Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Paramount Plus | June 15-21, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Paramount 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 15-21, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Call Me by Your Name (2017)

Thereโs summer romance, and then thereโs Call Me by Your Name. Luca Guadagninoโs sun-drenched, peach-sweet tale of longing drops you into northern Italy circa 1983, where 17-year-old Elio (Timothรฉe Chalamet) spends his days reading, swimming, and flirting with every feeling he doesnโt quite know how to nameโuntil Oliver (Armie Hammer) shows up.
Oliver is older, a visiting grad student. Their connection starts with side-eyes and casual jabs, but it deepens into something electric and heartbreaking. Chalamet, in the role that made him a star, is all nerves and brilliance, capturing the ache of wanting something you donโt know how to ask for. And the final shot? Devastating.
If youโve ever been young and confused and wildly, messily in love, this one will wreck you. In the best way.
No Country for Old Men (2007)

This one doesnโt just walkโit stalks. No Country for Old Men is the Coen brothers at their most stripped-down and brutal, adapting Cormac McCarthyโs novel into a modern western where the only real law is chaos.
Josh Brolin plays a hunter who finds a briefcase of cartel money and decides to keep it. Bad idea. Enter Javier Bardemโs Anton Chigurhโa soft-spoken psychopath with a weird haircut and a coin-flipping sense of morality. Tommy Lee Jones rounds it out as the weary sheriff trying to make sense of the violence spiraling around him.
Itโs quiet. Itโs cold. And it never gives you the catharsis you think is coming. Just dread, dust, and questions that stick to your ribs.
Rosemaryโs Baby (1968)

If youโve ever felt like the whole world was gaslighting you, this one hits hard. Rosemaryโs Baby is horror without jump scaresโit gets under your skin with slow-building dread and paranoia that never lets up.
Mia Farrow is heartbreaking as Rosemary, a newlywed who moves into a swanky but creepy NYC apartment with her husband and gets pregnant. But somethingโs off. The neighbors are too friendly. Her doctor brushes off her pain. And her husband? Yeah, donโt get us started.
By the time you realize whatโs happening, itโs already too late. Itโs terrifying because itโs quiet, plausible, and deeply personal. Horror, yesโbut also a brutal metaphor for not being believed.
Whiplash (2014)

This is not a feel-good movie about following your dreams. Whiplash is a fever dream about chasing greatness until it bleedsโand it slaps (literally).
Miles Teller plays a jazz drummer who wants to be one of the greats. J.K. Simmons plays his instructorโa man who believes abuse is just another teaching tool. Their dynamic? Explosive. Dangerous. Addictive. Every scene crackles with tension, and the music pounds like a heartbeat about to burst.
Itโs about ambition, control, sacrifice, and what happens when you pour everything into a dream that might not love you back. Buckle up. It gets loud.
Michael Clayton (2007)

George Clooneyโs never been coolerโor more haunted. Michael Clayton is a slow-burn legal thriller with the soul of a character study, and Clooney wears the title role like a second skin: slick on the outside, crumbling inside.
Heโs a fixer for a high-powered law firm. Think clean-ups, cover-ups, hush-hush phone calls at 3 a.m. But when one of the firmโs top attorneys loses it mid-caseโwhile defending a shady agrochemical giantโClayton gets dragged into a moral tug-of-war he canโt just talk his way out of.
Itโs sharp. Itโs smart. And Tilda Swinton, in a performance that earned her an Oscar, steals every scene sheโs in. If you like your dramas lean, mean, and quietly devastating, this is your pick.
Beverly Hills Cop (1984)

Eddie Murphy could charm a brick wall, and Beverly Hills Cop is him at peak charisma. He plays Axel Foley, a street-smart Detroit cop who rolls into Beverly Hills to solve his best friendโs murderโand instantly throws the polished local precinct into chaos.
Itโs a buddy-cop comedy that actually works. Thereโs action, yes, but the real juice is watching Axel troll his way through snobby SoCal, cracking jokes and breaking rules with style. The synth soundtrack? Iconic. The banana-in-the-tailpipe scene? Classic.
If you want something fast, funny, and way cooler than it has any right to be, this one still slaps after all these years.
Console Wars (2020)

This oneโs for the โ90s kidsโand the marketing nerds. Console Wars is a high-energy documentary that takes you behind the scenes of the original video game showdown: Sega vs. Nintendo. Back when Mario was king and Sonic was the cocky new kid with attitude.
Itโs got the underdog energy of a sports movie and the pacing of a tech thriller. You meet the suits who made the decisions, the ad wizards who cooked up โGenesis does what Nintendo doesnโt,โ and the execs who risked everything to shake up an entire industry.
If you grew up button-mashing through 16-bit worlds or you just love a good David vs. Goliath story, this oneโs pure nostalgia with a pulse.
The Social Network (2010)

You donโt get to 500 million friends without making a few enemiesโremember that tagline? The Social Network isnโt just about Facebook. Itโs about ego, betrayal, and what happens when a smart kid builds something massive without realizing the cost.
Jesse Eisenberg plays Mark Zuckerberg like a robot running on caffeine and spite. Andrew Garfield breaks your heart as the friend left behind. And Aaron Sorkinโs script? Every line is razor-sharp. David Fincher directs like itโs a thriller, and honestly, it kind of is.
This is the rare โtech movieโ that still feels vital. Itโs not about code. Itโs about power. And what you lose chasing it.
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)

This oneโs old-school in the best way. John Fordโs The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is a Western thatโs less about guns and more about truthโand the myths we build to survive it.
Jimmy Stewart plays the city-slicker lawyer. John Wayne is the gruff gunslinger. Together, they face off against Liberty Valance, a thug who rules with fear. But what really sticks is the twisty story that unfolds in hindsightโwho really pulled the trigger, and why that version of the story matters.
If you like your Westerns with moral ambiguity and emotional weight, this is the blueprint. Come for the showdown, stay for the existential crisis.
Past Lives (2023)

This oneโs quiet, but itโll stay with you. Past Lives follows Nora and Hae Sung, childhood friends separated when Noraโs family leaves South Korea. Twenty years later, they reconnect in New York, and itโs… complicated.
Thereโs no screaming match. No dramatic kiss in the rain. Just a tender, aching look at love, timing, and the lives we donโt get to live. Greta Lee and Teo Yoo give performances so grounded, you forget youโre watching a movie.
Itโs about fate. Regret. And the haunting idea that some people are part of your story, even if theyโre not in your ending. If you need a good cryโor a quiet night of reflectionโthis oneโs waiting.
And Thatโs a Wrap
So thatโs your Paramount Plus playlistโten films that donโt just pass the time, they leave a mark. Whether itโs a summer romance that burns slow (Call Me by Your Name), a jazz showdown that hits like a punch (Whiplash), or a Western that rewrites its own legend (Liberty Valance), every one of these stories has some real staying power.
Youโve got existential dread (No Country for Old Men), courtroom crises (Michael Clayton), pixelated nostalgia (Console Wars), and love that spans decades (Past Lives). Some are loud. Some are intimate. All of them make you feel somethingโand honestly, isnโt that the point?
If your watchlistโs been a little dusty, hereโs your sign to mix it up. Choose something new. Revisit a classic. Hit play on something that lingers after the credits.
