Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Apple TV | June 29-July 5, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Apple TV, hoping something jumps out. Weโve been there. Thatโs why we pulled together the Top 10 Movies you would actually want to watch this weekโno fluff, no filler. Whether you’re into thrillers, rom-coms, or indie gems, thereโs something worth hitting play on. Hereโs your movie cheat sheet for June 29-July 5, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
1. Greyhound (2020)

Tom Hanks does what he does bestโsteering ships and stealing scenesโin this tense WWII drama thatโs more about strategy than fireworks. Hanks plays Commander Krause, tasked with leading a convoy through the U-boatโinfested waters of the Atlantic. Itโs dialogue-light, tension-high, and literally never lets upโyou can practically feel the waves slamming against the hull.
Itโs more submarine-thriller than broad war epic, focusing on Krauseโs inner turmoil and the weight of responsibility. Elisabeth Shue and the rest of the supporting cast offer solid performances, but Hanks is the engine that drives this mission. Think of it as the cinematic equivalent of holding your breathโyou start hoping for a quick exhale around the halfway point, but nope, the tension only builds.
Clocking in at just under two hours, itโs lean, precise, and locked in. The sound design is so crisp youโll flinch at every ping and explosion (Oscar buzz was real). If youโre someone who likes their war movies knuckle-whitening and their heroes quietly heroic, Greyhound is a must-watch this week.
2. AโฏCharlieโฏBrownโฏChristmas (1965)

Youโve probably watched this at least a dozen times, but it never loses its charm. Charlie Brown is wringing his hands over the commercialization of the holidaysโagainโand chooses a sad little tree over tinsel and lights. Itโs simple, sweet, and oddly comforting, like catching up with an old friend.
What makes it special is how it wades into deeper themesโcommercialism, self-doubt, and the meaning of the seasonโwithout feeling preachy. Linus dropping the Gospel by the tree is one of the most iconic moments in TV history. Plus, that Vince Guaraldi score? Instant nostalgia.
Itโs shortโunder 30 minutesโso itโs easy to squeeze in between errands or baking. If your week needs a little heart and humility, this stop-motion gem delivers. Sometimes, you just want to be reminded of the simple magic of Christmas lights and a sincere lesson.
3. AโฏCharlieโฏBrownโฏThanksgiving (1973)

Peppermint Patty decides to host Thanksgiving soloโฆ at Charlie Brownโs house. Cue a dinner of toast, jelly beans, and popcornโsounds awful, right? But Linus, Snoopy, and Woodstock swoop in with actual food, turning a flop into a full feast. Itโs goofy, sweet, and totally Peanuts.
The vibe here is pure comfort: friends bickering, small mishaps, and a lastโminute rescue that feels like a warm blanket. Sure, itโs not gourmet, but it hits the heart with equal parts chaos and calm. This oneโs less existential than the Christmas special, but still deep enough to remind you what holidays are for.
If you want a half-hour of wholesome laughs and easy feels, this is your ticket. Itโs the kind of thing you can roll right back into, like an old favorite sweater thatโs just right. Perfect mid-week wind-down.
4. Echo Valley (2025)

Julianne Moore brings the heatโand the heartbreakโin this dark, emotional thriller. She plays Kate, whose life is derailed when her bloodโsoaked daughter, Claire (Sydney Sweeney), shows up claiming to have been in an accident. Mother and daughter bury a body, and from there itโs a spiral of secrets, suspicion, and psychological tug-of-war.
Itโs tense, quiet, and full of that โwhat just happened?โ feeling you get in your chest. Moore and Sweeney crackle off each other, delivering performances that are equal parts unsettling and empathetic. Think less action, more emotional anxiety, like your heart is a trampoline bouncing between their eyes.
If youโre in the mood for something that grips you with mood and mysteryโnot explosions or chase scenesโthis is a smart dive into family, guilt, and loyalty. Itโs the kind of thriller that sticks with you long after it ends. Highly recommended for a night-in that isn’t looking to wimp out.
5. The Gorge (2025)

This oneโs a weird mixโsci-fi, romance, and sniper thriller all mashed together. Miles Teller and Anya Taylor-Joy play elite snipers from rival countries, stationed on opposite cliffs overlooking a gorge that seems to swallow people whole. They bond, flirt, and question their purpose while guarding against a looming, supernatural threat.
Itโs romantic without being full-on Cupid, and frightening without going full-on monster movie. The slow-burn vibe lets you lean into Teller and TaylorโJoyโs chemistry, while the gorge itself becomes a characterโominous, mysterious, and full of tension. Visually, itโs a beauty: fogโchoked cliffs, choked silences, sudden bursts of danger.
It isnโt perfectโsome moments drag, some questions linger unansweredโbut if you’re up for something off-kilter that flirts with genres, The Gorge is a fresh, moody pick. Ideal for when you’re in the mood for lovesick snipers and eerie vibes.
6. Luck (2022)

