Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Peacock | June 1-7, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Peacock, 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.
That Good Night (2017)

This oneโs all about final actsโand not just in the theatrical sense. That Good Night follows an aging screenwriter (played by the late, great John Hurt) whoโs trying to tie up the loose ends of his life before checking out on his own terms. He’s terminally ill, emotionally complicated, and desperate to make peace with his estranged son. So yeah, get ready for some heavy air.
Itโs not flashy, and itโs not trying to be. Most of the movie takes place in a beautiful villa in Portugal, and it leans hard into conversationโregret, legacy, control, all the big existential hitters. But John Hurt is so quietly commanding that it works. You feel everything simmering underneath. And Charles Dance shows up too, just to make things a little sharper and more British.
This one hits in a quiet, thoughtful way. If you’re in the mood for something that wrestles with dying on your own termsโbut doesnโt get all sentimental about itโthis is a solid, mature watch.
Brimstone (2016)

Brimstone is brutal. And I mean that in the โsome people will straight-up not make it throughโ kind of way. Itโs a slow-burn Western revenge thriller with a heavy dose of religious trauma and a deeply unsettling performance by Guy Pearce as a fire-and-brimstone preacher from hell.
Dakota Fanning plays a mute woman trying to survive in a world that keeps crushing her. The storyโs told out of order, peeling back layers of violence, fear, and resilience as you start to piece together what sheโs been throughโand what sheโs running from. Spoiler: it’s bad. Like, maybe look up some trigger warnings first.
Itโs bleak, itโs intense, and it absolutely doesnโt pull punches. But if you like your period pieces with a horror edge and a heroine who refuses to break, Brimstone might be worth the emotional hangover. Just donโt expect anything soft or easy.
No Pay, Nudity (2016)

This oneโs for the theater kids, the aging actors, and anyone whoโs ever felt a little invisible in their own story. No Pay, Nudity stars Gabriel Byrne as a washed-up stage actor going through a full-on identity crisisโbroke, bitter, and spiraling into a funk that feels both funny and sad in that uniquely actor-y way.
Itโs got a quiet charm to it. Not loud or overly clever, just kind of worn-in and human. Nathan Lane shows up and steals every scene heโs in (as he does), and Frances Conroy brings this wistful warmth that makes even the sad parts feel oddly comforting.
If youโve ever wondered what happens to the guys who donโt make it big, or what it looks like to chase relevance after your prime, this one gets it. Itโs a small film with a big heart, and it earns its moments without shouting for attention.
Always at The Carlyle (2018)

Alright, this is pure New York luxury-core. Always at The Carlyle is a documentary love letter to the iconic Upper East Side hotel thatโs been home to movie stars, royals, and the kind of old-money mystery you just canโt fake. Itโs where Jackie O lived. Where JFK probably snuck out the back. Where George Clooney and Sofia Coppola still book the same rooms.
The movie isnโt here to break scandals or spill dirt. Itโs more about the vibeโelegance, discretion, and a staff thatโs been there long enough to read your mind. You get talking-head moments from celebs who clearly adore the place, plus some dry commentary from the hotel crew whoโve seen everything and will never, ever tell you about it.
Itโs light, stylish, and a little self-indulgentโbut thatโs kind of the point. If you want something pretty and low-stakes that feels like sipping champagne in a velvet robe, this is a nice 90-minute escape.
Five Nights in Maine (2015)

This oneโs soft. Like, whisper-soft. Five Nights in Maine is about a grieving husband (David Oyelowo) visiting his terminally awkward mother-in-law (Dianne Wiest) after his wife dies in a car crash. Thatโs… pretty much it. No big emotional speeches. No dramatic reveals. Just two people tryingโand mostly failingโto connect through the fog of loss.
The movie sits in the silences. It lets the tension breathe. Oyelowo carries a lot with his eyes, and Wiest is all closed doors and clipped sentences until little cracks start to show. Itโs frustrating at times, but also kind of honest in the way grief often is.
Not for everyone, for sure. But if youโre in a place where you can sit with something slow, tender, and emotionally messy, this one will meet you there.
A Million Little Pieces (2018)

