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Warfare

  • 2025
  • R
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
93K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
199
15
Warfare (2025)
Based on ex-Navy Seal Ray Mendoza's real-life experiences during the Iraq War.
Play trailer2:25
7 Videos
99+ Photos
Action EpicDocudramaEpicPeriod DramaWar EpicActionDramaWar

A platoon of Navy SEALs embark on a dangerous mission in Ramadi, Iraq, with the chaos and brotherhood of war retold through their memories of the event.A platoon of Navy SEALs embark on a dangerous mission in Ramadi, Iraq, with the chaos and brotherhood of war retold through their memories of the event.A platoon of Navy SEALs embark on a dangerous mission in Ramadi, Iraq, with the chaos and brotherhood of war retold through their memories of the event.

  • Directors
    • Alex Garland
    • Ray Mendoza
  • Writers
    • Ray Mendoza
    • Alex Garland
  • Stars
    • D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai
    • Will Poulter
    • Cosmo Jarvis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    93K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    199
    15
    • Directors
      • Alex Garland
      • Ray Mendoza
    • Writers
      • Ray Mendoza
      • Alex Garland
    • Stars
      • D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai
      • Will Poulter
      • Cosmo Jarvis
    • 604User reviews
    • 177Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos7

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:25
    Official Trailer
    Warfare
    Trailer 2:25
    Warfare
    Warfare
    Trailer 2:25
    Warfare
    Joseph Quinn, Will Poulter, and the 'Warfare' Cast on the Beauty of Boot Camp
    Clip 4:36
    Joseph Quinn, Will Poulter, and the 'Warfare' Cast on the Beauty of Boot Camp
    Official First Look
    Featurette 2:14
    Official First Look
    Warfare (Featurette 2)
    Featurette 0:46
    Warfare (Featurette 2)
    Warfare: First Look (Featurette)
    Featurette 2:14
    Warfare: First Look (Featurette)

    Photos148

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    + 142
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    Top Cast32

    Edit
    D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai
    D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai
    • Ray
    Will Poulter
    Will Poulter
    • Erik
    Cosmo Jarvis
    Cosmo Jarvis
    • Elliott
    Joseph Quinn
    Joseph Quinn
    • Sam
    Aaron Mackenzie
    Aaron Mackenzie
    • Kelly
    Alex Brockdorff
    Alex Brockdorff
    • Mikey
    Finn Bennett
    Finn Bennett
    • John
    Evan Holtzman
    Evan Holtzman
    • Brock
    Michael Gandolfini
    Michael Gandolfini
    • Lt. Macdonald
    Joe Macaulay
    Joe Macaulay
    • Mo
    Laurie Duncan
    Laurie Duncan
    • Pete
    Jake Lampert
    Jake Lampert
    • Ted
    Aaron Deakins
    Aaron Deakins
    • Bob
    Henrique Zaga
    Henrique Zaga
    • Aaron
    Kit Connor
    Kit Connor
    • Tommy
    Noah Centineo
    Noah Centineo
    • Brian
    Taylor John Smith
    Taylor John Smith
    • Frank
    Adain Bradley
    Adain Bradley
    • Sgt Laerrus
    • Directors
      • Alex Garland
      • Ray Mendoza
    • Writers
      • Ray Mendoza
      • Alex Garland
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews604

    7.293.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8simonv-648-292176

    SEE THIS IN THE THEATER

    Went into this expecting a military movie like those that get rolled out on Netflix periodically, however this is a huge step above. The fact it's a true story too also adds so much to the events shown. The filmmakers go out to put you in the middle of the action. It's a very intense movie that does an amazing job of making you feel the tension in the situation. Performances keep you locked in but the real star of the show is the sound. From the gunfire to explosions you feel every hit. The 'Show of force' they use NEEDS to be heard to be believed. I came out of the movie shaken tbh but really entertained and the time flew by.
    8Katiegoldberg

    War, Stripped Bare

    I despise films that glorify war. The swelling strings, the slow-motion salutes, the valour-for-the-sake-of-it nonsense - it's tired and tone-deaf. That's why 'Warfare', the latest and arguably best A24 film I've seen in a long while, floored me. This isn't some patriotic puff piece. It's raw, visceral, and deeply uncomfortable in all the right ways.

