Top 10 Movies on Peacock Week of May 18th

Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Peacock | June 15-21, 2025

So youโ€™re stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Peacock, hoping something jumps out. Weโ€™ve been there. Thatโ€™s why we pulled together the Top 10 Movies you would actually want to watch this weekโ€”no fluff, no filler. Whether you’re into thrillers, rom-coms, or indie gems, thereโ€™s something worth hitting play on. Hereโ€™s your movie cheat sheet for June 15-21, 2025โ€”because your time is too valuable for another โ€œmehโ€ movie night.

Dog Man (2025)

Top 10 Movies: Dog Man | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Dog Man | Courtesy of Peacock

This oneโ€™s a riot. Dog Man is DreamWorksโ€™ latest chaotic gemโ€”based on the mega-popular Dav Pilkey booksโ€”and itโ€™s every bit as weird and hilarious as it sounds. Imagine a half-dog, half-human cop chasing down a crime-committing cat voiced by Pete Davidson, and youโ€™re already halfway to understanding the movieโ€™s brain. Add in absurd gags, heartfelt moments, and surprisingly good animation, and youโ€™ve got a family comedy that actually delivers.

Itโ€™s got that sweet spot energy: loud enough for kids, clever enough for grown-ups. The jokes land fast, the visuals pop, and even the emotional beats (especially around Liโ€™l Petey) hit harder than youโ€™d expect from a movie where a dog wears a badge.

If youโ€™ve got young onesโ€”or just want to turn your brain off and laughโ€”Dog Man is a solid pick. Just maybe prep your kid to ask for the books immediately after.

Sophie and the Rising Sun (2016)

Top 10 Movies: Sophie and the Rising Sun | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Sophie and the Rising Sun | Courtesy of Peacock

This oneโ€™s a quiet heartbreaker. Sophie and the Rising Sun takes place in a sleepy South Carolina town on the brink of WWII, where a gentle romance blossoms between a white woman and a Japanese man, just as Pearl Harbor changes everything. Julianne Nicholson plays Sophie with quiet strength, while Takashi Yamaguchi brings grace and warmth to Mr. Ohta, her soft-spoken love interest.

What unfolds is less about sweeping declarations and more about whispered moments, stolen glances, and the looming threat of violence when a town turns inward out of fear and ignorance. Itโ€™s tender, tragic, and beautifully filmed.

If you liked The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society or The Remains of the Day, this one fits right inโ€”small in scope, big in emotion.

Little Pink House (2017)

Top 10 Movies: Little Pink House | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Little Pink House | Courtesy of Peacock

Itโ€™s the American Dream versus bulldozers. In Little Pink House, Catherine Keener plays Susette Kelo, a Connecticut nurse who suddenly finds herself fighting for her neighborhoodโ€”and her homeโ€”when the government tries to seize it for a corporate development deal. What starts as a local zoning issue turns into a Supreme Court showdown over eminent domain.

Keener nails it as a woman who never wanted to be a hero, just someone left alone to live her life. The film itself is scrappy, honest, and low-key inspiring. Itโ€™s not flashy, but it doesnโ€™t need to beโ€”because the story is real. And outrageous.

If youโ€™re into true David vs. Goliath stories like Erin Brockovich or Norma Rae, this oneโ€™ll get your blood up.

Happy Gilmore (1996)

Top 10 Movies: Happy Gilmore | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Happy Gilmore | Courtesy of Peacock

An oldie, but still a very loud goodie. Happy Gilmore is Adam Sandler in full chaotic mode as a failed hockey player who takes his slapshot to the golf courseโ€”and somehow, it works. Itโ€™s peak โ€˜90s dumb comedy, filled with screaming, fighting, and one of the best movie villains ever in Shooter McGavin (played to absolute perfection by Christopher McDonald).

The plot is simple: Happy needs to win a golf tournament to save his grandmaโ€™s house. What happens instead is a mess of golf rage, fistfights, and a few surprisingly sweet moments. Sandlerโ€™s energy is wild here, but itโ€™s also weirdly lovable.

If itโ€™s been a while, rewatch it. If youโ€™ve never seen itโ€ฆ what are you even doing? This is essential Sandler.

Tater Tot & Patton (2017)

Top 10 Movies: Tater Tot & Patton | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Tater Tot & Patton | Courtesy of Peacock

This one slipped under the radar, but itโ€™s worth tracking down. Tater Tot & Patton is about Andie, a city girl escaping to the middle of nowhere South Dakotaโ€”and the uncle (Patton) sheโ€™s forced to live with, whoโ€™s about as emotionally available as a rock. Theyโ€™re stuck with each other, and what starts out tense and awkward slowly becomes something quiet and kind.

