On the surface, Roland Emmerich’s 1996 blockbuster Independence Day is a quintessential disaster film: a tale of giant aliens, even bigger explosions, and the iconic image of the White House being vaporized into a fireball. But to watch it today is to step into a time capsule of a very specific American mood at the dawn of the digital age.
The climactic speech—"We will not go quietly into the night!"—is a masterclass in late-90s rhetoric. It is unapologetically sentimental, jingoistic, and unifying. In an era before deep political polarization, Independence Day offered a fantasy where every human on Earth dropped their flags to pick up the same one. independence day 1996
We survived.