
The 14 best Fourth of July movies to watch on Independence Day – and where to stream them
The question is, what qualifies as an ideal Fourth of July movie? Does it need to be expressly patriotic? Must it actually take place on the holiday in question? Can it express more complicated feelings about this place 329 million of us call home? In truth, all apply. To give you a better idea of what to watch this Independence Day, here are the best picks to throw on this July 4.
Independence Day (1996)
Director: Roland Emmerich
Cast: Will Smith, Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum
Technically, it's about mankind declaring its independence from the aliens that have come to subjugate us, but it's the Americans that lead the way. Bill Pullman gives a more inspirational speech than basically any real president has managed since. And if Will Smith punching an alien right in its ugly mug doesn't make your heart swell with pride, go ahead and deport yourself to Mars now.
Jaws (1975)
Director: Steven Spielberg
Cast: Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss
Sure, its main comment on America is that capitalism will kill you, but c'mon – it's Jaws, y'all. It's a movie about a big ass shark eating visitors to a coastal tourist town on Fourth of July weekend. If you don't watch it around this time every year, do you even count as a citizen? Plus, it's the 50th anniversary, so there's that too.
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)
Director: Michael Curtiz
Cast: James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston
The country was still reeling from Pearl Harbor when this look at the life of George M. Cohan — arguably the most patriotic songwriter ever — provided the salve our nation needed. It's an aggressive, toe-tapping ode to the red, white and blue that has everything: James Cagney in full-blown hoofer mode, pro-USA sentiment as thick as hasty pudding, and musical numbers less subtle than a ticker-tape parade led by Uncle Sam.
Rocky (1976)
Director: John G Avildsen
Cast: Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Carl Weathers
Historically, baseball is the country's No. 1 pastime, but watching two guys punch themselves unconscious is a close second. Sure, the fourth Rocky movie is where Sylvester Stallone single-handedly defeats communism, but the original is the most American story, that of a working-class palooka who gets knocked down but refuses to stay there.
Top Gun: Maverick (2021)
Director: Joseph Kosinski
Cast: Tom Cruise, Miles Teller, Glenn Powell
It's American military propaganda that'll have even pinko commie leftists hooting and hollering! For real, though, the sequel to the jet-flying, sexy-volleyball-playing 1986 original is one of the best blockbusters Hollywood has produced in ages, and its zoomtastic flight sequences are more exhilarating than any fireworks display.
A League of Their Own (1992)
Director: Penny Marshall
Cast: Tom Hanks, Geena Davis, Madonna
Baseball is America's pastime, but the best movie about the country's foundational sport doesn't involve Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle or Major League Baseball at all. Instead, this Penny Marshall-directed classic takes inspiration from the 1943 Rockford Peaches of the All-American Girls Professional League – a real team of all-women sluggers that briefly became a sensation during World War II. It's more than a bit sentimental, but its well-studied nostalgia feels like slipping into a bath full of warm apple pie.
Lincoln (2012)
Director: Steven Spielberg
Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, David Strathairn,
He wasn't a Founding Father, but the GOAT president doesn't need any singing or rapping to convince folks to sit down and watch a two and a half hour movie about him - especially when he's played by the GOAT actor (Daniel Day-Lewis), with the GOAT director at the helm (Steven Spielberg) and a screenplay from maybe the GOAT modern playwright (Tony Kushner).
The Sandlot (1993)
Director: David Mickey Evans
Cast: Tom Guiry, Mike Vitar, Patrick Renna
In the way Stranger Things successfully made zoomers nostalgic for the '80s, this cult favorite comedy about a group of baseball-obsessed preteens in the 1960s made '90s kids pine for an era they never actually experienced. The scene where the gang play a night game on July 4, illuminated by neighborhood fireworks, is some of the purest Americana ever caught on film.
Team America: World Police (2004)
Director: Trey Parker
Voice cast: Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Kristen Miller
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a puppet-based send-up of Bush-era imperialism, and all its flag-waving, mortar-exploding, projectile-vomiting patriotism is delivered with heavy amounts of sarcasm. But after slamming a case of White Claws and enough ribs to tranquilise a giant sloth, you won't know the difference.
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)
Director: Frank Capra
Cast: James Stewart, Jean Arthur, Claude Rains
As the years go on, Frank Capra's dramedy about a decent man elected to the US Senate trying to do good by his constituents seems more and more like a fantasy from a bygone era. But if you want to stoke the dying embers of your belief in a functioning government where politicians stand up to corruption, there's no better film.
