Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Disney Plus | June 22-28, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Disney Plus, 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 22-28, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Lilo & Stitch (2002)

This oneโs still magic. Lilo & Stitch is Disneyโs weirdest, sweetest, and most surprisingly emotional animated film from the early 2000s. Itโs about a lonely Hawaiian girl with too much heart and an alien science experiment with too much rageโand how the two of them become family. The art style is watercolor-soft, the soundtrack slaps (hello, Elvis), and the script balances real-world grief with alien chaos.
Liloโs not your typical Disney kid. Sheโs messy, emotional, and wildly relatable. Stitch is pure chaos gremlin energyโbut by the end, heโll break your heart in the best way. Itโs a story about found family, forgiveness, and what it means to belong when you donโt quite fit anywhere.
Still holds up. Still hits hard. And if youโre watching with someone for the first time, youโre luckyโyou get to see them fall in love with it.
Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch (2005)

This one flew under the radar, but itโs low-key one of the most emotional entries in the Lilo & Stitch universe. In Stitch Has a Glitch, our chaotic little blue friend starts breaking downโliterally. His alien DNA is malfunctioning, and Lilo is desperate to save him before heโs lost for good.
Itโs a direct-to-video sequel, sure, but it doesnโt feel like a cash grab. The animationโs solid, the storyโs tighter than expected, and the emotional payoff? Genuinely heavy. This is one of those โkids movie that will break adultsโ situations.
If youโve ever loved someone you couldnโt fix, this one will get you. Maybe not a classic, but definitely a sleeper gem.
Snow White (2025)

Letโs get the obvious out of the wayโyes, this new Snow White is the one thatโs been stirring up controversy since day one. But once youโre actually watching it, what stands out isnโt the casting discourseโitโs the visuals. Rachel Zegler gives a sweet, grounded performance as Snow White, while Gal Gadot brings serious fashion-villain energy as the Evil Queen. The dwarfs have been swapped out for magical forest beings, and the musical numbers feel more Broadway than bedtime story.
Directed by Marc Webb (The Amazing Spider-Man), it definitely leans theatrical. The story mostly sticks to the familiar beats, but adds a little grit and a lot of glitter. Some new songs land, others donโt. But itโs undeniably ambitious.
It wonโt be for everyone. But if youโre curiousโor just here for the spectacleโit delivers on both fronts.
Predator: Killer of Killers (2025)

This oneโs not for the kids. Predator: Killer of Killers is a bloody, beautifully animated anthology that drops the galaxyโs most feared hunter into three different timelinesโVikings, feudal Japan, and WWII. Each segment is brutal, stylish, and totally self-contained. And yeah, it absolutely rules.
Dan Trachtenberg (Prey) directs again, and he knows exactly what fans want: smart kills, eerie tension, and creative bloodshed. The animation leans adultโnot just in violence, but tone. These arenโt goofy Saturday morning cartoons. Theyโre mini horror flicks with swords, muskets, and war paint.
If you liked Castlevania or Love, Death & Robots, this oneโs in your wheelhouse. Itโs slick, savage, and surprisingly emotional in places.
Mary Poppins (1964)

Thereโs a reason this oneโs a classicโand itโs not just the dancing penguins. Mary Poppins is pure Disney magic, wrapped in a musical that somehow manages to be silly, surreal, and deeply wholesome all at once. Julie Andrews is iconic. Dick Van Dykeโs accent? Less so, but still iconic in its own weird way.
The songs stick with you. The chimney sweep scene still slaps. And thereโs a surprising amount of heart tucked in between all the sugar and whimsy. Itโs not just nostalgiaโitโs genuinely good storytelling.
If you havenโt revisited it in a while, nowโs the time. Practically perfect still holds up.
Captain America: Brave New World (2025)

Anthony Mackieโs Sam Wilson officially takes the shield, and this movie makes sure you feel the weight of itโliterally and metaphorically. Brave New World isnโt just another Cap story; itโs a politically loaded thriller with the kind of paranoia and power struggles youโd expect from a Cold War reboot. Oh, and Harrison Ford joins the MCU as General Thaddeus โRed Hulkโ Ross, which is a whole thing.
The tone leans more Winter Soldier than Endgame, but the pacingโs a little clunky. Thereโs solid action and some sharp character moments, but you can feel the weight of trying to launch Phase 5 into relevance. Mackieโs performance is solidโearnest, grounded, and deeply human.
If youโre an MCU completionist, itโs worth the watch. If youโre just here for the good stuff? You might feel the fatigue.
Elio (2025)

Pixarโs latest gem (Elio) isnโt a sequel, spin-off, or toy-turned-franchiseโitโs something new, which already feels rare. The setupโs weird and wonderful: a shy, artistic kid accidentally becomes Earthโs ambassador to an intergalactic council of aliens. No pressure, right? But it works, because Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) is such a believable little weirdo, full of fear and imagination.
The story balances cosmic-scale stakes with real emotional coreโmainly his bond with his single mom (Zoe Saldaรฑa). Itโs not quite Inside Out levels of genius, but it gets surprisingly close in spots. Visually, itโs not Pixarโs flashiest, but the world-building is quirky and rich.
Bottom line? Itโs a space movie with heart. And we need more of those.
Mufasa: The Lion King (2024)

Mufasa tells a story we didnโt know we neededโhow the original king of Pride Rock became, well, the king. Itโs a prequel framed as Rafiki telling Kiara (Simba and Nalaโs daughter) the legend of her grandfather. And like the original, this oneโs all sweeping visuals, big musical numbers, and Shakespeare-lite drama.
Aaron Pierre and Kelvin Harrison Jr. bring serious heat as young Mufasa and Scar. Beyoncรฉโs back. So is Timon, Pumbaa, and a little more soul than the 2019 Lion King had. The visuals are stunning (again), but this one has more emotion packed into the story.
If you loved the original but wanted more depth to the royal family lore, this is your jam. Just brace for some sibling betrayal.
Toy Story (1995)

This is the one that started it allโPixarโs first full-length feature, and still one of its best. Toy Story introduced a world where your favorite childhood toys had secret lives, personalities, and beef. Woody and Buzz werenโt just charactersโthey were icons. And their rivalry-turned-friendship still hits hard.
The animation might look a little dated now, but the writing? Flawless. Every joke, every emotional beat, still lands. Itโs funny, itโs tender, and itโs smarter than most adult dramas.
If you somehow havenโt seen it, fix that. If you have, rewatch it and remember why Pixar changed the game.
Coco (2017)

Thereโs a reason people still talk about Coco like it wrecked themโand itโs because it totally does, in the best way. The story follows Miguel, a kid obsessed with music in a family thatโs banned it for generations. One wrong move on Dรญa de los Muertos and boomโheโs in the Land of the Dead, trying to make things right and figure out who he really is.
The world-building is gorgeous, sureโglowing bridges, floating marigolds, and spirit animals that shimmer like neon. But what hits hardest is the emotional stuff. Family. Memory. That bittersweet pull between honoring the past and chasing your dream. And the โRemember Meโ moment? Yeah, no oneโs emotionally prepared for that scene, no matter how many times theyโve seen it.
Coco doesnโt just tug at your heartstringsโit strums them like a guitar. Watch it with your family. Or solo. Just… have tissues nearby.