    Co-directed by Alex Garland and Ray Mendoza (a former Navy SEAL whose real-life experience forms the backbone of the story), 'Warfare' drops you headfirst into the chaos of a mission gone sideways in 2006 Ramadi (Iraq). There's no time for character backstories or emotional flashbacks. You're in the dirt with these men, hearing the crack of gunfire, the ragged breathing, the frantic comms - every heartbeat of the film is felt in your chest. Real war, as this film so powerfully reminds us, isn't medals and glory. It's blood, guts, and a harrowing sense of hopelessness.

    The cast - most notably D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Cosmo Jarvis, and Will Poulter - bring a haunting realism to their roles. You don't watch them; you endure alongside them. And that's what elevates 'Warfare' into something more than cinema. It's an experience. A brutal, brilliantly made, and emotionally devastating experience.

    Any loss of life in war is a failure - of diplomacy, of leadership, of humanity. This film doesn't flinch from that truth. It holds your gaze and says: look at what we do to each other.

    A masterpiece. Uncompromising and unforgettable. If you can, see it in a theatre. The sound design alone is worth the ticket - each echoing explosion and muffled breath immerses you deeper into the dread-soaked trenches of reality. 'Warfare' doesn't just show war. It makes you feel every awful second of it.
    9cedricdumler

    Warfare is not a film you watch. It's something you survive.

    Warfare isn't a war film. It's war.

    Garland and Mendoza strip the genre of everything recognizable: no character arcs, no flashbacks, no patriotic overtures or emotional beats. There are no names to remember. No home to long for. No cinematic scaffolding to hold onto. What's left is the brutal machinery of combat - dry, immediate, procedural.

    This is not the psychological descent of Apocalypse Now, nor the trembling humanism of Saving Private Ryan. It's more like being waterboarded with dust, sound, and confusion.

    The camera is unflinching - tight, reactive, often handheld but never "shaky-cam" chaos. It moves with the soldiers, but never sentimentalizes them. There's no slow-mo. No meditative framing. Just bodies moving through smoke, clearing rooms, capturing buildings. The lens doesn't find beauty in destruction - it avoids it entirely. The few wide shots we get are just to show how small they are. How futile it all looks from a distance. The sound design is relentless: radios crackling over one another, gunfire echoing through narrow alleyways. There is almost no score, and when music does appear (Low's Dancing and Blood) it's droning, ghostly, anti-heroic. It haunts rather than elevates. The production design is chillingly effective. Everything feels lived-in and long-dead at the same time. You can smell the ash, feel the heat radiating off the concrete. The environments aren't stylized, they're decayed, abandoned, half-real. It feels like the war has already happened, and this is just the residue.

    One of the final moments, set to the droning nightmare of Low's Dancing and Blood, shows a blurry portrait of an Iraqi family seconds before their home is destroyed. Not for shock. Not for plot. But because that is war-it happens, and then it's gone, and the image remains, smeared and indistinct.

    Civil War framed the ethics of capturing violence. Warfare removes the frame entirely. There is no image here to interpret - just presence. Just event.

    It's also one of the most immersive war films I've ever seen, precisely because it refuses to explain itself. The film doesn't care if you're lost. It wants you to be. Questions pile up. None are answered. Context is treated like luxury, one the characters (and audience) don't get.

    By the final sequence, you feel exhausted - not thrilled, not moved - just emptied out. And then the film has the audacity to end on one word:

    "Why?"

    But it doesn't ask it to provoke. It asks it like a ghost would. Like a memory does. It's not a question. It's an echo.

    Warfare is not a film you watch. It's something you survive.

    9/10.

    P. S Having experienced Warfare in Dolby Atmos, I must emphasize how sonically overwhelming the film's opening sequence is - a moment of almost euphoric surrealism, as the soldiers lose themselves in the pulsating rhythm of Call on Me, the bass resonating so powerfully it felt like the theater roof was coming down. It's a scene of unexpected levity and collective joy, rendered with hypnotic energy and tonal audacity. Precisely this striking contrast - between the almost absurd vitality of the prologue and the film's emotionally pulverizing, desolate conclusion - marks one of the boldest and most jarring juxtapositions in recent cinema.
    8jongrif851

    Good and bad

    Spent 15 years in Army Special Forces. Most of the movie was decent. Cannot believe they did not immediately tourniquet those leg wounds. Screw the blood sweep / stop the bleeding first. Definitely some shell shock there. Tommy seemed to be completely confused and out of it. No one assessed mental capacity after explosions. FAILURE to use the M-79 Grenade launcher was HUGE. That weapon could have done a lot to clear adjacent rooftops instead it stayed in the guy's backpack. When they staged two separate times to evacuate the wounded they came out blazing but you don't see any targets / they're shooting to keep the enemy's heads Down... you DO NOT shoot unless fired upon per se / also the Bradley was taking those second floors ... why didn't they do that on the initial attempt to evacuate ...??

