Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on HBO Max | June 15-21, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through HBO Max, 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 15-21, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Mountainhead (2025)

If Succession gave you a taste for rich people flailing in their own self-made messes, Mountainhead is the full-course meal. Jesse Armstrong is back with this sharp, biting HBO original about a group of tech billionaires who head to a luxurious mountain retreat just as one of their AI apps starts destabilizing, well… democracy.
Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef, and Cory Michael Smith play the kind of guys who think theyโre changing the world when really, theyโre just making it worse. The movie traps them together in a snowed-in house as the outside world burnsโand the backstabbing begins. Itโs dark. Itโs hilarious. And it somehow feels both completely absurd and way too real.
If The Menu and The Social Network had a babyโand that baby was deeply insecure and very onlineโitโd be Mountainhead.
aka Mr. Chow (2023)

You might know the name from the ultra-glam restaurants.ย But,ย aka Mr. Chow, peels back the curtain on the man himself, Michael Chow, and what it finds is way more layered than youโd expect.ย Heโs not just a restaurateur. Heโs a survivor, an artist, a bridge between East and West, and a man shaped by a family legacy of Beijing opera and unspeakable personal losses.
The doc gives us his story in bold strokes and quiet momentsโhis exile from China, his strained relationship with his father, the loneliness behind all the flash. And yeah, itโs still got the glitz (those restaurants are iconic), but itโs not a puff piece. Itโs a portrait of a guy who remade himself over and over and never quite shook the feeling that he didnโt belong.
If you love docs like Val or Roadrunner, this oneโs in that laneโintimate, stylish, and a little haunted.
Reality (2023)

This one doesnโt blink. Reality takes the real FBI interrogation transcript of whistleblower Reality Winnerโand lets it play out, word for word, with Sydney Sweeney delivering a performance thatโs straight-up surgical.
Itโs not a courtroom drama. Thereโs no big monologue. Itโs just a young woman sitting in her living room, flanked by agents, as her world slowly comes apart. The tension creeps up on you, not because of whatโs said, but how. The awkward pauses. The bureaucratic language. The way the truth starts to crack through.
If you thought Sweeney was just good at playing emotionally messy teens, Reality will stop you in your tracks. Itโs chilling. Itโs restrained. And itโll leave you thinking long after the last lineโs read.
The Batman (2022)

This oneโs a vibeโgothic, grimy, and soaked in rain. The Batman doesnโt try to out-Batman the Batmans that came before. Instead, it leans into noir, putting Robert Pattinson in the cowl as a younger, angrier Bruce Wayne still figuring out how to channel his demons into justice.
Heโs less of a playboy and more of a recluse in guyliner. Gothamโs rotting from the inside out. And The Riddler? More serial killer than comic book villain. Itโs gritty and grounded, but not joylessโZoe Kravitz brings real heat as Selina Kyle, and the whole thing feels like a detective thriller with capes.
If you want your Batman with more paranoia and fewer punchlines, this is your ride. Itโs less superhero movie, more Seven in a capeโand thatโs not a complaint.
Dune (2021)

Denis Villeneuve really said, โWhat if Game of Thrones, but in space… and way moodier?โ Dune is all scaleโepic, sand-swept, worm-ridden scaleโand somehow still manages to make every political betrayal and whispered prophecy feel deeply personal.
Timothรฉe Chalamet plays Paul Atreides, a space prince with weird dreams and a tragic destiny, while Zendaya floats in and out like a mirage (until she finally gets screen time in Part Two). The visuals are stunning, the score sounds like a war horn from another dimension, and yes, the giant sandworms are worth the hype.
Itโs not fast. Itโs not flashy. But itโs dense, beautiful, and exactly the kind of movie that dares you to lean in. Think Blade Runner 2049 meets Lawrence of Arabiaโwith more spice.
KIMI (2022)

