Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on HBO Max | June 22-28, 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 22-28, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Surviving Ohio State (2025)

This oneโs not easy to watchโand thatโs the point. Surviving Ohio State dives headfirst into one of the largest sexual abuse scandals in U.S. sports history. Over 170 former students allege abuse by Dr. Richard Strauss during his decades at the university, and this documentary gives them the microphone they never had.
Itโs not just about the crimesโitโs about the silence. The culture of denial. The systems that looked the other way. Youโll hear from former athletes, including UFC legend Mark Coleman, and see just how long justice has been delayed. Thereโs anger, heartbreak, and a quiet kind of strength that builds across every interview.
If you think youโve already heard this storyโyou havenโt. Not like this. This one lingers.
Cleaner (2025)

If Die Hard had a sister, itโd be Cleaner. Daisy Ridley stars as a window cleanerโyes, reallyโwho ends up 50 stories in the air when a corporate gala is taken hostage by radical activists. And oh yeah, her little brother is inside.
What follows is classic action chaos: climbing, dodging bullets, outsmarting bad guys with only a harness and sheer nerve. Ridley sells every beat. Sheโs intense, scrappy, and surprisingly funny under pressure. The filmโs got that old-school, single-location tension you donโt see much anymore.
Is it a little ridiculous? For sure. But it also totally works. Youโll have a blast.
The Hunger Games (2012)

The one that started the revolutionโboth in Panem and at the box office. The Hunger Games took a grim, dystopian world and turned it into a cultural moment. Jennifer Lawrenceโs Katniss Everdeen? Instantly iconic.
Set in a future where teens fight to the death on live TV, the story somehow balances survival horror with coming-of-age urgency. The Capitol is pure spectacle, the games are brutal, and the themes hit harder than most โYAโ fare dares to go. Itโs bleak, sureโbut thereโs hope in every arrow Katniss fires.
Rewatching it now, the tension still holds. The world-building still slaps. And the message? Still painfully relevant.
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013)

Catching Fire isnโt just a good sequelโitโs a game-changer. This time, the stakes go way beyond survival. Katniss and Peeta are now reluctant symbols of rebellion, and the Capitol is pissed.
What follows is a new Hunger Games, a new set of rules, and a lot more fire. The arenaโs deadlier. The politics are messier. And Jennifer Lawrence levels up with every scene. The introduction of Johanna, Finnick, and that clock arena? Unforgettable. Plus, the fashion in this one deserves its own award.
Itโs bigger, smarter, and sets up the next two movies perfectly. Probably the best of the bunch.
Mockingjay โ Part 1 (2014)

The Games are overโbut the real warโs just beginning. Mockingjay โ Part 1 dials down the action and turns up the psychological warfare. Katniss is now the face of a revolution she barely understands, and everyone wants to use her.
The pacing slows a bit here, but the emotional weight picks up. You feel the trauma. The manipulation. The rage simmering under Katnissโs surface. This is the chess game before the battleโand itโs compelling in a completely different way. Also: that haunting โHanging Treeโ scene? Still chills.
Itโs more political thriller than action movie, but donโt sleep on it. Itโs the setup that makes the finale hit.
Mockingjay โ Part 2 (2015)

This is itโthe end of the rebellion, the Capitol, and the girl on fire. Mockingjay โ Part 2 brings everything to a head, with Katniss leading a full-on assault into Snowโs territory. But this isnโt your typical action finale. Itโs darker. Messier. And way more personal than you might expect.
There are traps, deaths, betrayalsโand one heartbreaking twist you donโt see coming. The emotional stakes are brutal. The action? Gritty and claustrophobic. And Lawrence, once again, absolutely owns every scene. Itโs not a victory march. Itโs a reckoning.
If you made it this far in the series, you owe it to yourself to finish it. Just donโt expect a fairytale ending.
Spaceballs (1987)

Thereโs parody. And then thereโs Spaceballs. Mel Brooks takes aim at Star Wars, Star Trek, and every sci-fi clichรฉ in the bookโand the result is a glorious, chaotic mess of a comedy that somehow still works nearly 40 years later.
Rick Moranis is perfect as Lord Dark Helmet. John Candy is a delight as Barf. And the jokes? Relentless. Some are genius, some are groan-worthy, but they all hit with that goofy, โ80s energy that doesnโt take itself too seriously. Plus, it gave us one of the best fake merchandise scenes in movie history.
If youโve never seen it, youโre overdue. If you have? Itโs still funny. May the Schwartz be with you.
The Alto Knights (2025)

Two mob legends. One city. Zero trust. The Alto Knights tells the story of Frank Costello and Vito Genoveseโonce allies, now enemies in a war for control of New Yorkโs criminal underworld. Robert De Niro plays both roles, and honestly, thatโs half the reason to watch.
The other half? Classic gangster drama. Betrayals, body counts, smoky backrooms, and simmering vendettas. Itโs not The Godfatherโdonโt expect that level of elegance. But it does hit the beats you want from a mob movie: power, ego, downfall. De Niro chewing scenery as two different men is just icing.
If youโre a sucker for old-school crime stories, this one scratches the itch.
Bullet Train (2022)

A bunch of assassins, one speeding train, and more chaos than you can trackโthatโs Bullet Train. Brad Pitt plays Ladybug, a reluctant hitman with the worst luck imaginable. He just wants a peaceful job. Instead, he gets caught in a web of revenge, stolen briefcases, and very stylish violence.
The movie is fast, ridiculous, and has a wicked sense of humor. Every assassin has their own backstory, vibe, and weapon of choice. Brian Tyree Henry and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the โtwinโ killers are comedy gold. And the fight scenes? Choreographed like anime come to life.
Itโs a blast. Donโt overthink itโjust hang on and enjoy the ride.
Singinโ in the Rain (1952)

Letโs end with a classic. Singinโ in the Rain isnโt just a great musicalโitโs the musical. Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds, and Donald OโConnor dance through the awkward transition from silent films to talkies, and every number is an absolute banger.
The energy is electric. The colors pop. The humor still lands. And that title scene? Iconic doesnโt even begin to cover it. Itโs movie magic in its purest formโjoyful, theatrical, and impossibly charming.
Whether youโre a die-hard musical fan or just curious why this movie shows up on every โBest Ofโ list ever made, give it a spin. Youโll leave smiling.
And Thatโs a Wrap
There it isโten HBO Max picks that bring a little bit of everything. Youโve got real-world reckoning (Surviving Ohio State), big-budget rebellion (The Hunger Games saga), bullet-fueled chaos (Bullet Train), and even a little old-Hollywood charm (Singinโ in the Rain).
Whether youโre in the mood for survival, satire, shootouts, or show tunes, this weekโs lineup doesnโt disappoint. Some movies will make you think. Some will make you laugh. A few might hit harder than expected.
So if your queueโs been looking thin, or youโre just tired of endless scrolling, this listโs got you. Hit play and let it rip.
