An intrinsic part of popular culture, war movies have featured some of the biggest stars in Hollywood since the earliest days of cinema. From emotionally impactful war movies that stick with the viewer forever to offerings that feature the most horrific depictions of war imaginable, the genre has played host to some of the silver screen’s most celebrated and instantly recognizable faces, from Laurence Olivier to Idris Elba. Thankfully, this is a status quo that shows no sign of letting up any time soon.
From the best war films of all time to more recent genre offerings, war movies have a habit of flashing an A-lister when audiences least expect it. These roles can even precede the individual in question hitting the big time, leading to a delightful sense of realization when the sense of recognition eventually hits home. In others, it can be a well known individual who is virtually unrecognizable when they aren’t playing their most famous character. In any case, the genre features a considerable number of major actors in roles that many fans will have forgotten.
10 Johnny Depp
Platoon (1986)
Based on director Oliver Stone’s real-life experiences of the Vietnam War, 1986’s Platoon is regarded as one of the most accurate and influential films depicting the conflict ever made. The film boasts an ensemble cast at the top of their game, with Willem Dafoe and Tom Berenger both receiving nominations for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor off the back of their masterful roles as Elias and Barnes, respectively.

Related
10 Best War Movies Of The 1980s
A collection of the finest war films that the 1980s have to offer, featuring the work of Steven Spielberg, Stanley Kubrick, and Oliver Stone.
Platoon also happens to feature one of cinema’s most instantly recognizable faces in the briefest of cameo appearances. Pirates of the Caribbean star Johnny Depp plays Private Lerner, a background character who is last seen in the back of a medevac helicopter after being wounded in battle. In an alternate universe, Depp’s role in Platoon could have been his breakout performance, but the actor’s screen time was vastly reduced after most of his scenes and dialogue were cut in the final take.
9 Guy Pearce
The Hurt Locker (2008)
The toast of the 82nd Academy Awards, Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker took home six of the nine Oscars that the film was nominated for, including the prestigious accolades of Best Director and Best Picture. Chronicling the exploits of a proficient bomb disposal expert and his team during the Iraq War, Bigelow’s ensemble cast is led by Marvel Cinematic Universe star Jeremy Renner.
The American plays Staff Sergeant William James, brought in after the demise of Bravo Company’s previous explosives expert. Killed by an improvised explosive device during the film’s adrenaline-soaked opening sequence, the late Staff Sergeant Matthew Thompson is played in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it bow from Memento and L.A. Confidential star, Guy Pearce. The Australian actor features for all of 10 minutes before his untimely death and is swiftly forgotten as Renner takes the reins in assured fashion.
8 John Krasinski
Jarhead (2005)
Known for his breakout role as Jim Halpert in the seminal comedy mockumentary The Office, John Krasinski has come a long way since his early days in Scranton. In addition to landing the titular role of Jack Ryan in Amazon Prime’s live action television series based on the iconic Tom Clancy character, the American became a household name after his masterful work in 2018’s A Quiet Place and the movie’s 2020 sequel.
A classical literature graduate from Dartmouth, Harrigan finds himself roped into writing exceedingly pornographic love letters on behalf of his superior officers.
What many fans may not know is that Krasinski featured in a minor role in one of the 2000s most underrated war films, in the same year that he made his first appearance as Jim on The Office. Appearing for less than a minute, the actor plays Corporal Harrigan in Sam Mendes’ Jarhead, widely regarded as one of Jake Gyllenhaal’s best movies. A classical literature graduate from Dartmouth University, Harrigan finds himself roped into the demeaning task of writing exceedingly pornographic love letters on behalf of his superior officers.
7 Bryan Cranston
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
Contentiously the greatest war film of all time, 1998’s Saving Private Ryan is littered with fleeting appearances from big-name actors from start to finish. Paul Giamatti, Nathan Fillion, and Ted Danson are just a few of the Hollywood big-hitters that pop up in minor roles across the course of Steven Spielberg’s WWII epic, but the movie’s highlight cameo appearance belongs to Breaking Bad star and Academy Award-nominated actor, Bryan Cranston.
Cranston received his sole Academy Award for Best Actor nomination to date for his bow in 2015’s
Trumbo.
The man charged with bringing “Heisenberg” to life features in the film’s early goings as an unnamed, one-armed colonel in the war department. In a cameo that doubles as one of Cranston’s most underrated performances, the Malcolm in the Middle star is the one who makes the case for bringing James Ryan home safely after the tragic news of his brothers’ deaths gradually filters home.
6 Léa Seydoux
Inglourious Basterds (2009)
One of French cinema’s most prolific and accomplished performers, Léa Seydoux has featured in numerous high-profile Hollywood offerings to complement her work in her home country. A frequent collaborator with Wes Anderson, Seydoux is also credited with supporting roles in the wildly successful Mission Impossible and Dune franchises, in addition to two appearances as Bond girl, Madeleine Swann.
Léa Seydoux James Bond film appearances |
|
---|---|
Movie |
Year |
Spectre |
2015 |
No Time to Die |
2021 |
Given the actress’ impressive list of credits, it’s hardly surprising that one of her more minor film roles is often overlooked, even if it is in one of the most influential war movies of all time. Seydoux features in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it instance in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds, playing one of Monsieur LaPadite’s trio of daughters in the film’s opening sequence. The actress features in one of the most unforgettable character introductions of all time for Christoph Waltz’s Hans Landa, as the Colonel comes calling in search of fugitive Jews.
5 Anthony Starr
The Covenant (2023)
An action war drama from Snatch director Guy Ritchie, The Covenant follows an American soldier and his Afghan interpreter, played by Jake Gyllenhaal and Dar Salim respectively. The 2023 movie chronicles the pair’s trials and tribulations fighting the Taliban against the backdrop of the War in Afghanistan, a series of events that eventually forces Gyllenhaal’s John Kinley into enlisting the assistance of a private military contractor by the name of Eddie Parker.
Almost unrecognizable at first glance thanks to his dark hair and a thick beard, Parker is played by none other than Antony Starr; the man behind current television’s most compelling and formidable villain in The Boys’ sadistic superhero, Homelander. The New Zealander steps into the minor role of Parker for the film’s final act, sending in the cavalry to save the day when all appears to be lost.
4 Harrison Ford
Apocalypse Now (1979)
A seminal offering from Francis Ford Coppola and one of the best war films of the 1970s, Apocalypse Now chronicles a covert mission to assassinate a renegade Special Forces officer set during the Vietnam War. Coppola’s 1979 outing features an eye-watering ensemble cast, boasting iconic names in the vein of Marlon Brando, Robert Duvall, and Martin Sheen in the film’s most prominent roles.
Ford’s character is named after Coppola’s friend and legendary filmmaker George Lucas, who had been attached to direct
Apocalypse Now
before getting bogged down with his work on
Star Wars
.
As such, it’s understandable that such big-hitters overshadow a fleeting appearance from one of cinema’s greatest action movie stars. Said action hero happens to be none other than Star Wars, Blade Runner, and Indiana Jones star Harrison Ford. The American cultural icon appears in the early goings of Coppola’s picture as Colonel G. Lucas, an Army intelligence specialist who gives Sheen’s Captain Willard his orders to assassinate Brando’s mysterious Colonel Kurtz.
3 Judy Greer
Three Kings (1999)
As one of Hollywood’s most accomplished character actresses and comedians, Judy Greer boasts an impressive body of work. From multiple appearances in blockbuster franchises such as the Marvel Cinematic Universe to supporting roles in a diverse range of prominent television shows like It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the American thespian is credited with more than 150 appearances across film and television.
Judy Greer’s Marvel Cinematic Universe appearances |
|
---|---|
Movie |
Role |
Ant-Man (2015) |
Maggie Lang |
Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018) |
Maggie Lang |
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023) |
War Pig |
Among those appearances is an easily missable role in one of the best war films of the 1990s. Greer makes a fleeting appearance in 1999’s Three Kings, a lauded black-comedy war film chronicling a gold heist during the 1991 uprisings in Iraq. One of George Clooney’s best movies, Three Kings sees the Up in the Air star flanked by fellow A-listers in Mark Wahlberg and Ice Cube. Greer plays Cathy Daitch in the movie, a journalist who trades sex for stories from Clooney’s Special Forces Major Archie Gates in the film’s early stages.
2 Billy Boyd
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003)
Scotsman Billy Boyd may not possess the most extensive filmography, but what the actor’s credit list lacks in length, it more than makes up for in prestige. Boyd is primarily known for his work on what is arguably the most successful and beloved movie franchise of all time, in Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy. The Scottish actor plays the role of hobbit Peregrin “Pippin” Took, constant companion to Dominic Monaghan’s Meriadoc “Merry” Brandybuck and a member of the Fellowship of the Ring.
The Scotsman can be seen in a minor role in 2003’s
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
as the
Surprise’s
coxswain, Barrett Bonden.
Much like many of his cast mates from Jackson’s trilogy, Boyd found himself forever typecast following his bow as the mischievous hobbit, but still managed to squeeze in a fleeting appearance in one of the finest historical war films of the 2000s. The Scotsman can be seen in a minor role in 2003’s Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World as the Surprise’s coxswain, Barrett Bonden.
1 George Mackay
Defiance (2008)