    Regarding shooting... ok you return fire WHEN you have a target but if you have no target in your sector - don't fire...

    They should have put some personnel atop the roof - that roof seemed to be higher than other roofs and it could have been used to suppress adjacent roof tops

    One thing that was missing - the enemy most assuredly would have had RPGs - 110% yet none were fired into the house - they could have lost the entire platoon. RPGs are everywhere so it's sort of disbelieving that the enemy did not use RPGs. I lost two friends on Black Hawk Down - both Delta guys. The one friend .. Timmy Martin ... depicted at the end with Gary Gordon ... my other friend was taken out by an RPG below the waist... unfortunately like the guy in this movie he lost his lower extremity but "lived" for a couple of hours until he basically succumbed to blood loss.

    Interesting flick - would have been a bit better with better weapons deployment / leaders doing personnel checks / ammo conservation /. NO TAC AIR is ABSOLUTELY HORRENDOUS- that should have an absolute guarantee before they went in that they TAC AIR on call. And then they have to get the Brigade CO approval - gimme a break. We once pulled my Heavy Weapons Sergeant from choking our BN CDR to death when he did not provide helo exfil during an exercise in Denmark. It was an exercise but the Sergeant had done three tours in Nam and said you never strand troops in the field after a successful attack in enemy territory..

    Movie rating - B to potentially B+
    8mezzanomarcus

    A Modern Day War Horror Film

    A masterclass in tension and sound design. A visceral, gut wrenching, unrelenting war film experience.

    This film absolutely deserves an Oscar nod for its sound design, my ears are still ringing, but in the best way possible. It's not for the faint of heart. Rarely has the raw horror of war been depicted with such intensity; I haven't felt this shaken since Saving Private Ryan. The theatrical experience is essential, this soundscape demands a massive screen. The gunfire alone rivals Heat in realism and impact.

    Those expecting a conventional narrative should adjust their expectations. This isn't a traditional hero's journey, it's an immersive, boots-on-the-ground depiction of a team navigating a chaotic operation where, even when everything is done right, everything can still go catastrophically wrong.

    Watching this, my respect for our military deepened tenfold. The courage it takes to step into such situations is beyond comprehension, and the professionalism of the operators is portrayed with remarkable authenticity. This film didn't just entertain, it inspired me to be a better leader, a better friend.

    This is the film I wanted Civil War to be, and I wouldn't be surprised if Alex Garland felt the same. It offered a deeper understanding of PTSD and the brotherhood forged in combat. The emotional and psychological toll is palpable, yet never overplayed.

    This is not just a film, it's an experience. I'm already planning to see it again in theaters. I'm genuinely curious if my heart rate ever dropped below 130 bpm. As a filmmaker who dreams of tackling a military story one day, I found this both intimidating and inspiring.

    So. Well. Done.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Names of the real SEAL team members' were changed in the film to protect their identities as some are still serving in the military or preferred to remain anonymous. The only names that weren't changed in the film are: Ray Mendoza and Elliott Miller.
    • Goofs
      The sniper is positioned about 1.5 m from the hole in the wall, which is barely 20 cm across. His viewing field is no more than 10 degrees. In the movie, they show the sniper doing panoramic sweeps at least five times wider.
    • Crazy credits
      Before the end credits, photos are displayed showing the cast on the right and the true-life servicemen they portrayed on the left. Many of the left-hand photos are blurred to protect identities, including the last photo showing the Iraqi family whose home the Navy SEALs occupied.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sean Chandler Talks About: Warfare (2025) | Movie Review | Best of the year? (2025)
    • Soundtracks
      Call on Me
      Written by Will Jennings, Eric Prydz, Steve Winwood

      Performed by Eric Prydz

      C/O Data Records/Ministry of Sound Recordings Limited/Wincraft Music Limited

      Licensed by Sony Music Entertainment UK Limited

      Published by Sony Music Publishing

      Hipgnosis SFH I Limited

      Administered by Kobalt Music Publishing Limited

      Universal Music Publishing Ltd.

      On behalf of Blue Sky Rider Songs

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 11, 2025 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Бойові дії
    • Filming locations
      • Iraq(on location)
    • Production companies
      • A24
      • DNA Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $26,000,309
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,317,989
      • Apr 13, 2025
    • Gross worldwide
      • $33,649,631
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • IMAX 6-Track
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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