Rear Window for the Alexa generation. KIMI drops Zoรซ Kravitz into a hyper-modern thriller where tech is everywhere and trust is thin. She plays Angela, an agoraphobic data analyst who reviews smart assistant recordings. One day, she hears what sounds like a violent crimeโand suddenly, her job turns into a life-or-death puzzle.
Directed by Steven Soderbergh, this oneโs tight, slick, and surprisingly tense for something that rarely leaves a single apartment. Angelaโs anxiety feels lived-in, not just a plot point, and Kravitz plays her with a kind of raw, quiet sharpness that anchors the whole thing.
If youโre into slow-burn thrillers that mess with your head more than your heartbeat, this is worth hitting โplay.โ Just maybe donโt watch it with your smart speaker on.
The Fallout (2021)

This one isnโt about the shootingโitโs about everything after. The Fallout opens in a high school bathroom, and within minutes, something unthinkable happens. But instead of turning it into a plot device, the movie zooms in on two girlsโJenna Ortega and Maddie Zieglerโas they try to figure out how to breathe again in a world that suddenly feels like it could collapse at any second.
What follows is quiet, messy, and deeply human. Ortega, especially, is phenomenalโfragile one moment, furious the next. It doesnโt offer easy answers or grand speeches. It just sits with the pain, the confusion, the occasional bursts of laughter that donโt really make sense but happen anyway.
If you liked Eighth Grade or The Edge of Seventeen, this is that vibe, but heavier. It hurts. But it matters.
Spirited Away (2001)

This isnโt just a movieโitโs a portal. Spirited Away is Studio Ghibliโs crown jewel, and even 20+ years later, it still feels like stepping into a dream you donโt want to wake up from. Chihiroโs journey into a spirit world full of gods, witches, soot sprites, and dragons isnโt just enchantingโitโs profound.
The animation is hand-drawn perfection. The score is hauntingly beautiful. And the story? It somehow juggles capitalism, identity, and childhood fear without ever losing its sense of wonder.
If youโve never seen it, nowโs the time. If you have? Watch it again. Thereโs always something new to notice in this world.
The Janes (2022)

Before Roe v. Wade, there were The Janesโa collective of women in 1970s Chicago who risked everything to provide safe, illegal abortions. This doc doesnโt sugarcoat anything. Itโs raw, urgent, and deeply rooted in personal testimony, built from interviews, archival footage, and a whole lot of righteous rage.
Whatโs wild is how calm these women are recounting what they did. No drama. Just: โIt needed to be done, so we did it.โ And when you see the scopeโ11,000 women helpedโyou start to realize how much history we forget to teach.
If Call Jane gave you the dramatized version, this is the real deal. Itโs a reminder of how fast things can slide backwardโand how much courage it takes to push forward.
Diggers (2006)

This oneโs easy to missโbut donโt. Diggers is a slice-of-life indie set in 1970s Long Island, where Paul Rudd and his buddies dig for clams while their coastal town gets eaten alive by corporate fisheries and creeping development.
Itโs not flashy. There are no big speeches. But itโs full of small, lived-in moments about working-class identity, letting go of your past, and trying to stay true to something in a world thatโs moving on without you.
Think The Station Agent or The Way Way Back, but more salty, less sweet. If youโve ever felt like your hometown was slipping through your fingers, this oneโll hit.
And Thatโs a Wrap
So thatโs your HBO Max mixโten films that donโt just entertain, they say something. Whether itโs tech bros melting down in Mountainhead, a whisper-quiet coming-of-age in The Fallout, or Studio Ghibli magic that hits you right in the chest, this lineupโs got real range.
Youโve got stories about whistleblowers (Reality), identity reinvention (aka Mr. Chow), quiet resistance (The Janes), and epic sci-fi destiny (Dune). Some are glossy. Some are scrappy. All of them are doing more than just killing time.
If your watchlist has been feeling a little safe lately, nowโs the time to shake it up. Thereโs something here for the restless, the thoughtful, the nostalgic, and the late-night scrollers who want something that lingers after the credits roll.