Remember that book everyone was obsessed with until Oprah publicly yeeted it into the sun? YeahโA Million Little Pieces is the film version of that memoir. James Freyโs not-quite-true-but-kind-of-true tale of drug addiction, rehab, and existential spiraling got the Hollywood treatment, and while the scandal still lingers, the movieโs doing its own thing.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson stars (and co-wrote it with his wife, director Sam Taylor-Johnson), and heโs all inโbloody, broken, twitchy, and half-feral as a guy trying to claw his way back to life. Itโs raw and artsy, sometimes to a fault, but it definitely doesnโt sugarcoat recovery. Billy Bob Thornton plays the crusty rehab vet with just enough wisdom to land some punches, and Giovanni Ribisi is quietly devastating in a supporting role.
Itโs not subtle. Itโs not soft. But if youโre into stylized chaos and messy redemption arcs, this one’s got plenty of both.
Disclosure (2020)

Disclosure should be required viewing. No hyperbole. Itโs a documentary that digs into how trans people have been portrayed in film and TVโfrom silent-era villains to the tropes we still see todayโand itโs told entirely through the voices of trans creators, actors, and thinkers. Laverne Cox. Jen Richards. MJ Rodriguez. The list goes on.
Itโs smart, emotional, and unflinchingly clear. Youโll see clips from films you know (and probably love) in a whole new light, and it doesnโt feel like a lectureโit feels like a group of insanely articulate people finally getting a chance to tell the truth on their own terms.
The edit is sharp, the pacing is tight, and the takeaway is hard to ignore. If you care about storytelling, representation, or just not being a jerk, this one will expand your lens in the best way.
Colewell (2019)

Colewell is smallโbut it lingers. Karen Allen plays Nora, a rural postmaster whose entire world gets upended when she finds out her tiny post office is shutting down. Thatโs the plot. No big twist. No third-act reveal. Just a quiet woman facing the end of something she’s built her life around.
The movieโs all stillness and soft light. Long shots of trees. Slow cups of coffee. Conversations that barely scratch the surface but say a lot anyway. And Allen? Sheโs heartbreaking in that way only someone whoโs seen some things can beโlonely, proud, and stuck in a place thatโs stopped needing her.
Itโs definitely not for the impatient, but if youโve ever felt your relevance slipping or just needed a film to sit with you instead of entertain you, Colewell gets it.
Ms. White Light

This oneโs weirdโin the best way. Ms. White Light is about a woman named Lex who helps terminally ill people transition to death. She’s great at it. Calm. Professional. Totally unshakeable. Until she meets someone who absolutely refuses to play by the dying-person rules.
Roberta Colindrez (whoโs phenomenal, by the way) plays Lex as a closed-off oddball whoโs spent so long dealing with death that sheโs forgotten how to deal with, well, life. What follows is a dark comedy full of awkward encounters, quiet epiphanies, and moments that hit way harder than they should.
Think Lars and the Real Girl meets The Big Cโoffbeat, sincere, and sneakily emotional. Not flashy, but full of strange charm.
Drunk Bus

This oneโs a hidden gem if you like your coming-of-age stories a little more slouched and hungover. Drunk Bus is about a college grad (Charlie Tahan) whoโs stuck driving the night shift shuttle on campus while all his friends move on with their lives. Heโs spiraling. Slowly. Repetitively. Then this giant, tatted-up Samoan security guard named Pineapple shows up and flips the script.
The setupโs simple, but the heart is big. Their odd-couple friendship carries the whole thingโfunny, chaotic, unexpectedly tender. And while it hits all the familiar beats (letting go, growing up, finding direction), it does it with real charm and a lo-fi, lived-in vibe.
If Adventureland and The Station Agent had a slightly stoned baby, itโd probably look something like this. Equal parts aimless and meaningful. Which, letโs be honest, is the most accurate way to portray your early twenties.
