Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Prime Video | June 15-21, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Prime Video, 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.
The Accountant 2 (2025)

You know how sometimes a sequel shows up years later and you’re like, โWait, really?โ Thatโs The Accountant 2โbut surprise, it kind of rules. Ben Affleck is back as Christian Wolff, the autistic math savant-slash-action machine who makes forensic accounting look cool (somehow). This time around, heโs teamed up with Jon Bernthal as Braxton, his mercenary brother with a grudge and a gun, and the dynamic between them? Absolutely feral in the best way.
Director Gavin OโConnor doesnโt mess with the formula too muchโthereโs still number crunching, mob ties, and lots of bodiesโbut itโs sharper now, more personal. The fight scenes are brutal, the plot twists feel earned, and thereโs actual emotional depth underneath all the spreadsheets and silencers.
If you liked the first one, this sequel gives you more of what worked, but with higher stakes and better brotherly chaos. Itโs like Rain Man if both guys were carrying assault rifles.
To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)

This is the kind of movie that feels like itโs smoking a cigarette while side-eyeing you. To Live and Die in L.A. is all heat and gritโan โ80s crime thriller from William Friedkin (yeah, The Exorcist guy) that drops you into a sun-blasted world of counterfeit money, dirty agents, and nihilism with a badge.
William Petersen plays a Secret Service agent whoโs lost all sense of chill after his partner gets murdered. So he goes full rogue to bring down Willem Dafoeโs counterfeiting artist-slash-psychopath, who, by the way, oozes menace in every frame. The car chase? Unreal. The synth score? Straight vibes. And the ending? Letโs just say it doesnโt flinch.
If you like your thrillers sweaty, stylish, and morally messed up, this is essential viewing. Think Heat meets Drive, but angrier.
The Idea of You (2024)

Yes, the lead singer kind of looks like Harry Styles. No, thatโs not the point. The Idea of You might have started as โthe hot pop star falls for a 40-year-old momโ story, but it ends up being a whole lot more than that. Anne Hathaway plays Solรจne, a divorced art gallery owner who ends up in a whirlwind romance with boy band heartthrob Hayes Campbell (Nicholas Galitzine) after a very accidental meet-cute at Coachella.
What follows is glossy and swoony, sure, but it also takes real swings at how society treats women โof a certain age.โ The media chaos, the judgment, the double standardsโit all lands. Hathaway and Galitzine have serious heat, and their relationship never feels like a gimmick.
If youโve ever felt boxed in by what you โshouldโ want at 40, this one might surprise you. Itโs sexy, emotional, and way smarter than the tabloid pitch makes it sound.
Bottoms (2023)

This movie is completely unhingedโin the best way possible. Bottoms is like if Fight Club was written by horny, queer theater kids. Two high school lesbians (Rachel Sennott and Ayo Edebiri) start a self-defense club to hook up with cheerleaders, but it quickly devolves into a gloriously bloody satire of teen movie tropes, gender roles, and sports bro culture.
Thereโs not a single sincere football coach speech. There are, however, cheerleaders body-slamming bullies, absurd fight scenes, and jokes that come faster than you can keep up with. But somehow, itโs not just chaos for chaosโs sakeโthereโs real heart underneath the madness.
If Booksmart, Heathers, and Dodgeball had a baby, and that baby was really, really gay, it would be Bottoms. Itโs dumb in a genius way. Or genius in a dumb way. Either way, it slaps.
Saltburn (2023)

This movie is like drinking champagne with a knife hidden in the glass. Saltburn follows Oliver (Barry Keoghan), a working-class Oxford student who gets pulled into the orbit of Felix (Jacob Elordi), a rich, golden-boy classmate with a sprawling estate and a family straight out of a fever dream. What starts as a summer of privilege quickly turns dark, weird, and deeply twisted.
Director Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman) isnโt here to play it safe. This is a full-blown psychological descentโequal parts sexy, sinister, and hilarious in the most uncomfortable ways. Thereโs voyeurism, obsession, and one hell of a bathtub scene.
If you liked The Talented Mr. Ripley but wished it had more eyeliner and TikTok energy, Saltburn is your kind of chaos. Just be warned: it gets weird.
Totally Killer (2023)