If youโve ever felt like the universe had it out for you, Luck is here to commiserate. Sam Greenfield is the unluckiest person aliveโuntil she stumbles into the Land of Luck, where black cats run security and four-leaf clovers power a city the size of Tokyo. Itโs colorful, zippy, and surprisingly thoughtful for a kidโs movie.
Eva Noblezada voices Sam with just the right mix of pluck and panic, while Simon Pegg (as a Scottish leprechaun cat named Bob) steals scenes like heโs been doing it forever. The animationโs slick, the pace rarely lags, and the whole thing feels like a sugar rush without the crash. Plus, Jane Fonda as a dragon? Iconic.
Is it groundbreaking? Not really. But itโs bright, funny, and hits its emotional beats without getting preachy. If you need a pick-me-up or something safe for all ages that still entertains the grown-ups, this is an easy win.
7. The Family Plan (2023)

Mark Wahlberg, Michelle Monaghan, and a minivan full of chaosโThe Family Plan is the kind of movie that starts with suburban dad vibes and ends with body counts. Wahlberg plays a former assassin turned car dealership guy whose past kicks down the door just as heโs trying to survive PTA life. Naturally, the family gets dragged along.
Itโs part Spy Kids, part John Wick with juice boxes. Thereโs a great set piece in a Chuck E. Cheese, car chases through cul-de-sacs, and just enough heart to keep it from going full cartoon. Maggie Q shows up to deliver badass energy, and the kids arenโt annoyingโwhich, letโs be real, is rare in movies like this.
Itโs silly, itโs self-aware, and it moves like a caffeinated soccer coach. If you want action with training wheels and heart, toss this on and enjoy the ride. Just maybe donโt let your kids get any ideas.
8. Wolfs (2024)

George Clooney and Brad Pitt playing rival fixers is exactly as fun as it sounds. Wolfs pairs them up against their will when a routine cleanup turns into a full-on catastrophe. They bicker, they charm, they dodge bulletsโand somewhere in there, a murder cover-up turns into a buddy comedy with teeth.
This is Jon Watts doing what he does best: tight pacing, snappy banter, and just enough tension to make the jokes pop harder. Amy Ryan and Poorna Jagannathan round out the cast, but itโs Clooney and Pitt who bring the smirk-fueled energy. Theyโre older, scruffier, and clearly having the time of their lives.
Is it deep? Nope. Is it slick, stylish, and satisfying? Absolutely. Itโs basically Oceanโs Eleven if they ditched Vegas for a crime scene and got stuck working together. Youโll laugh, youโll wince, youโll want more.
9. The Instigators (2024)

What do you get when Matt Damon and Casey Affleck try to rob a corrupt politician and everything goes sideways? The Instigators. Itโs a Boston-flavored heist movie that turns into a manhunt, a buddy road trip, and a therapy session all at once.
Doug Liman directs with chaotic energy, throwing Damon and Affleck into escalating trouble with a growing cast of angry cops, sketchy criminals, and one very confused therapist. The cast is stackedโHong Chau, Ving Rhames, Toby Jones, even Jack Harlow (yep). The plotโs a mess, but thatโs kind of the point. Itโs not about the heist, itโs about surviving the fallout.
It doesnโt always land, but itโs scrappy, fast, and full of personality. If youโre into Boston accents, brotherly dysfunction, and the kind of crime comedy that embraces the chaos, this oneโs worth your time. Just buckle upโitโs a bumpy ride.
10. Fountain of Youth (2025)

John Krasinski and Natalie Portman go full treasure-hunting siblings in Fountain of Youth, and yes, itโs giving National Treasure with a touch of Indiana Jones flair. The pair play estranged siblings reunited by their late archaeologist fatherโs clues pointing to the real-life Fountainโand naturally, danger, double-crosses, and global flights ensue.
Directed by Guy Ritchie (yep, that Guy Ritchie), the movie zips through riddles, booby traps, and villain monologues at a breakneck pace. Domhnall Gleeson and Stanley Tucci add some class and chaos, while Eiza Gonzรกlez keeps things stylish. The stakes are big, the puzzles are clever, and the vibe is pure popcorn.
Itโs not rewriting the genre, and critics havenโt exactly been kindโbut if you want high-stakes adventure with pretty people running through ruins, this one checks the boxes. Itโs fun, dumb, and shiny in the best possible way. Just donโt think too hard.
And Thatโs a Wrap
There you have itโten Apple TV picks that hit just about every mood. Youโve got emotional gut-punches (Echo Valley), all-out action (Greyhound, The Family Plan), and a few genre mashups that arenโt afraid to get weird (The Gorge, The Instigators). Whether you want high-stakes chaos or just some animated luck on your side, thereโs something here worth a click.
Thereโs nostalgic comfort (A Charlie Brown Christmas, Thanksgiving), sleek star-powered showdowns (Wolfs), and treasure-hunting thrills that donโt take themselves too seriously (Fountain of Youth). A couple of these are critical darlings. A few are glorified guilty pleasures. All of them? Stream-worthy.
So if your Apple TV lineup’s been feeling a little stale, nowโs the time to mix it up. Grab a snack, hit play, and let the binge begin.
