Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Netflix | June 29-July 5, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Netflix, 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. KPop Demon Hunters (2025)

This oneโs pure genre candyโand weirdly heartfelt. KPop Demon Hunters follows HUNTR/X, a fierce K-pop girl group by day, secret demon-slaying warriors by night. The twist? One of them, Rumi, finds out sheโs part-demon herself, just as their supernatural enemies return with a vengeance. What unfolds is a music-fueled, anime-inspired spectacle with stadium-sized fight scenes and earworm tracks.
Visually, itโs stunningโneon-soaked cyberpunk collides with slick choreography and full-on fantasy mayhem. Think Scott Pilgrim meets Sailor Moon, with a heavy K-pop aesthetic and a surprisingly emotional core. Bryce Shogunโs score slaps, and the voice work (especially Arden Cho and Ji-young Yoo) gives the characters real spark. Itโs loud, weird, and wildly original.
Youโll laugh, tear up, and probably rewatch the final number more than once. If youโve ever wanted your pop concerts with a side of demon-slicing, this is your moment.
2. Plankton: The Movie (2025)

Yes, Plankton got his own movieโand somehow, it kind of works. In this offbeat SpongeBob spin-off, the villainous Plankton gets the spotlight as he navigates a relationship crisis with Karen, his sentient computer wife. Oh, and she might be taking over the world while heโs having a mid-life crustacean crisis.
The toneโs pure chaos: a musical comedy that zips between jokes about love, power, and fast food espionage. Itโs loaded with absurd one-liners, surprise cameos, and more than a few fourth-wall breaks. Mr. Lawrence returns as Plankton, and the energy is unhinged in the best way. Itโs not high artโbut itโs never trying to be.
If you loved Minions or The Lego Batman Movie, youโll find something to enjoy here. Just donโt overthink it. The soundtrack slaps and the jokes are fast.
3. Rebel Ridge (2023)

Aaron Pierre goes full feral in this tight, brutal thriller from Jeremy Saulnier. Rebel Ridge drops you into the American South and never lets up. Pierre plays an ex-Marine who gets caught up in a small-town conspiracy after a violent police raid goes sideways. What follows is part manhunt, part political pressure cooker.
Thereโs no clean resolution hereโjust layers of corruption and backwoods paranoia that keep ramping up. Saulnier (Green Room, Blue Ruin) knows how to shoot tension, and this oneโs packed with chases, standoffs, and explosive moments that feel earned. Pierre’s performance is fierce and physical, but grounded by real rage.
Itโs not just about the violenceโitโs about the system, and what happens when someone refuses to play by its rules. If you want your thrillers raw and relevant, this oneโs a must.
4. Carry-On (2023)

This one came out of nowhereโand now itโs everywhere. Carry-On takes a wildly surreal idea (luggage that stores peopleโs emotional baggage, literally) and spins it into an oddly touching dramedy. Set mostly on a cross-country flight, itโs part road movie, part midlife crisis with wings.
The toneโs whimsical but sharp. Thereโs social commentary, romance, even a little existential dread, all packed neatly into the overhead bin. Gus Van Sant directs with a light touch, and the writing balances absurdity with sincerity. Itโs a bizarre movieโbut one that totally commits to its weird premise.
Youโll laugh, think, and maybe cry a little if youโve ever felt stuck in your own personal terminal. This oneโs not for everyoneโbut if it lands, it really lands.
5. Despicable Me 4 (2024)

Gru is back, the girls are older, and the Minions are still causing absolute chaos. Despicable Me 4 doesnโt reinvent the wheelโit just makes it spin faster and louder. This time around, Gru faces off against a villain who wants to rob the world of its joy (yes, literally), so naturally, the mission involves gadgets, globetrotting, and banana-fueled nonsense.
Steve Carell remains the heart of it all, and the family dynamics still hit those sweet, silly notes. Thereโs a surprising subplot about fatherhood and legacy that gives the mayhem some weight. But make no mistake: this is a Minion vehicle, and theyโre going full throttle.
If youโve got kidsโor just need some uncomplicated joyโthis oneโs an easy win. Itโs funny, itโs fast, and it knows exactly who itโs entertaining.
6. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023)

