Before franchise filmmaking took over the summer, one man had a different kind of hold on Hollywood’s hottest holiday weekend. For over a decade, July 4th belonged to Will Smith.
But before the holiday dominance, there was a different kind of proving ground. In 1995, Smith first defied Hollywood’s expectations alongside Martin Lawrence in Bad Boys, a Michael Bay action film that at the time had two TV stars leading an R-rated studio blockbuster. Nobody was certain it would work. It did. The film earned over $141 million worldwide on a $19 million budget, kicking off what would become Smith’s first major franchise and proving Hollywood wrong about what he was capable of.
Independence Day arrived on July 3, 1996, and Smith took things to a whole new level. Director Roland Emmerich had built the film as an ensemble piece, insisting he didn’t want a movie star to drive it. The studio had its own reservations, primarily because Smith was still largely associated with his six-season run on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. What nobody saw coming was that the moment Smith decked an alien and bellowed “Welcome to Earth,” something clicked in a way that couldn’t be manufactured or predicted. The film became the highest-grossing release of 1996 with $817.4 million worldwide, landing Smith on the cover of People and rewriting how Hollywood saw him overnight.
Smith later described just how sudden that shift felt. Speaking at a 2007 press conference for I Am Legend, he recalled that the Monday after Independence Day opened was the first time he was addressed as “Mr. Smith,” and that people started calling him that from the morning the box office numbers came in — a change he found genuinely strange after years of being known simply as the Fresh Prince.
Men in Black followed in July 1997, pairing Smith with Tommy Lee Jones in a sci-fi buddy comedy that earned $589.4 million worldwide and became one of his most iconic franchises. Two back-to-back July blockbusters were enough to establish a pattern. When Wild Wild West locked in a 4th of July 1999 release date, the nickname was already forming. The film flopped, but it barely dented the momentum. Men in Black II returned to dominate the same holiday weekend in 2002, and whatever doubt Wild Wild West may have raised was quickly erased.
By 2004, the Mr. 4th of July moniker was so entrenched that losing the date actually made headlines. Sony wanted the July 4th weekend for Spider-Man 2 and moved its release to claim it, pushing Fox to pull I, Robot off its planned July 2 slot and reschedule for later that month. The irony wasn’t lost on the industry: even Will Smith’s grip on the holiday could be muscled aside by a big enough contender, which was itself proof of how closely the date and his name had become linked.
He kind of did own it. Bad Boys II opened July 18, 2003, just two weeks after the holiday, close enough to carry the same energy. I, Robot, despite losing its preferred release date to Spider-Man 2, still opened in late July 2004 to strong numbers. Then came Hancock in July 2008, a superhero actioner that hauled in over $107 million in its first five days, proving that even an original concept with a complicated tone could win big when Smith was attached and the calendar said July.
During his peak run, no actor in Hollywood commanded a holiday weekend and month, the way Smith commanded the Fourth of July. It wasn’t just about the films themselves. It was about the certainty. Between 1996 and 2008, a Will Smith action movie over Independence Day weekend wasn’t just an event. It was a given.