James Berry
July 5, 2026
Jon Erwin’s Young Washington stepped onto the July 4th box office stage carrying a heavy burden of expectation and technical skepticism, yet it ultimately delivers a crowd-pleasing, deeply patriotic theatrical experience. Rather than presenting the flawless, untouchable monument found on a dollar bill, the narrative’s greatest asset is its willingness to focus squarely on Washington’s early military failures during the French and Indian War. By examining how these formative, often devastating missteps shaped his ultimate character, the script uncovers a refreshing layer of human vulnerability underneath the historical armor. While the thematic emphasis on "Divine Providence" leans slightly glorified, it remains anchored enough in the documented mindset of the era to avoid feeling entirely like folklore. The film relies heavily on newcomer William Franklyn-Miller to carry the emotional and physical weight of the production. Backed by sparse, limited appearances from seasoned veterans like Ben Kingsley, Andy Serkis, and Kelsey Grammer, Franklyn-Miller commands the screen by projecting a distinct blend of youthful ambition and stiff, eighteenth-century civility. Visually, the film easily survives its pre-release tech controversy. The realtime digital hybrid environments and AI-assisted background effects are seamless enough that casual viewers will never find their immersion broken. While Kristopher Kimlin’s cinematography isn't the most breathtaking work put to film, it is highly competent, capturing the isolation of the early American frontier without drawing distracting attention to its digital stitching. The narrative momentum falters only when it reaches the explosive final act at the Monongahela ambush. Here, the production trades the gritty, grounded historical realism of films like The Patriot for traditional Hollywood blockbuster tropes. By hyper-stylizing Washington’s legendary survival into a superhero spectacle, the film briefly loses its human heart to chase an over-the-top action high. Despite leaning too hard into an action-hero caricature during the climax, Young Washington remains an engaging, earnest look at a leader's birth through fire—leaving audiences cheering and fully delivering on the exact holiday energy it promised.