Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Features

5 best HBO Max movies to watch on Memorial Day 

Add as a preferred source on Google
Aurélia Nolin and Melvil Poupaud in A Summer's Tale.
Les Films du Losange

Memorial Day occupies its awkward corner at the end of May as a time both to honor our fallen heroes and to celebrate the unofficial beginning of summer. To that end, both war films and summer films are called for to while away the long weekend before we can start preparing our out-of-office emails. Here are five movies on HBO Max worthy of any post-barbecue evening — three movies about summer and two about war.

We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.

Mystic Pizza (1988)

Mystic Pizza, the story of three waitresses at a real-life Connecticut eatery the summer before college, does everything movies of this type are supposed to do in creating an impossibly bucolic world: everyone owns waterfront property, it’s perpetually a beautiful New England summer, and townies look like Julia Roberts.

Recommended Videos

Also, everyone survives exclusively on pizza, though it is Connecticut-style pizza, which proves you can’t have everything. With a script co-written by Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist Alfred Uhry, Mystic Pizza has a pedigree far more prestigious than its (forgive me) cheesy reputation.

Stream Mystic Pizza on HBO Max.

Seven Samurai (1954)

For any other filmmaker, Seven Samurai would be a career-defining masterpiece. For Akira Kurosawa, it was merely an entry in his impossibly illustrious 1950s, alongside Rashomon, Ikiru, and Throne of Blood. Takashi Shimura (also a co-star of Rashomon and Ikiru) leads a band of mercenaries contracted to engage in a great battle to protect a village from bandits.

Seven Samurai was made in the rubble of Japan’s recovery from World War II, and it is, unmistakably, a war film. It is a portrait of what makes a society both at peace and at war — its organization, discipline, fears, entertainment, and weaknesses — and its selective need for those who can protect it in a crisis, only to discard them once that crisis has passed.

Stream Seven Samurai on HBO Max.

Aftersun (2022)

Aftersun, a Charlotte Wells film loosely based on a summer trip the director took with her own father as a child, feels like a memory. Set at a low-grade beach resort in Turkey, the film follows Wells’ counterpart, 11-year-old Sophie (Frankie Corio), and her 30-year-old father, Calum (Paul Mescal).

Calum’s youth gets him confused for Sophie’s brother more than once, and the keen sense that his childhood was interrupted by Sophie’s arrival pervades the film. Mescal received his first Oscar nomination for this achingly gorgeous memory play.

Stream Aftersun on HBO Max.

The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943)

Forty years of British war-making are soaringly summarized in this superb film by the prototypical British wartime filmmakers, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger (The Red Shoes). Roger Livesey is Clive Wynne-Candy, who climbs from enlisted man in the Boer War to major general during World War II, guided by a sense of stereotypically English honor that becomes more archaic as the century winds on.

There is something unique about the way Powell and Pressburger use Technicolor. Their films, especially this one, have a texture and richness almost nothing can match; one wants to lick them off the screen.

Stream The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp on HBO Max.

A Tale of Summer (1996)

Gaspard (Melvil Poupaud) has a problem. He’s waiting patiently by the seaside in the north of France for his on-again, off-again girlfriend, Lena (Aurélia Nolin), but he’s also being pursued by Solene (Gwenaëlle Simon) and nursing a will-they-won’t-they friendship with waitress Margot (Amanda Langlet).

This, if you’re curious, is what passes for a problem in France. Éric Rohmer’s exquisitely French romance, lazy and contemplative as a perfect summer’s day, never ceases to delight as the years go on.

Stream A Tale of Summer on HBO Max.

James Feinberg
James Feinberg is a writer and journalist who has written for the Broadway Journal and NBC's The Blacklist.
YouTube is trapping you in an entirely different content bubble based on your gender
Researchers say YouTube’s algorithm pushes male users toward more polarizing content
YouTube

A new study suggests YouTube’s recommendation algorithm may be shaping political perspectives differently for men and women - even when both groups start with the same interest in political content. The research, published in Cornell University’s arXiv repository, explored how YouTube’s recommendation system responds to different viewing behaviors.

Researchers created 160 automated social bots, splitting them into two groups with “male-coded” and “female-coded” viewing habits. While both sets of accounts showed identical interest in YouTube’s News & Politics category, their recommendations reportedly evolved in dramatically different directions over time.

Read more
EXCLUSIVE: Spider-Noir showrunner Oren Uziel on creating Nicolas Cage’s dark new Spider-Man series
The Spider in the Prime Video series, Spider-Noir.

Few superhero franchises continue to dominate pop culture like Spider-Man. With upcoming films like Spider-Man: Brand New Day and Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse building up hype, Sony is now expanding the web-slinger's universe onto streaming with MGM+ and Prime Video's new live-action series, Spider-Noir, developed by Oren Uziel.

Developed by Oren Uziel, this 1930s-set noir thriller stars Nicolas Cage as Ben Reilly, a private investigator who has long abandoned his masked alter-ego, "The Spider." However, when superpowered criminals emerge in New York City, Reilly must confront his past and become a superhero once again.

Read more
Netflix has its own AI studio now, and AI-generated content is coming for your feed whether you like it or not
Netflix's secret AI studio INKubator is hiring fast, with plans to produce animated shorts using generative AI.
Netflix-voice-search

Netflix has spent years using AI to make sure you never leave the couch. Making AI-based content is the next step, I guess.

The streaming giant is staffing up a new internal studio called INKubator to produce animated short films and specials using generative AI (via TheVerge).

Read more