Born on the Fourth of July (1989)
Director: Oliver Stone
Cast: Tom Cruise, Kyra Sedgwick, Raymond J Barry
While the title alone makes it a no-brainer, this Oliver Stone-directed antiwar flick is like 'Born in the USA' - it's only 'patriotic' if you disregard literally everything else about it. In fact, it tells a similar story to the Springsteen song: a soldier (Tom Cruise) returns home from Vietnam, now paralyzed and disillusioned by his country and the war he was sent to fight. But hey, dissent is as American as apple pie and cheap fireworks. At least, it used to be.
Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
Director: Joe Johnston
Cast: Chris Evans, Tommy Lee Jones, Hugo Weaving
The whole Captain America series will have flags flying at full mast, but the original's well-executed evocation of the 1940s remains an MCU standout, as does Chris Evans's star-making turn as puny soldier turned supercharged mega-patriot Steve Rogers.
Air Force One (1997)
Director: Wolfgang Petersen
Cast: Harrison Ford, Gary Oldman, Glenn Close
It's been a long while since Americans could feel truly proud of our Commander-in-Chief, and it's really no wonder, given that, back in the late '90s, President Harrison Ford beat the shit out of a bunch of terrorists who attempted to hijack his airplane. How could anyone possibly hope to live up to those standards?
National Treasure (2004)
Director: Jon Turteltaub
Cast: Nicolas Cage, Harvey Keitel, Jon Voight
Nicolas Cage is going to steal the Declaration of Independence. Okay, so the first in this sub-Indiana Jones adventure series – about a historian seeking a hidden stash of gold that once belonged to the Founding Fathers – only really uses American history as a McGuffin. But Cage is the acting equivalent of a Roman candle, and watching him go off will have you saluting your flat screen.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
24 minutes ago
- BBC News
Jimmy Swaggart, ogbonge televangelist wey die at di age of 90 bin make news for im following and scandal
US televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, don die at di age of 90 years. Di family say di preacher bin dey intensive care for hospital afta im bin suffer heart attack for im house for Baton Rouge on 15 June. "For ova seven decades, Brother Swaggart bin pour out im life to preach di gospel, sing songs of faith, and point millions to di saving power of Jesus Christ and di Baptism of di Holy Spirit," im church tok for inside statement as dem confam im death. Dis na tins you need to know about di Ogbonge American evangelist. Life and times of Jimmy Swaggart Oga Swaggart bin start to broadcast sermons in di 1960s and become a pioneer of televangelism, wey extend im his success into a media empire until one sex scandal ssata eviritin. For im peak in di 1980s, Oga Swaggart broadcast bin dey reach millions of viewers for more dan 100 kontris and e bring in $140 million a year, along wit sales of gospel albums and branded items wey range from bible study manuals to remake of Jesus crown of thorns. Im bin describe imself as an "old-fashioned, Holy Ghost-filled, shouting, weeping, soul-winning, Gospel-preaching preacher" to di media. Im Family Worship Center for Baton Rouge dey sit 7,000 pipo, wia im dey conduct im intense services. Worshipers often dey cry and sometimes speak in tongues - na sign of deep devotion for American Pentecostal faith wey Oga Swaggart bin dey practice. Im bin dey like to preach about di eternal struggle between good and evil, wey bin include sermons against temptations of di flesh. For 1988, wen im been dey reign well-well, photographers bin snap oga Swaggart for New Orleans wit a sex worker. Di fallout increase afta im bin address di incident wit im congregation. For one televised appearance, im bin beg for forgiveness for im sins as tears roll down for im face. "To di hundreds of millions wey I don stand bifor … I don sin against una, and I dey beg una to forgive me," im tok. "I don sin against you, my Lord." Oga Swaggart bifor dis mata bin dey highly critical of oda high-profile preachers, especially those wey get similar scandals. Im bin also make controversial comments about Catholicism and Judaism, e call dem illegitimate faiths. Tori be say dem catch again wit a sex worker again three years later, dis time na for California. Im bin no too apologise like im bin do for di first one, "di Lord bin tell me say na none of una business," na so im tok for one broadcast. Afta di New Orleans scandal, dem comot Oga Swaggart from di ultra-conservative Assemblies of God, one association of Pentecostal churches. Religious network drop im programs and di size of im ministry, wey once be a major employer for Louisiana, shrink. Legal troubles wey get to do wit tax payments further drain im resources.


