20. ‘Dark Skies’ (2013)
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‘Dark Skies,’ a basically fine-enough Blumhouse horror film starring Keri Russell and Josh Hamilton as parents of two who are forced to protect their son from an aliens seeking to kidnap him, isn’t a Fourth of July movie for the majority of its runtime. But the entire climax takes place on the holiday, as the couple boards up the windows and front doors of the house to keep the intruders out. The irony of trapping themselves during Independence Day is one that the film doesn’t need to underline to be effective, and the film goes for a more eerie, cold take on the alien invasion genre to set itself apart from, uh, ‘Independence Day.’ Even if the film’s connection to the fourth feels mostly slim, the scene before the Greys attack where the family basks in the glow of their TV watching fireworks proves a bright spot in the terror. —WC