Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Disney Plus | July 13-19, 2025
So you’re stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Disney Plus, 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 July 13-19, 2025—because your time is too valuable for another “meh” movie night.
1. Snow White (2025)

Disney’s latest live-action reboot is here, and it’s not playing it safe. Snow White takes the bones of the 1937 classic and layers in a darker, more sweeping fantasy vibe—complete with forest bandits, royal backstabbing, and a genuinely menacing Evil Queen played by Gal Gadot (yes, that Gal Gadot).
Rachel Zegler (fresh off West Side Story) steps into the title role with wide-eyed warmth and a quiet steeliness, while Andrew Burnap brings some unexpected edge as Jonathan, a rogue who becomes more than just a love interest. It’s directed by Marc Webb (The Amazing Spider-Man) and features new songs from the La La Land songwriting duo, Pasek & Paul.
If you’re expecting a note-for-note remake, think again. This one leans more Cinderella meets Maleficent, with bigger battles, richer world-building, and a heroine who fights back.
2. Z-O-M-B-I-E-S 4: Dawn of the Vampires (2025)

Just when you thought Seabrook had run out of supernatural drama, here come the vampires. Z-O-M-B-I-E-S 4 cranks up the camp (and the eyeliner) with a summer camp showdown between Daywalkers and classic vamps—with Zed and Addison stuck in the middle as peacekeeping counselors.
It’s goofy, it’s musical, it’s relentlessly upbeat—and that’s exactly the point. Director Paul Hoen keeps the neon-colored chaos moving, while fan favorites like Eliza and Willa return to offer some bite. Newcomers Freya Skye and Malachi Barton bring fresh blood to the mix, pun very much intended.
If you’ve followed this franchise from zombies to werewolves to aliens, you already know what kind of monster mash you’re in for. Think Camp Rock meets Hotel Transylvania, but with more glitter and feelings.
3. Shifting Gears (2024)

Love, competition, and vintage muscle cars—Shifting Gears hits all the sweet spots of a cozy rom-com, with just enough grease under the nails. Katherine Barrell plays Jess, a small-town mechanic reluctantly roped into a reality TV car restoration show… only to discover her ex, Luke (Tyler Hynes), is her main competition.
You know the beats—old flames, lingering tension, sabotage that turns to teamwork—but the chemistry sells it. Director Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe (a Hallmark favorite behind the camera) leans into the charm of garage life and small-town dynamics, without veering into cliché overload.
It’s light, it’s clean, it’s got just enough torque to be memorable. If you liked The Perfect Catch or Sweet Home Alabama, you’ll cruise right through this one.
4. Captain America: Brave New World (2025)

The shield is back in the air—and Sam Wilson’s at the center of a very different kind of Captain America story. Brave New World sees Anthony Mackie leading his first solo outing as Cap, and things are already messy. After a high-stakes meeting with President Thaddeus Ross (Harrison Ford, stepping into the role), Sam gets pulled into a tangled web of geopolitical chaos and underground threats.
Giancarlo Esposito joins the MCU with quiet menace, while Tim Blake Nelson returns as The Leader to stir up some gamma-fueled complications. Directed by Julius Onah (Luce), this entry plays more like a spy thriller than a standard superhero smash-up—and that’s a good thing.
If you liked the grounded grit of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier or the politics of The Winter Soldier, this one keeps the legacy moving forward—with just enough explosions to remind you it’s still Marvel.
5. Ratatouille (2007)

Remy the rat wants to cook. Paris wants him dead. And Pixar wants you to cry over soup. Ratatouille remains one of the studio’s most underrated gems—a heartfelt, beautifully animated story about dreams, identity, and how greatness can come from the most unexpected places.
Voiced with lovable optimism by Patton Oswalt, Remy partners with a hapless kitchen worker to sneak his way into one of the city’s top restaurants. Director Brad Bird (The Incredibles) gives the film just enough whimsy and wonder to make you forget it’s literally about rodents in a kitchen.
Winner of the Oscar for Best Animated Feature and still a top-tier comfort watch, this one’s for the foodies, the underdogs, and anyone who’s ever believed they could be more than what the world expects.





