Review: WARFARE Is a Relentless, Visceral Descent Into Combat Madness
Warfare is not your typical war movie. It’s not about glory, it’s about the sacrifices that soldiers make. It’s about the kind of chaos that strips soldiers down to raw nerves. From the start, I could tell this one was different. What begins as a quiet, almost boring recon mission spirals into an unrelenting nightmare. You get lulled into the mundane rhythms of a SEAL team setting up shop in a family’s home, detaining them under watch while using the structure to scope out enemy movement. It’s slow, tense, and eerie. You can feel something’s going to snap, and when the shit hits the fan, it’s like the film grabs you by the throat and refuses to let go.The turning point is subtle, just a line of dialogue about losing air support, and then everything unravels. Gunmen seize their chance to attack. The team is pinned down, their comms are working but the bureaucracy on the other end is paralyzed by protocols and indecision. It’s maddening to watch them try to navigate through this system even as bullets tear through walls. What impressed me most was how Warfare captures the weight of the reality of the situation as it all of it plays out inside a single, claustrophobic location, amplifying the nightmarish desperation.Once the shooting starts, the film transforms into something almost unbearable, but in a good way. It’s loud, messy, and relentless. The sound design alone is a full-on assault,l. It feels real. The blood, the dust, the screaming… every detail throws you into the thick of it. It’s not stylized or romanticized. It’s ugly and exhausting. You’re not just watching this movie; you’re surviving it.The movie was co-directed by Alex Garland and Ray Mendoza, one of the co-directors and a real-life SEAL who lived through the battle, pulled from his own memories gives the entire film a raw authenticity. Mendoza’s personal story bleeds into every frame as he’s confronting his experience. And the cast sells every beat. D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Will Poulter, Joseph Quinn, and Cosmo Jarvis especially stand out, grounding their characters in fear, instinct, and the painful grind of keeping each other alive.I’m a huge fan of war films, and this one left a mark. Warfare isn’t trying to be the definitive Iraq War movie. It’s not about the war as a whole, it’s about one bad day that never seemed to end.It’s a small impactful story told with intense precision, and it hits harder than most grand-scale epics. You walk away feeling wrecked, and I guess that’s exactly the point.


Warfare is not your typical war movie. It’s not about glory, it’s about the sacrifices that soldiers make. It’s about the kind of chaos that strips soldiers down to raw nerves.
From the start, I could tell this one was different. What begins as a quiet, almost boring recon mission spirals into an unrelenting nightmare. You get lulled into the mundane rhythms of a SEAL team setting up shop in a family’s home, detaining them under watch while using the structure to scope out enemy movement.
It’s slow, tense, and eerie. You can feel something’s going to snap, and when the shit hits the fan, it’s like the film grabs you by the throat and refuses to let go.
The turning point is subtle, just a line of dialogue about losing air support, and then everything unravels. Gunmen seize their chance to attack. The team is pinned down, their comms are working but the bureaucracy on the other end is paralyzed by protocols and indecision.
It’s maddening to watch them try to navigate through this system even as bullets tear through walls. What impressed me most was how Warfare captures the weight of the reality of the situation as it all of it plays out inside a single, claustrophobic location, amplifying the nightmarish desperation.
Once the shooting starts, the film transforms into something almost unbearable, but in a good way. It’s loud, messy, and relentless. The sound design alone is a full-on assault,l. It feels real.
The blood, the dust, the screaming… every detail throws you into the thick of it. It’s not stylized or romanticized. It’s ugly and exhausting. You’re not just watching this movie; you’re surviving it.
The movie was co-directed by Alex Garland and Ray Mendoza, one of the co-directors and a real-life SEAL who lived through the battle, pulled from his own memories gives the entire film a raw authenticity. Mendoza’s personal story bleeds into every frame as he’s confronting his experience.
And the cast sells every beat. D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Will Poulter, Joseph Quinn, and Cosmo Jarvis especially stand out, grounding their characters in fear, instinct, and the painful grind of keeping each other alive.
I’m a huge fan of war films, and this one left a mark. Warfare isn’t trying to be the definitive Iraq War movie. It’s not about the war as a whole, it’s about one bad day that never seemed to end.
It’s a small impactful story told with intense precision, and it hits harder than most grand-scale epics. You walk away feeling wrecked, and I guess that’s exactly the point.