Most war movies are understandably based on real-life conflicts from humanity’s turbulent past. And given the majority of movies - war or otherwise - tend to be around two hours long (and rarely longer than three hours), the focus can sometimes only be on one side of any conflict or dispute. This can generally result in movies that are about good versus evil, or protagonist versus antagonist, and war movies perhaps more often than not adhere to this form of storytelling.

Many great war movies only focus on one side of the conflict they’re about, and that’s okay. It’s something that can be done well, and for conflicts that get covered a lot in cinema, it’s possible to watch several war movies (say all about World War II) and see things from different sides. But some ambitious war movies tackle combat situations from two or more sides within the one movie, with the following war-related films all being examples of this approach being executed well.

Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence - 1983

10’Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence' (1983)

Beyond being a World War II movie,Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrenceis more broadlya film about a clash of cultures, all set within a prisoner of war camp. It splits its time evenly between the Japanese forces who run the camp and the (mostly) British soldiers who are being held prisoners there, with essentially equal parts Japanese and English dialogue.

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It had a Japanese director,Nagisa Ōshima, and notably had its two main characters (on opposing sides) played by an English musician (David Bowie) and a Japanese musician (Ryuichi Sakamoto, who also wrote the film’s score). It’s a slow but absorbing World War II drama, and successfully shows two opposing forces in surprisingly empathetic ways.

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9’Waterloo' (1970)

Of the manymovies that featureNapoleon Bonaparteas a character,Waterloois up there as one of the very best. It centers around the divisive titular battle later immortalized in anABBAsong, with screen time split between the two main sides: the French forces led by Napoleon himself (Rod Steiger), and the British allied forces overseen by theDuke of Wellington(Christopher Plummer).

It feels like a movie that wants to tell this historical story largely the way it happened, and plays out surprisingly neutral as a result. It can all feel a bit matter-of-fact at times, but when the battle scenes begin, the film starts to truly impress, as it’s rare to see historical war sequences in movies play out at the scale seen here.

Two officers on horseback in front of an army in Waterloo (1970)

8’Is Paris Burning?' (1966)

With a runtime that falls just shy of three hours,Is Paris Burning?certainly has ample time to explore its central narrative from a few different points of view. The historical story being explored here is that of the French Resistance combating German forces in the final days of World War II, when Nazi Germany’s grip on the French capital city it occupied was slipping.

On top of different characters from both the French and German sides, American Allied forces also play a role within the film, leading to the casting of some well-known stars likeAnthony PerkinsandKirk Douglas. There are similar big-name actors for the French and German characters, too, including the likes ofJean-Louis Trintignant,Jean-Paul Belmondo,Alain Delon, andLeslie Caron.

Is Paris Burning_ - 1966

7’Joint Security Area' (2000)

Joint Security Areais an underrated movie directed byPark Chan-wook, made just a few years before the South Korean filmmaker saw his career truly take off on an international scale with the release ofOldboy. Its story revolves around a murder investigation at the Korean Demilitarized Zone, which sits between North and South Korea.

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It’s a zone that was established at what was ostensibly the end of the Korean War in 1953, but tensions still exist between the North and the South, and this is reflected by many ofJoint Security Area’scharacters being military personnel. It’s not a war film in the traditional sense, perhaps, but it focuses on two different armies and the inherent tensions between the two, with characters on both sides of the conflict.

joint security area0

6’Hell in the Pacific' (1968)

Few World War II movies feel likeHell in the Pacific, which is arguably more of a survival film than a war movie. It also feels about as small-scale as a movie about such a huge war could be, given there are only two characters in the film:a member of the Japanese forces (Toshiro Mifune)and an American pilot (Lee Marvin).

It’s instantly tense, because both end up stranded on the same small island, and find themselves at odds and unable to communicate.Hell in the Pacificeventually becomes about them needing to work together if either is to have any chance of surviving into the future. Not only is it as simple and small as war can get, but it’s also perhaps as even-handed and balanced between two sides as a war movie could ever be.

5’The Longest Day' (1962)

The Longest Dayis up there as one of the most large-scale war movies of all time, arguably exceeding the likes of similarly ambitious epics likeIs Paris Burning?andA Bridge Too Far. It’s also one of thebest of these big World War II movies, being a thoroughly engrossing depiction of the D-Day landings at Normandy.

It uses its 178-minute runtime to have several different sets of armed forces focused on, including American, British, German, and French soldiers. This mammoth film also needed three directors -Ken Annakin,Andrew Marton, andBernhard Wicki- and had a gigantic cast that included the likes ofJohn Wayne,Sean Connery,Henry Fonda, andRobert Mitchum, to name just a few.

4’Pan’s Labyrinth' (2006)

WhilePan’s Labyrinthis primarily a fantasy movie (and a pretty grisly one at that), it’s also a war movie. Despite it taking place in 1944, the war focused on isn’t World War II, with it instead following a story that plays out several years after the Spanish Civil War, with forces of the Francoist dictatorship clashing with various rebels.

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A general of the former (played bySergi López) serves as the main antagonist, with his brutality and ruthlessness causing his stepdaughter, Ofelia ​​​​​​​(Ivana Baquero) to escape into a disturbing fantasy world. Given the opposing rebel forces are also given significant screen time, the war-focused parts ofPan’s Labyrinthdo ultimately show two sides to a conflict.

3’Tora! Tora! Tora!' (1970)

LikeThe Longest Day,Tora! Tora! Tora!was a World War II movie that had several directors -Richard Fleischer,Toshio Masuda, andKinji Fukasaku- helm different scenes. This was done to present the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor from the two main sides involved: the U.S. forces and the Japanese army.

It’s largely successful in showing Pearl Harbor from the perspective of those who attacked the naval base and those who were caught off guard by it, with the event being the trigger for the U.S. joining World War II.Tora! Tora! Tora!has an impressive scale and ambitious scope that makes it still hold up as a gripping World War II epic, even 50+ years on from its release.

2’War for the Planet of the Apes' (2017)

Not all war movies are necessarily about real-life conflicts, as the futuristicWar for the Planet of the Apesdemonstrates. As the third movie in the 2010sPlanet of the Apestrilogy, it takes things to another level when it comes to scale and ambition, ultimately depicting the final conflict that saw apes definitively take over the Earth, paving the way for the stories depicted in the originalPlanet of the Apesseries.

It has the most focus on Caesar and his ape forces of all three films in the trilogy, but still spends time on human characters, predominantly a paramilitary faction led byWoody Harrelson’scharacter. The ape vs. humans war may be fictional, but it nevertheless details the points of view of figures on both sides.

1’Flags of Our Fathers' & ‘Letters from Iwo Jima’ (2006)

Few directorial achievements byClint Eastwoodare quite as impressive as his 2006 duology which is made up ofFlags of Our FathersandLetters from Iwo Jima. These two movies complement each other perfectly, with the former telling the story of the Battle of Iwo Jima from the American perspective, and the latter telling it from the Japanese perspective.

Taken together, it’s a 4.5-hour epic that would have to be among the best World War II films of the 21st century so far. They were made and released close enough together to feel like one big film, with adequate time therefore afforded to both sides in this infamously brutal battle from the Second World War.

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