Times
24 minutes ago
- Times
Aerial Photographer of the Year: the 2025 winners
The inaugural Aerial Photographer of the Year awards attracted 1,549 entries from around the globe, the photographers using drones, aircraft, helicopters and even balloons. The judging panel selected the top 101 images for publication and awarded the ultimate accolade to Joanna Steidle of the United States. Daniel Viñé Garcia, from Spain, and David Swindler, another American, took second and third place respectively in the photographer of the year category. Australia's Ignacio Palacios won photograph of the year, second and third place going to Talor Stone and Thomas Vijayan respectively. Awards for special categories spanning black and white, abstract, drone and chairman's choice were also handed out. Pal Hermansen, who won the special award in the drone category, captured a snow blizzard by a lake's edge in Norway COVER IMAGES Colin Leonhardt's photo of an alumina mine tailings dam, a waste pond for bauxite ore extraction, earned the special award in the abstract category COVER IMAGES Two seals lounging on a drifting slab of ice in the Jokulsarlon glacial lagoon, southern Iceland, helped Fabien Guittard seal the win in the chairman's choice category COVER IMAGES A lava river flows out of the Litli-Hrutur volcano, Iceland, hours after its 2023 eruption, in this panoramic shot by Mike Mezeul SWNS Ignacio Palacios's photo of the Cono de Arita in the middle of the Arizaro salt flats in Argentina earned him the photograph of the year award COVER IMAGES A polar bear in Svalbard, the Norwegian archipelago, after eating a walrus carcass, captured by Pal Hermansen, the winner of the special award in the drone category COVER IMAGES The alumina mine near Collie in Western Australia, photographed by Colin Leonhardt COVER IMAGES The Brasvellbreen glacier, part of the Austfonna Ice Cap in Svalbard, earned Thomas Vijayan third place in the photograph of the year category and reminded the public of the reality of climate change COVER IMAGES David Swindler captured a swarm of flamingos surrounding a small group of pelicans, as he won third place in the photographer of the year contest COVER IMAGES Glacial calving, the process where chunks of ice break off from a glacier, reveals an organic pattern in the waters of Northeast Greenland National Park in this photograph by Talor Stone COVER IMAGES Daniel Viñé Garcia caught the moment lava from Iceland's Fagradalsfjall volcano formed a pattern resembling a skull COVER IMAGES Joanna Steidle, the overall winner, also took a photograph of a fever of cownose rays approaching a school of menhaden off the coast of Southampton, New York COVER IMAGES David Swindler's photo of a desert playa, among the flattest of landforms, which can periodically get covered by water — leaving salt, sand and mud after it evaporates COVER IMAGES A dormant volcano in the high-altitude Puna plateau of Argentina reveals intricate erosion patterns sculpted by wind and time in a photo by Daniel Viñé Garcia COVER IMAGES Barbara Brown, the winner of the special award in the black and white category, photographed a salt lake in the Goldfields region of Western Australia COVER IMAGES Joanna Steidle's shot of a humpback whale diving back under the surface of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Southampton COVER IMAGES


Scotsman
28 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Love Island narrator apologises for joke on USA version
Love Island narrator Iain Stirling has apologises to fans of the USA version 💕🌴 Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Love Island narrator Iain Stirling has got into hot water with fans of USA version. The comedian joked about a dumped islander returning - but it didn't go well. 'I'll be honest, it was, perhaps, a misjudgement by me'. Love Island wouldn't be the same without the wry commentary from Iain Stirling. In fact he is such a fixture that he is also pulling double duty this summer - and offering his witty narration on the American version. ITV2's iconic reality show has been such a hit since it debuted a decade ago that it has unsurprisingly led to plenty of spin-offs. It includes Love Island USA, which is now in its seventh season. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Iain Stirling took over narration duties for the show back in its fourth series - and has been a fan favourite. However one of his recent jokes did not go down well and he has had to apologise. But what exactly happened? Here's all you need to know: Love Island USA narrator apologises to fans over joke Love Island narrator (R) Iain Stirling |for MTV The action may have kicked-off in the Mallorca villa for the original ITV2 version of the show - but the American spin-off is also taking place at the same time. The Peacock series started in June and is continuing right now. Unlike the British version, it is filmed in Fiji instead of on a Spanish island. But it does have a familiar voice in the form of narrator Iain Stirling. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He is equally beloved for his witty comments and jokes about the islanders, but he ruffled feathers of fans with a fake-out recently. Stirling joked that beloved-but-dumped islander Jeremiah Brown was returning as a waiter for two other contestants who were on a date. Fans were not happy when this didn't turn out to be the case, as they were hopeful that he was about to make a comeback. Speaking to E! News, Iain said: 'I'll be honest, it was, perhaps, a misjudgement by me. 'I genuinely thought people would appreciate the nod to him, because we very rarely talk about it, but if you think about it, it's an unwritten rule that I never really joke about the islanders once they've gone. I'll maybe do a joke as they're leaving. So it's a big deal.' He continued: 'It was a genuine statement of love that I mentioned Jeremiah after he'd already left the show. I thought people would be, 'Oh, that's funny.' He was such an intrinsic part of the show. Some people did take it as such, and then some people sadly didn't, and I apologize to those people.'