Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Prime Video | July 13-19, 2025
So you’re stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Prime Video, hoping something jumps out. We’ve been there. That’s why we pulled together the Top 10 Movies you would actually want to watch this week—no fluff, no filler. Whether you’re into thrillers, rom-coms, or indie gems, there’s something worth hitting play on. Here’s your movie cheat sheet for July 13-19, 2025—because your time is too valuable for another “meh” movie night.
1. Heads of State (2025)

Imagine if The Hitman’s Bodyguard and The West Wing had a baby—and then handed it a grenade launcher. That’s the vibe with Heads of State, a high-octane buddy comedy that throws John Cena and Idris Elba together as the U.S. President and UK Prime Minister. They hate each other. Until, of course, they have to team up to save the world.
Director Ilya Naishuller (Nobody) brings the same propulsive energy and visual chaos, while Priyanka Chopra Jonas swoops in as an MI6 agent with actual skills (and zero patience for political nonsense). Jack Quaid plays the idealist aide trying to keep everything from imploding. Spoiler: he fails.
It’s loud, fast, and borderline absurd—but in the best possible way. If you’re craving global stakes with sharp suits and sarcastic bickering, this one hits the mark.
2. The Accountant 2 (2025)

Christian Wolff is back—and he’s not just crunching numbers anymore. Ben Affleck returns as the math genius turned vigilante, and this time, things get personal. When a former associate turns up dead, Wolff recruits his long-estranged brother (Jon Bernthal, locked and loaded) to help crack a conspiracy that goes way deeper than either of them expects.
Director Gavin O’Connor returns to keep things grounded and brutal, balancing tactical shootouts with that same quiet emotional weight that made the original such a sleeper hit. Cynthia Addai-Robinson and J.K. Simmons also reprise their roles, adding continuity to the escalating chaos.
If John Wick and A Beautiful Mind had a noir lovechild, this would be it. Bring snacks—and maybe a calculator.
3. Elevation (2024)

Post-apocalyptic survival stories are nothing new—but Elevation finds fresh ground by scaling everything down to one father, two strangers, and a kid’s life han ging in the balance. Anthony Mackie leads this tense sci-fi thriller as a man who steps outside the safety of his bunker to face the monstrous unknown.
He’s joined by Morena Baccarin and Maddie Hasson as reluctant allies navigating a landscape where the creatures aren’t the only threat. Director George Nolfi (The Adjustment Bureau) keeps the pace tight and the world-building minimal—but effective. It’s the quiet, desperate moments between chaos that hit hardest.
Think A Quiet Place with a road-movie twist. Just don’t watch it in the dark unless you’re into that whole “constant dread” thing.
4. The Last Voyage of the Demeter (2023)

Dracula, but make it nautical. The Last Voyage of the Demeter adapts the creepiest chapter of Bram Stoker’s novel—the one where the infamous vampire sails to London, picking off the crew one by one like a sea-faring slasher.
Corey Hawkins anchors the cast as the ship’s doctor trying to make sense of the horror, with strong support from Aisling Franciosi and Liam Cunningham. Norwegian director André Øvredal (Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark) goes all-in on period atmosphere and shadow-drenched tension.
This isn’t your jump-scare factory horror. It’s slow, brooding, and claustrophobic in the best way. If Alien took place on a 19th-century ship with creaky wood instead of cold steel, this would be it.
5. A Working Man (2025)

Jason Statham. A missing girl. Human traffickers who picked the wrong ex–black ops contractor to mess with. You already know where this is going—and honestly, it’s exactly what you want it to be.
A Working Man, directed by David Ayer (Fury, End of Watch), puts Statham back in his wheelhouse as Levon Cade, a construction worker with a violent past and a moral compass set to “kill anyone who hurts the people I love.” David Harbour and Michael Peña round out the cast, bringing some grit and emotional grounding to an otherwise fists-and-firepower story.
It’s lean, mean, and absolutely unpretentious. Think Man on Fire meets Taken, with a steel-toe boot to the face.