Imagine Back to the Futureโbut with a masked killer and way more neon. Totally Killer drops Kiernan Shipka into a time-traveling slasher flick where the stakes are both personal and bloody. Her character, Jamie, zips back to 1987 to stop a string of murders that targeted her momโs teenage friends. Itโs got that classic โmess with the past, risk erasing yourselfโ tensionโbut with jokes, leg warmers, and a whole lot of fake blood.
Director Nahnatchka Khan (who gave us Always Be My Maybe) balances horror and comedy like a pro. Itโs never too scary, but itโs just creepy enough to keep your pulse up. Shipka sells the whole thing with deadpan delivery and genuine heart, especially in scenes with her momโs younger self (played by Olivia Holt).
If you like your slashers with sarcasmโand a killer soundtrackโthis oneโs a no-brainer. Literally and figuratively.
Sitting in Bars with Cake (2023)

This is one of those movies that sneaks up on you. You think itโs gonna be quirky and cute (and it is, at first)โtwo best friends bring cakes into bars to help one of them meet peopleโbut then it takes a sharp left turn into real-life heartbreak. When one friend gets a cancer diagnosis, what started as a social experiment turns into a story about love, loss, and showing up for your person when everything else falls apart.
Yara Shahidi and Odessa Aโzion carry the whole thing with zero pretension. Their friendship feels lived-in and raw. And yes, itโs about griefโbut itโs also full of color, joy, and weird little moments that feel like life itself.
Think Beaches with a modern glow-up. If youโve ever laughed through tearsโor cried over cakeโthis oneโs got you.
Judy Blume Forever (2023)

You donโt have to be a lifelong Judy Blume reader to get pulled into this one. Judy Blume Forever is part biography, part love letter, and part mic drop on how one womanโs books shaped an entire generation of kidsโespecially girlsโtrying to figure out their bodies, their feelings, and their place in the world.
Through interviews with famous fans (hi, Lena Dunham, Molly Ringwald, Samantha Bee), the film shows just how radical Blumeโs honesty wasโand how controversial it still is in some corners. Thereโs joy here, and reverence, but also a bit of fire. Because Blume didnโt just write about pubertyโshe fought for the right to say the stuff adults wanted to hush.
If you ever dog-eared Are You There God? Itโs Me, Margaret., this will hit you right in the nostalgia. If you didnโt? Youโll still leave wondering why we donโt have more writers like her.
I Want You Back (2022)

What happens when two freshly dumped people decide to sabotage their exesโ new relationships? Absolute chaosโand somehow, a pretty great rom-com. I Want You Back pairs Jenny Slate and Charlie Day as heartbroken strangers who form a messy little alliance to win back their former partners. Spoiler: not everything goes according to plan.
Itโs a classic โwhat could go wrong?โ setup, but the script is sharp, and Slate and Day bring just the right mix of awkwardness and emotional honesty. Itโs funny, a little cringey, surprisingly tenderโand yes, thereโs karaoke.
If youโre tired of rom-coms that feel like they were written by an algorithm, this oneโs got soul. Itโs not about finding perfect love. Itโs about the beautiful disaster of trying.
A Hero (2021)

This one moves quietlyโbut it cuts deep. From Iranian filmmaker Asghar Farhadi (A Separation, The Salesman), A Hero tells the story of a man named Rahim whoโs in jail over a debt he canโt repay. When he finds a bag of gold coins and tries to return them, the world sees him as a hero. But the truth? Itโs complicated.
What unfolds is part character study, part social commentaryโabout honor, manipulation, and the fine line between doing the right thing and being seen doing the right thing. Amir Jadidi gives a knockout performance thatโs understated and devastating.
Itโs not flashy. Itโs not loud. But if you let it, itโll stay with you. Like a question you canโt quite shake.
And Thatโs a Wrap
So yeah, thatโs your Prime Video lineupโten films that actually go somewhere. Not just content for the sake of content, but movies with bite, heart, and something real to chew on. Whether itโs the dark decadence of Saltburn, the slow-burn suspense of A Hero, or the queer chaos of Bottoms, every pick here brings something to the table.
Youโve got action with depth (The Accountant 2), love stories that push back (The Idea of You), smart satire (Totally Killer, I Want You Back), and docs that stick with you (Judy Blume Forever). Some will make you cry. Some will make you rewind. A few might make you text a friend mid-watch just to say, โWait, what?!โ
So if your โContinue Watchingโ row is looking a little tired, nowโs the time to shake it up. Whether youโre in the mood to laugh, scream, cry, or time travel with a knife-wielding maniacโthereโs something here thatโll meet you where youโre at.
Pick your vibe. Press play. Let it hit.