Thereโ€™s not a lot of plot hereโ€”just long silences, empty fields, and two people trying to figure each other out. But it works. Itโ€™s a character study wrapped in denim and prairie sky, and itโ€™ll hit you if youโ€™ve ever tried to talk to someone who just doesnโ€™t do talking.

If you liked Nebraska or The Straight Story, this has that same meditative, slow-burn heart. Plus, itโ€™s got the kind of ending that sneaks up on you and sits with you after.

June Again (2020)

Top 10 Movies: June Again | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: June Again | Courtesy of Peacock

This oneโ€™s a tearjerkerโ€”with bite. June Again follows a woman who unexpectedly comes out of a years-long fog caused by dementia, only to find her adult kids and old life in total disarray. So what does she do? Jumps right back in and tries to fix everything. Itโ€™s sweet, chaotic, and a little messyโ€”just like family.

Noni Hazlehurst gives a knockout performance as June: part meddling matriarch, part comic whirlwind, part heartbreak waiting to happen. The storyโ€™s got its heavy moments, but itโ€™s also warm and funny in ways that feel totally earned. Think Still Alice meets The Farewell, but with an Aussie accent and a streak of romantic rebellion.

If youโ€™ve ever tried to help someone who means well but does too much, this one will hit close.

Yosemite (2015)

Top 10 Movies: Yosemite | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Yosemite | Courtesy of Peacock

This oneโ€™s small, but it has a pulse. Yosemite centers on three kids who set out to track a mountain lion supposedly roaming their neighborhood. But itโ€™s not really about the lion. Itโ€™s about that moment in childhood when the world starts to feel both bigger and scarier than you thought.

Thereโ€™s an undercurrent of loss and loneliness here, wrapped in the freedom of wandering through woods with your friends and thinking you might find something wild. Itโ€™s got that Stand by Me or The Kings of Summer vibeโ€”equal parts nostalgia and coming-of-age clarity.

If youโ€™re into quiet, reflective stories with a nature backdrop and real emotional stakes, this oneโ€™s worth a look.

Bottom of the World (2017)

Top 10 Movies: Bottom of the World | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Bottom of the World | Courtesy of Peacock

This is one of those movies where you finish and immediately go, โ€œWaitโ€”what just happened?โ€ Bottom of the World starts out as a road trip romance with Jena Malone and Douglas Smith. But when she vanishes in a dusty desert town, things spiral into a surreal, dreamlike rabbit hole of alternate realities and lost identity.

Itโ€™s moody, atmospheric, and deeply confusingโ€”in a way thatโ€™s either hypnotic or frustrating, depending on how you feel about puzzles with no clear answers. Think Lost Highway meets The OA, with a hint of Mulholland Drive.

If you like your movies cryptic and unsettling, and donโ€™t mind a little ambiguity, give it a shot. Just donโ€™t expect clean answers.

Double Blind (2024)

Top 10 Movies: Double Blind | Courtesy of Peacock
Top 10 Movies: Double Blind | Courtesy of Peacock

This oneโ€™s pure nightmare fuelโ€”in the best way. Double Blind throws seven strangers into a locked-down drug trial with one rule: donโ€™t fall asleep. If you do, you die. No one knows why the side effects are getting worse, and trust? Out the window. Itโ€™s like The Breakfast Club, if the breakfast was laced with fear and everyone slowly turned on each other.

Millie Brady plays Claire, the one person trying to hold it all together while everything spirals. Pollyanna McIntosh (The Walking Dead) shows up with a serious โ€œtrust me, Iโ€™m a doctorโ€ menace. The whole thing is sweaty-palmed, slow-building dreadโ€”the kind that settles in and refuses to leave.

If Circle, The Platform, or It Follows are your kind of weird, this one belongs on your list. Just… maybe donโ€™t watch it right before bed.

And Thatโ€™s a Wrap

So yeah, thatโ€™s your Peacock lineupโ€”ten picks that zig where you expect a zag. Youโ€™ve got a dog cop saving the day (Dog Man), a Supreme Court drama wrapped in pink siding (Little Pink House), and a sleep-deprivation thriller thatโ€™ll make you think twice about that late-night nap (Double Blind).

Thereโ€™s something here for every mood: quiet love stories (Sophie and the Rising Sun), underdog chaos (Happy Gilmore), family drama with heart (June Again), and a couple of indies thatโ€™ll leave you asking, โ€œWhat did I just watch?โ€โ€”in a good way.

So whether you’re settling in for something warm and familiar or ready to take a risk on something weird and unforgettable, this weekโ€™s picks have you covered. Pop some popcorn, grab the remote, and dive in. You never know which oneโ€™s going to stick with you.

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