Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Paramount Plus | June 29-July 5, 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 29-July 5, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
1. Gladiator II (2024)

More than two decades after Maximus made us yell โAre you not entertained?,โ Gladiator II returns us to the Roman Colosseumโthis time with Paul Mescal leading the charge. He plays Lucius Verus, now grown and exiled, forced into the arena after Rome falls into the hands of twin tyrant emperors. With Pedro Pascal bringing serious menace and Denzel Washington pulling strings from the shadows, the stakes are as bloody as they are political.
Ridley Scott doesnโt hold backโthere are rhinos, baboons, even arena sharks (yep), all rendered in gloriously over-the-top CGI. The script leans heavy on vengeance and honor, echoing the original while carving out its own path. Itโs big, bold, and occasionally bonkers.
Some fans may crave more emotional weight, but if youโre here for spectacle and sword fights, youโll get your fill. Itโs not perfect, but itโs a worthy sequel. Consider it your high-drama history fix for the week.
2. World War Z (2013)

Zombies were starting to feel a little played outโuntil World War Z dropped. Brad Pitt stars as Gerry Lane, a former UN investigator who finds himself yanked back into global chaos when a fast-spreading virus turns people into sprinting death machines. From Philadelphia to Jerusalem to a World Health Organization lab in Wales, the movie never slows down.
What sets it apart is scale. These arenโt basement-level zombie shufflesโtheyโre continent-spanning plagues, with mass pileups and panic in broad daylight. Director Marc Forster keeps the tension dialed up, and Pitt anchors it all with quiet, believable urgency.
Itโs not a gore-fest, but it is gripping. If you like your apocalypses global and your zombies terrifyingly fast, this oneโs worth a rewatch. Bonus points for that airport sceneโyouโll know it when you see it.
3. Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

Some sequels coast on nostalgiaโTop Gun: Maverick blasts past it at Mach 10. Tom Cruise returns as Pete โMaverickโ Mitchell, still dodging promotions and pushing jets past their limits. But this time, heโs training a new class of elite pilotsโincluding Rooster (Miles Teller), the son of his late best friend Goose.
What follows is part high-octane action, part emotional reckoning. The flight scenes? Absolutely wildโshot practically with real pilots and cameras in the cockpit. Director Joseph Kosinski gives everything a slick, sun-drenched glow thatโs equal parts throwback and modern upgrade.
Itโs thrilling, heartfelt, and genuinely better than it had any right to be. If you havenโt seen it yet, this is your sign. And yesโthereโs volleyball. Sort of.
4. The Promised Land (2023)

Mads Mikkelsen goes full pioneer grit in The Promised Land, a Danish epic thatโs as stark as the landscape itโs set in. He plays Captain Ludvig Kahlen, a military man obsessed with turning a patch of desolate heath into a thriving colonyโand earning a royal title in the process. But standing in his way? A petty, ruthless noble whoโs not thrilled about competition.
Itโs slow-burning, beautifully shot, and loaded with tension that simmers rather than explodes. Mikkelsen is all steely resolve and quiet fury, making even the filmโs stillest moments feel charged. Thereโs betrayal, resilience, and a deep undercurrent of survivalism throughout.
If youโre in the mood for a grounded, character-driven historical drama, this is your pick. Itโs not flashy, but itโs powerful. And it lingers long after the credits roll.
5. Terminator Genisys (2015)

Letโs be honest: Terminator Genisys is messyโbut itโs also a lot more fun than people give it credit for. This reboot-slash-remix sends Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back in time to save Sarah Connor, only to discover sheโs already been raised by a reprogrammed T-800 (Arnold Schwarzenegger, back in full dad-robot mode). What follows is a timeline mashup that rewrites Terminator history with a wink and a shotgun.
Emilia Clarke steps into Linda Hamiltonโs combat boots with mixed results, and Jason Clarkeโs John Connor goes through one of the wildest character turns in the franchise. There are big set pieces, goofy exposition dumps, and just enough nostalgia to keep die-hard fans engaged.
Itโs far from perfectโbut itโs definitely watchable. If you go in expecting popcorn chaos instead of time-travel genius, youโll have a good time. Just donโt try to make sense of the timeline. Seriously. Donโt.
6. The Outsider (2014)

