Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Hulu | June 1-7, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Hulu, 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 1-7, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Lee (2023)

Kate Winslet plays a war photographer who walked away from the fashion world and straight into WWIIโand no, this isnโt your usual Oscar-bait biopic. Lee is raw, stylish, and deeply personal. It follows Lee Miller, who went from modeling for Vogue to documenting the horrors of war, and Winslet doesnโt hold back for a second. Sheโs fierce, messy, traumatized, and completely magnetic.
The film isnโt just about historyโitโs about who gets to tell it. Thereโs a sharpness to the way it tackles power, image, and what it costs to witness violence up close. Add in a killer supporting cast (hello, Marion Cotillard and Josh OโConnor), and you’ve got something that feels way more alive than most โimportantโ period dramas. Plus, it looks incredibleโlike vintage Vogue collided with a war zone.
Winslet also helped finance the shoot herself when money ran out. If youโre into war stories with a womanโs point of view, or just want to watch a legendary actress absolutely eat, Lee is it.
Exhibiting Forgiveness (2024)

This one hits like a gut punch in slow motion. Itโs about a successful artistโplayed with quiet power by Andrรฉ Hollandโwhoโs pulled back into old pain when his estranged dad reappears, years into recovery. Theyโre both trying. Theyโre both failing. And the film just sits in that tension.
Directed by real-life visual artist Titus Kaphar, it feels more like an open wound than a movie. Itโs about trauma, yes, but also about creativity, faith, and what it actually takes to forgive someone who hurt youโespecially when they want a relationship but not accountability. The father-son dynamic is raw, and the way itโs framedโvisually and emotionallyโfeels deeply personal.
Itโs not loud or flashy. Itโs not trying to explain itself. But itโs doing something honest. And if youโve ever had complicated family stuff (so, all of us), itโll find you.
Humane (2024)

Imagine if climate collapse got so bad the government started asking people to volunteer for โpopulation reduction.โ Now imagine your dad signs up, and your whole family gets together for one last dinner… and someone doesnโt make it out alive.
Thatโs the setup for Humane, and itโs tense from the jump. The whole thing takes place in one day, mostly in one house, and itโs just this slow boil of guilt, dread, and sibling chaos. Jay Baruchel and Emily Hampshire lead the cast, and everyoneโs got a secret, a grudge, or both.
Itโs the kind of story where every line feels like a ticking bomb. The future it imagines isnโt sci-fiโitโs barely fiction. Director Caitlin Cronenberg (yes, from that Cronenberg family) brings that off-kilter, skin-crawling unease her dadโs famous for, but gives it a real human core. Itโs dark, sharp, and unsettling in all the right ways.
Summering (2022)

This oneโs got big end-of-summer energyโthe kind where youโre still a kid, but you can feel the grown-up world creeping in. Four girls are hanging out in their small town before school starts again, trying to hold on to that last bit of childhood. Then they find a dead body in the woods.
Yeah, it sounds like Stand by Me, but itโs slower, softer, and more about the feelings than the mystery. Director James Ponsoldt (who made The Spectacular Now) gives it this hazy, sunlit vibe thatโs totally nostalgic without being fake-sweet. The friendship feels real. So do the fears, and the awkwardness, and the way they start to see the world differently by the end.
Itโs not a movie that shouts. It lingers. If youโre in the mood for something low-key, heartfelt, and full of that quiet ache of growing upโthis oneโs a sleeper.
The Cave (2019)

This one doesnโt ease you inโit drops you straight into hell. The Cave is technically a documentary, but it feels more like a warzone survival story. It follows Dr. Amani Ballour, a pediatrician running an underground hospital in Syria, doing everything she can to keep people alive while the world above her literally collapses.
Bombs are falling. Kids are screaming. Supplies are running out. And on top of that, sheโs constantly battling dudes who think she shouldnโt be in charge because sheโs a woman. Itโs tense, itโs raw, and it doesnโt let up. Thereโs no voiceover, no sugarcoatingโjust her steady, exhausted voice and the sound of chaos closing in.
Itโs not an easy watch, but itโs powerful. The kind of film that gets under your skin and stays there. If you want something realโand I mean realโput this on. Just maybe not on a casual Tuesday night.
Hold Your Breath (2024)