Defiance is a historical drama directed by Edward Zwick, starring Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber. Released in 2008, the film follows the true story of the Bielski brothers, who led a group of Jewish partisans in Belarus during World War II, aiming to protect their community from the Nazis. Together, they build a hidden village in the forest, providing refuge and mounting resistance efforts against their oppressors.
- Director
- Edward Zwick
- Release Date
- December 31, 2008
- Cast
- Daniel Craig , Liev Schreiber , Jamie Bell , Alexa Davalos , Allan Corduner , Mark Feuerstein
- Runtime
- 136 minutes
Previously known for his work in the likes of Private Peaceful, How I Live Now, and True History of the Kelly Gang, George Mackay gained international recognition for his role in Sam Mendes’ acclaimed 2019 war offering, 1917. Cast in the leading role as Lance Corporal Will Schofield in one of the best British war films ever made, Mackay earned rave reviews for his take on the young English soldier, with his haunting performance highlighted as one of the masterful movie’s strongest elements.

Related
1917’s Ending Explained
Sam Mendes’ epic war film, 1917, has a major reveal in the film’s closing seconds, which means a lot for the characters and story of the movie.
More than a decade before his breakout role as Schofield, Mackay featured in another prominent war offering boasting an ensemble cast. Aged 16 at the time of the film’s production, the 1917 star also starred in 2008’s Defiance, in what was just his third feature film appearance. Mackay plays the minor role of Aron Bielski, the youngest brother from a family of Partisan rebels who saved Jews in Belarus during WWII. The war film also sees Hollywood big hitters Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, and Jamie Bell feature as Bielski’s elder siblings.