This Independence Day weekend, we're going to hear the pops and fizzes of fireworks as they burst into the sky. Fireworks are so fun and colorful, it's really a great time watching them.

But in cinema, these fireworks aren't always used for celebration. Sometimes they can help other themes come alive in our story.

Today, I want to go over ten instances where this is the case.

Let's dive in.


Blow Out (1981)

In Brian De Palma’s paranoid thriller, fireworks become the death of the American dream as they coordinate with gunshots to cover up a massive political assassination.

In the movie, sound recordist Jack Terry (John Travolta) is out capturing ambient noise when he records a car accident that pulls him into a deadly conspiracy where a sound meant for joy becomes the key to a murder.

Brokeback Mountain (2005)

During a tense party, fireworks explode outside as Ennis Del Mar (Heath Ledger) loses his cool on two guys. We see there is a person inside him, so fed up with who he is that he's not sure what to do. And we see his wife see him losing himself.

The Sandlot (1993)

The 4th of July night game scene is pure cinematic magic. As the boys play baseball under a sky lit up by neighborhood fireworks, Ray Charles's "America the Beautiful" plays.

This is a coming-of-age scene that celebrates growing up and the romance of being a kid and playing outside.

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)

Gandalf's fireworks at Bilbo's birthday party start as simple fun, delighting the Hobbits. But when he unleashes the grand finale—a massive, roaring dragon that flies menacingly over the crowd—the mood shifts, and we understand that in this world, there are beasts like that out there.

The Great Gatsby (2013)

Jay Gatsby's parties are legendary, and his fireworks are the main event. But they aren't for his guests. They are a loud, desperate, and ostentatious signal fired across the bay, so that Daisy Buchanan may come calling.

To Catch a Thief (1955)

Alfred Hitchcock made movies at a time when he was constrained by the restrictive Hays Code that limited depictions of sex.

So, how do you hint that sex might happen?

Why not use fireworks for romantic metaphors?

As John Robie (Cary Grant) and Frances Stevens (Grace Kelly) share a passionate kiss, the film cuts away to a dazzling fireworks display over the French Riviera. It's pretty obvious Hitchcock is being playful here.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007)

When Fred and George Weasley unleash their "Weasleys' Wildfire Whiz-bangs" during the O.W.L. exams, it’s not for fun; it's a declaration of war against the suffocating, bureaucratic tyranny of Dolores Umbridge.

And these fireworks are their last act of rebellion, inspiring others to fight back.

Mulan (1998)

In a brilliant subversion of their purpose, Mulan uses the celebratory fireworks brought for the Emperor to trigger a massive avalanche that wipes out the bulk of the Hun army and saves her people. It adds to the theme of the movie of purpose and is also a really fun payoff.

V for Vendetta (2005)

The fireworks in V for Vendetta isn't a celebration; it's the beautiful, explosive birth of a new era. As the Houses of Parliament are destroyed in a pyrotechnic symphony set to the 1812 Overture.  

Here the fireworks represent the release of an oppressed people, the destruction of tyranny, and the violent revolution.

Summing It All Up 

Fireworks are a cinematic staple, a go-to for visual spectacle and moments of joy. But in the hands of a skilled filmmaker, these explosive displays can become anything you want them to be.

Are there movie scenes I missed?

Let me know what you think in the comments.