This one slipped under a lot of radars, but itโs a solid revenge flick with a gritty undercurrent. British contractor Lex Walker (Craig Fairbrass) is told his daughter has died in Los Angelesโbut when he arrives, the body isnโt hers. What starts as a fatherโs desperate search spirals into a violent investigation through L.A.โs underbelly.
Fairbrass plays it old-schoolโgruff, relentless, and full of barely contained rage. Heโs the kind of guy who doesnโt ask questions so much as punch his way to answers. James Caan shows up in one of his last truly gnarly roles, and the tone is pure early-2010s throwback.
Itโs not flashy, but it moves fast and hits hard. Think Taken, but with more cigarettes and fewer cell phone speeches. If youโre craving some no-frills action with a side of grime, this one delivers.
7. Night Hunter (2018)

This one tries to crawl under your skinโand mostly succeeds. Night Hunter follows a detective (Henry Cavill) and a forensic profiler (Alexandra Daddario) as they try to take down an elusive predator. But nothing is simple, and every lead only drags them deeper into a maze of disturbing crimes and psychological twists.
Itโs dark. Like, really dark. The plot dips into themes of abuse, online manipulation, and fractured identitiesโdefinitely not your average cop thriller. Ben Kingsley brings some gravitas as a vigilante with his own approach to justice, and Stanley Tucci gives great โIโm too old for thisโ energy.
There are a few too many twists for its own good, but the vibe is strong and the dread is real. Think Zodiac meets Prisoners, with a bit more chaos. Not for the faint of heart.
8. The Railway Man (2013)

This oneโs a quiet gut-punch. The Railway Man tells the true story of Eric Lomax, a British POW tortured by the Japanese during WWII, who decades later tracks down the man responsible. Colin Firth plays Lomax with brittle intensity, while Nicole Kidman adds warmth and restraint as the wife who helps him heal.
Itโs not a war movie in the explosive senseโitโs a war movie about memory, trauma, and trying to find peace when forgiveness feels impossible. The flashbacks to Lomaxโs time in captivity are brutal, but the filmโs real power comes in the quiet reckonings that follow.
This is one of those dramas that sneaks up on you. It builds slow, but by the end, youโre probably crying. Or at least blinking a lot.
9. A Quiet Place Part II (2021)

The sequel picks up right where the first left offโliterally. A Quiet Place Part II follows the Abbott family as they leave the safety of their home and venture into a world where the creatures that hunt by sound still roam free. But this time, humans might be just as dangerous.
Emily Blunt continues to kick ass in boots and silence, while Cillian Murphy joins the cast as a haunted survivor with his own baggage. The tension is relentless, the sound design still terrifyingly precise, and director John Krasinski proves heโs more than a one-hit wonder.
It expands the world without losing what made the original work: high stakes, tight storytelling, and that constant, nerve-shredding quiet. If you held your breath through the first one, youโre about to pass out. Totally worth it.
10. Utopia (2024)

Utopia is one of those sci-fi thrillers that starts grounded and then goes full fever dream. Moe Dunford plays a soldier on a mission to find his missing wife, which leads him to a mysterious high-tech compound. What he discovers? A surreal fantasy park where reality bends, nothingโs quite what it seems, and people live like godsโif gods were designed by billionaires with control issues.
The visuals are slick, the tone flirts with dystopia and dream logic, and thereโs just enough mystery to keep you leaning in. Charlotte Vega adds emotional weight as a woman caught in the illusion, and Jason Flemyng plays the kind of smirking villain you love to hate.
It doesnโt always stick the landing, but itโs stylish and ambitious in a way that makes up for its narrative gaps. Think Westworld meets Annihilation, with a dash of Black Mirror. Worth a look if you like your sci-fi weird, shiny, and vaguely unsettling.
And Thatโs a Wrap
There you goโten Paramount Plus picks that span the whole spectrum. Youโve got heavy hitters (Top Gun: Maverick, Gladiator II), slow-burn survival stories (The Promised Land, The Railway Man), and full-throttle genre chaos (Terminator Genisys, A Quiet Place Part II). Whether you’re craving ancient Rome, zombie outbreaks, or near-future tech nightmares, this list has you.
Thereโs old-school impact (World War Z, The Outsider), new-school ambition (Utopia, Night Hunter), and a couple of gritty gems that mightโve flown under your radar. Some will leave you breathless. Some will leave you rattled. And a few might surprise you in the best way.
So if your Paramount Plus queue has been feeling a little light, nowโs the time to stock up. Remote in hand. Volume up. Let the streaming begin.
