Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Prime Video | September 14-20, 2025
So you’re stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Prime Video, hoping something jumps out. We’ve been there. That’s why we pulled together the Top 10 Movies you would actually want to watch this week—no fluff, no filler. Whether you’re into thrillers, rom-coms, or indie gems, there’s something worth hitting play on. Here’s your movie cheat sheet for September 14-20, 2025—because your time is too valuable for another “meh” movie night.
A Working Man (2025)

Jason Statham is back in “angry dad on a mission” mode, and honestly, nobody does it better. Directed by David Ayer (End of Watch, Fury), this adaptation of Chuck Dixon’s Levon’s Trade finds Statham playing an ex–black ops soldier turned construction worker whose surrogate niece is kidnapped by traffickers. What starts as a personal rescue spirals into a citywide conspiracy. With support from David Harbour and Michael Peña, it’s a gritty, no-nonsense action flick that plays like Taken with a Stallone polish (he co-produced).
Last Breath (2025)

Claustrophobics, beware. This survival thriller retells the true 2012 North Sea diving accident, with Woody Harrelson, Simu Liu, and Finn Cole leading the crew. When a diver is stranded 300 feet underwater with only minutes of oxygen, his team races to pull off an impossible rescue. Director Alex Parkinson—who also made the 2019 documentary on the incident—brings documentary realism to a nail-biting dramatization. Think Apollo 13 underwater, with added pressure (literally).
Black Bag (2025)

Steven Soderbergh takes on spies and marriage in the same breath, and it’s as twisty as it sounds. Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender play a legendary intelligence couple whose marriage is tested when she’s accused of betraying her country. Regé-Jean Page, Naomie Harris, and Pierce Brosnan round out a stacked cast. Written by David Koepp (Jurassic Park), it’s sleek, cerebral, and very Soderbergh—somewhere between Mr. & Mrs. Smith and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.
The Map That Leads to You (2025)

Madelyn Cline (Outer Banks) and K.J. Apa (Riverdale) bring the YA-romance energy to Prime’s new original from director Lasse Hallström (Chocolat). Based on J.P. Monninger’s novel, it follows Heather, a Type-A grad-to-be, whose European summer fling with a free-spirited Jack reshapes her perfectly planned life. It’s got secret reveals, sun-dappled train rides, and swoony chemistry—all the things you want in a tear-streaked Sunday night romance watch.
The Bourne Identity (2002)

The one that changed action movies forever. Matt Damon’s Jason Bourne wakes up with amnesia and lethal instincts, and spends the next two hours outrunning assassins across Europe while piecing together his past. Doug Liman’s shaky-cam thriller set the tone for the gritty, realistic spy trend that even Bond had to copy. If you’ve never started the series—or if you just want a throwback to when car chases actually felt dangerous—this is the place to dive in.
The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)

Many fans (and critics) consider this the peak of the Bourne franchise. Director Paul Greengrass goes full throttle with handheld chaos, rooftop chases, and close-quarters fights that never let up. Damon delivers his best Bourne yet, Julia Stiles steps up in a bigger role, and the film even nabbed three Oscars for editing and sound. It’s the kind of action movie that feels exhausting in the best possible way—like you just ran alongside him the whole time.
The Bourne Legacy (2012)

Okay, Damon’s not in this one—but hear me out. Jeremy Renner plays Aaron Cross, another genetically enhanced operative fighting for survival after Bourne’s actions ripple through the CIA. Rachel Weisz and Edward Norton add gravitas, and the world-expanding storyline gives a different angle on the Treadstone fallout. It’s more of a spin-off than a sequel, but if you’re binging the franchise this week, it fills in some interesting gaps.
Thirteen Lives (2022)

Ron Howard takes on the 2018 Thai cave rescue, and the result is as tense as it is uplifting. Viggo Mortensen, Colin Farrell, and Joel Edgerton star as divers navigating the flooded labyrinth to save 12 trapped boys and their coach. Shot with obsessive realism, it balances the technical challenges with the emotional weight of an international community rallying together. If you liked Apollo 13 or Argo, this is that same mix of precision and heart.
The Boss Baby (2017)

Alec Baldwin voicing a suit-wearing infant CEO sounds like a bad SNL sketch—but somehow, it works. This DreamWorks hit pairs a jealous older brother with his secret-agent baby sibling to take on an evil puppy scheme. Silly? Absolutely. But it also earned an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature and spawned a franchise. If you’ve got kids—or just want something goofy to turn your brain off—it’s a safe bet.
Hitman: Agent 47 (2015)

Adapted from the popular video game series, this one stars Rupert Friend as the barcoded assassin, with Zachary Quinto and Hannah Ware tangled up in biotech conspiracies and globe-trotting shootouts. It didn’t win over critics, but it delivers on slick gunplay, stylish kills, and operatic action sequences. Basically, if you like your spy thrillers a little pulpy and very loud, this one fits the bill.
And That’s A Wrap
From Jason Statham hammering through traffickers in A Working Man to Matt Damon redefining the spy genre in The Bourne Identity, Prime Video’s lineup this week covers just about every mood. Want something romantic? The Map That Leads to You is your ticket. Need survival stakes? Last Breath and Thirteen Lives both deliver. Or maybe you just want to see a baby in a suit (Boss Baby)—we don’t judge. Either way, your watchlist is officially sorted.