This oneโs got that slow-creep kind of horror that messes with your head more than your eyes. Set during the Dust Bowl (yep, that one), Hold Your Breath follows a mother trying to keep her family together while the world outside turns to ashโand something else seems to be creeping in with the dust.
Sarah Paulson leads, and as always, sheโs magnetic. You watch her try to stay sane while everything gets more and more off. Dust clouds roll in, weird sounds start echoing, and pretty soon, youโre not sure if itโs environmental collapse or something supernaturalโor both. Itโs bleak, eerie, and grounded in real history, which makes it hit harder.
This isnโt a jump-scare fest. Itโs psychological horror with dirty fingernails. If you liked The Witch or The Others, or just want to feel deeply unsettled by wind and silence, give it a shot.
Breaking (2022)

This one flew under the radar, but it shouldnโt have. Breaking is based on a real storyโBrian Brown-Easley, a Marine veteran who got screwed over by the VA and ended up taking a bank hostage when he couldnโt get help. Itโs not a thriller, though. Itโs a heartbreak in slow motion.
John Boyega is phenomenal. He gives Brian this quiet desperation that never feels overplayed. Heโs not out for money or fameโhe just wants someone to listen. And Michael K. Williams (in one of his last roles) brings this gentle, worn-out gravity that makes every scene feel like a punch to the chest.
This is one of those films that makes you angry in all the right ways. Itโs tight, tense, and painfully human. If you want a movie that sticks with you after the credits rollโthis is it.
Babes (2024)

If youโre looking for something that actually understands how messy and hilarious adult friendships can beโBabes nails it. Ilana Glazer stars as Eden, who finds out sheโs pregnant after a one-night stand, and leans hard on her lifelong best friend (Michelle Buteau) to help her figure out how the hell to do this.
Itโs loud, honest, super funny, and somehow still deeply sweet without getting cheesy. Think Broad City with a baby on the way. There’s sex jokes, panic attacks, weird birth classes, and lots of moments thatโll make you want to text your best friend just to say โthanks for putting up with my chaos.โ
Itโs not just a comedy about pregnancyโitโs about friendship, identity shifts, and the weird grief that comes with growing up. But yeah, itโs also really funny.
The Lady Bird Diaries (2024)

Okay, history nerds, this oneโs for you. But alsoโif youโre not into political documentaries, The Lady Bird Diaries might surprise you. Itโs based on the actual audio diaries Lady Bird Johnson kept during her time in the White House, and hearing it all in her own voice? Weirdly powerful.
Sheโs smart, sharp, and way more involved than people gave her credit for. The film uses her wordsโpaired with archival footageโto reframe that era through her eyes, and suddenly youโre seeing the civil rights movement, Vietnam, and even Lyndonโs mess of a presidency in a totally different light.
Itโs quiet, thoughtful, and kind of radical in its own way. If youโve ever wondered what itโs like to be the smartest person in the room but told to smile and decorateโLady Birdโs got a few things to say about that.
In The Summers (2024)

This oneโs quiet, personal, and just… tender. In the Summers is about two sisters who spend their childhood summers with their dad in New Mexicoโheโs unpredictable, kind of a mess, and clearly trying, even when heโs not getting it right.
The story doesnโt do big drama. It just watchesโthe way families drift, reconnect, hurt each other without meaning to. And the way those summer trips start to mean different things as the girls get older. It’s shot beautifully, with all this warm desert light and space to breathe.
It feels like memory: a little blurred around the edges, full of love and regret. If you liked Moonlight or The Florida Project, this might be up your alley. Itโs not trying to impress youโitโs just telling the truth, gently.
Wrap Up
Thereโs no theme this week except: donโt waste your time. Whether youโre in the mood to be gutted (Exhibiting Forgiveness, Breaking), disturbed (Hold Your Breath, Humane), or quietly wrecked by childhood nostalgia (Summering, In the Summers), thereโs something here with actual weight. Real emotion. Real tension. Real humanity.
These arenโt background-noise movies. Theyโre the kind you sit with. The kind that leave you thinking long after the credits. A war photographer who refuses to be forgotten (Lee). A pediatrician holding it all together under falling bombs (The Cave). A presidentโs wife reclaiming her voice in history (The Lady Bird Diaries). A pregnant bestie just trying to figure it out without losing herself (Babes). They all have something to sayโand they say it loud, or quiet, or just… perfectly.
So whether you’re queuing up a doc thatโll shake your worldview or a friendship comedy that feels like therapy in joke form, this list has range. Substance and vibes. Pick one. Let it hit. And if something on this list floors you, come back and tell us. You know we love that.