This isnโt just a sequelโitโs an evolution. Across the Spider-Verse takes everything that made the first film iconic and cranks it up to 11. Miles Morales is back, and this time heโs navigating the web of the multiverse while facing a new villain (The Spot) and some serious existential crises.
The animation is next-levelโeach universe has its own visual style, which makes the whole thing feel like a comic book fever dream. Hailee Steinfeldโs Gwen Stacy gets more screen time, and her arc is one of the emotional anchors. The voice cast is stacked, the Easter eggs are endless, and the soundtrack slaps. But itโs not just vibesโitโs deep, thoughtful, and full of hard choices.
It ends on a major cliffhanger, but donโt let that stop you. This is one of those films that reminds you why animation isnโt just for kidsโitโs for anyone who loves great storytelling.
7. Godzilla Minus One (2023)

This is not your typical monster mash. Godzilla Minus One throws you into post-war Japan and builds real, emotional stakes before the big lizard even shows up. Director Takashi Yamazaki delivers a kaiju film thatโs part national reckoning, part survival drama, and all heartbreak.
The human story is front and centerโRyunosuke Kamiki plays a former kamikaze pilot wracked with guilt, caught in the fallout of yet another catastrophe. When Godzilla rises from the sea, itโs not just destructionโitโs metaphor. The monsterโs scenes are terrifying, with a new design that makes him feel ancient, unstoppable, and weirdly sad.
Itโs beautiful, brutal, and one of the best Godzilla films in decades. If you thought you knew what a kaiju movie could be, think again.
8. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023)

This oneโs just pure fun. Honor Among Thieves takes all the chaos of a D&D game nightโbad plans, bickering teammates, last-minute miraclesโand turns it into a slick, surprisingly heartfelt fantasy adventure. Chris Pine leads a lovable band of misfits trying to pull off a heist with swords and sorcery.
Michelle Rodriguez is the muscle. Justice Smith fumbles through spells. Regรฉ-Jean Page steals scenes with dry charisma. Thereโs a pudgy dragon, a shapeshifting druid, and a maze fight that feels like something out of a video game boss level. Itโs goofy but never stupid, emotional without being sappy.
You donโt need to know anything about the game to enjoy itโit just wants you to have a good time. And honestly? Mission accomplished.
9. Venom: The Last Dance (2024)

Tom Hardyโs still talking to himselfโand weโre still here for it. Venom: The Last Dance closes out the trilogy with more gooey chaos, more internal arguing, and some surprisingly sharp emotional beats. This time, Venom and Eddie team up with the symbiote offspring Toxin to stop a threat even they canโt handle alone.
Thereโs body horror. Thereโs symbiote lore. Thereโs a lot of yelling. Hardy is all-in as always, and the film doubles down on its weird, codependent buddy-cop energy. Critics were mixed, but fans? Fans are eating it up like chocolate brains.
Itโs not elegant, but itโs entertaining. And if youโve stuck with the franchise this long, you already know thatโs kind of the whole point.
10. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024)

Anya Taylor-Joy steps into Charlize Theronโs bootsโand absolutely owns them. Furiosa is a prequel to Fury Road, but itโs got its own brutal rhythm. It tells the story of how Furiosa became the warrior we met in that war rig, with Chris Hemsworth chewing scenery as her deranged captor, Dementus.
The stunts are still practical, still jaw-dropping, and still dusty as hell. George Miller hasnโt lost a stepโif anything, heโs gotten weirder (in the best way). The film is structured like a survival saga, unfolding in chapters that feel more mythic than cinematic. Itโs violent, yes, but also deeply human.
If you love Fury Road, this is a must-watch. If youโve never seen a Mad Max movie, buckle up. Itโs one hell of a ride.
And Thatโs a Wrap
There it isโten Netflix picks to keep your watchlist stacked. Youโve got big-budget animation (Spider-Verse, KPop Demon Hunters), wild genre swings (Furiosa, Rebel Ridge), and the kind of weird, offbeat gems (Carry-On, Plankton: The Movie) you only find when Netflix is feeling extra. Whether you’re in the mood to laugh, cry, or watch a Minion sing karaoke, thereโs something here for you.
Thereโs world-ending chaos (Godzilla Minus One, Venom), world-saving heroes (Honor Among Thieves), and a few deeply human stories hiding behind all the spectacle. Some of these are straight-up fun. Some hit surprisingly hard. And a few are so strange youโll be thinking about them for days.
So if your Netflix queueโs been feeling a little stale, this list just brought it back to life. Pop the popcorn. Hit play. Let chaos (and a few emotions) unfold.
