follow-up to international megahit *The Passion of the Christ *(2004), and depicts early 16th century warfare in the Yucatán peninsula during the waning days of Mayan hegemony.
Rudy Youngblood stars as Jaguar Paw, a tribesman in a rainforest community who is captured and brought to a Mayan stronghold to be a human sacrifice. Various gruesome adventures and a thrilling, extended chase/hunt sequence unfold, all leading to an ending that ought not be a surprise for people familiar versed in Latin American history.
Hostiles (2017)
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Christian Bale in 'Hostiles'. Lorey Sebastian, Le Grisbi Productions/Waypoint Entertainment
Scott Cooper’s fatalistic Western stars Christian Bale as an Army veteran tasked with “escorting” a Cheyenne chief (Wes Studi), a former enemy from the Great Sioux War of 1876, from New Mexico territory to Montana.
Their journey runs afoul of a band of Comanche warriors, exposing the death throes of once-vibrant indigenous cultures overwhelmed by westward American expansion. This movie is hardly a laugh riot, but there are moments of grace found among individuals who find a connection outside of wider and seemingly unstoppable conflicts.
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The Pianist (2002)
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Adrien Brody in his first Oscar-winning performance, 'The Pianist'.
Roman Polanski is a repulsive individual who is, unfortunately, a tremendously talented filmmaker. *The Pianist *is just one of the films nurtured by his own cursed biography as a witness to, and survivor of, the Holocaust in his native Poland.
Adrien Brody, who won the Oscar for his lead performance, is just one of many proverbial frogs in the boiling pot that is Warsaw during Nazi occupation. We see the world grow increasingly unrecognizable and violent through his eyes, until he is hidden in an apartment watching the Ghetto Uprising from a window as if it were a movie screen.
Red Cliff (2008)
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Tony Leung in the twilight of the Han Dynasty in 'Red Cliff'.
John Woo’s dazzling epic *Red Cliff *hurls audiences into the middle of the dynasty-shifting battles of early third century China with electric ferocity and grand style. This was Woo’s return to Chinese filmmaking after a long sojourn in Hollywood, and a remarkable return to form.
There are different cuts of the film out there, but we absolutely recommend the full 288-minute soak (it was released as two separate films in China), which mixes *Game of Thrones*-like intrigue with highly choreographed action sequences.
Just how historically accurate any of this is… well that’s something scholars can argue about while you're hootin’ and hollerin’ over the depiction of “tortoise formation.”
The Train (1964)
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Burt Lancaster doing the lord's work (thwarting Nazis) in 'The Train'.
Armchair historians often wonder how things would have turned out if Adolf Hitler was accepted at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. In any case, he and many other high-ranking Nazis had a weird obsession with art.
John Frankenheimer’s *The Train*, based on a true story, shows how the “national treasures” of France were saved by valiant patriots. While a movie about moving a bunch of Manets around on rolling stock may not seem action-packed, when it’s Burt Lancaster going up against Paul Scofield (as a baddie called “Franz von Waldheim,” who they may as well have called “Nazi McGerman”) you’ll find yourself cheering along.
Zulu (1964)
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Ivor Emmanuel and Stanley Baker during the Battle of Rorke's Drift in 'Zulu'.
Controversial upon its release and still so today, this Michael Caine-led war film is defended by many for its location photography and a “somewhat progressive for its time” depiction of late 19th century African culture.
The movie focuses on the Battle of Rorke’s Drift during the Anglo-Zulu war, a showdown between a predominantly Welsh regiment tasked with maintaining a British stronghold in modern day South Africa against incredible odds.
What was stunning at the time of the movie’s release was how the warriors on either side of the conflict show a respect for one another despite more powerful forces sending them into combat.
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