Top 10 Movies on Prime Video (Courtesy of Prime Video)

Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Prime Video | June 8-14, 2025

So youโ€™re stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Prime Video, 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 8-12, 2025โ€”because your time is too valuable for another โ€œmehโ€ movie night.

Presence (2024)

Top 10 Movies: Presence | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Presence | Courtesy of Prime Video

Steven Soderberghโ€™s Presence is a haunted house movieโ€”but not in the way you think. The entire film unfolds from the perspective of the ghost. No cuts. No third-person wide shots. Just us, watching through the eyes of something… or someone… lingering in the corners of this family’s life. Itโ€™s eerie, but quiet. More skin-prickle than jump scare.

Lucy Liu anchors the film as the matriarch who senses somethingโ€™s off. The house hums with tensionโ€”small shifts in light, whispers down the hallway, a feeling like someoneโ€™s always watching. And thatโ€™s kind of the point. The camera never blinks. You sit in stillness, waiting for whatever it is to reveal itselfโ€”and when it finally does, itโ€™s less horror, more heartbreak.

If you liked The Others or Lake Mungo, this is that vibeโ€”grief in the walls, memory in the air. Itโ€™s short, strange, and surprisingly emotional. Not your typical ghost storyโ€”and honestly, better for it.

Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father (2008)

Top 10 Movies: Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father | Courtesy of Prime Video

This is one of those documentaries that just breaks you. Dear Zachary starts as a tributeโ€”a filmmaker making a home video for his murdered best friendโ€™s newborn son. But what unfolds is so much bigger and darker. It’s about love, loss, and a justice system that will leave you stunned.

Itโ€™s messy, fast, and personal. Kurt Kuenne isnโ€™t trying to be slickโ€”heโ€™s grieving, and you feel it in every rushed cut and raw voiceover. And just when you think you understand what kind of film this is, it shifts. And then it shifts again. By the time itโ€™s over, you’re wrecked. Not because it’s manipulativeโ€”but because itโ€™s real.

Watch it when youโ€™re ready to be gutted. Itโ€™s devastating. But alsoโ€ฆ necessary. One of the most unforgettable documentaries out there.

Warfare (2025)

Top 10 Movies: Warfare | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Warfare | Courtesy of Prime Video

Warfare drops you into Ramadi, Iraq, alongside a platoon of Navy SEALs on a mission that quickly spirals into chaos. But itโ€™s not about tactics or gloryโ€”itโ€™s about the feeling of war. The fear. The brotherhood. The split-second choices that stay with you long after the mission ends. Itโ€™s raw, grounded, and deeply personal.

Co-directed by Ray Mendoza (a real SEAL) and Alex Garland (Ex Machina, Men), the film strips away the Hollywood polish. Youโ€™re not watching soldiersโ€”youโ€™re with them. The camera moves like it’s breathing. Memories flash in and out. Names are shouted, lost, remembered. It feels real because it isโ€”Mendoza lived it.

If you liked The Hurt Locker or Restrepo, this belongs in that same conversation. Itโ€™s not here to entertain. Itโ€™s here to make you feel the weight these men carriedโ€”and still carry.

Heretic (2024)

Top 10 Movies: Heretic | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Heretic | Courtesy of Prime Video

What starts as a polite religious visit spirals into pure psychological hell. In Heretic, two young Mormon missionaries knock on the wrong doorโ€”and Hugh Grant answers it with a smile that never quite reaches his eyes. What follows is a twisted, escalating game of belief, fear, and manipulation that never lets you breathe.

Grant is terrifying. Heโ€™s charming, unsettling, and just unhinged enough to make you question whatโ€™s real. Sophie Thatcher holds her own, giving us a slow, tense unraveling as faith collides with survival instinct. Thereโ€™s no gore, no demons. Just the terrifying possibility that the most dangerous thing in the room is someone who knows exactly what you believeโ€”and knows how to use it.

Think Misery meets The Invitation, but creepier. And way more talkyโ€”in a good way. Itโ€™s intimate, intelligent horror that burrows under your skin and stays there.

28 Weeks Later (2007)

Top 10 Movies: 28 Weeks Later | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: 28 Weeks Later | Courtesy of Prime Video

If 28 Days Later was about the breakdown, 28 Weeks Later is about what happens when you try to rebuild. The rage virus is supposedly under control, the U.S. military is helping people repopulate a quarantined London, and for a minute, it looks like maybe, just maybe, normal is coming back. Yeah… no.

This sequel wastes zero time before everything goes to hellโ€”again. The opening scene alone is a masterclass in panic. But what sets this apart is how human it feels. Thereโ€™s no single hero. Just people trying to survive, make choices, and protect the ones they love while the world crumbles again in real time. Itโ€™s brutal, fast, and weirdly emotional.

If you liked the first film, this oneโ€™s more action-heavy but still full of dread. Less quiet horror, more โ€œrun now, cry laterโ€ energy. And Jeremy Renner as a conflicted sniper? Low-key great.

Talk to Me (2022)

Top 10 Movies: Talk to Me | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Talk to Me | Courtesy of Prime Video

Talk to Me has one of the creepiest setups in yearsโ€”and it totally delivers. It starts with a group of teens who discover they can contact spirits by holding an embalmed hand. It’s all laughs and viral videos until, of course, something goes wrong. And once that door gets opened? It doesnโ€™t want to close.

What makes this one hit harder than your average teen horror is how intimate it is. The scares are brutal, yes, but theyโ€™re also tied to grief, guilt, and that messy line between pain and thrill-seeking. Sophie Wilde is incredibleโ€”quietly holding all this tension as a girl still reeling from loss, chasing connection in all the wrong places.

If you liked It Follows or The Babadook, this is in that same emotional horror lane. Visceral, stylish, and unshakably sad. Youโ€™ll jumpโ€”but youโ€™ll also think about it long after the lights are back on.

Barbarian (2022)

Top 10 Movies: Barbarian | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Barbarian | Courtesy of Prime Video

If you know nothing going into Barbarian, keep it that way. Trust me. What starts as a woman showing up to a double-booked Airbnb spirals into one of the most unpredictable, deeply messed-up horror rides in recent memory. And just when you think itโ€™s peaked? It shifts. Hard.

Georgina Campbell grounds the first act in pure, creeping dread. Bill Skarsgรฅrd keeps you guessing (is he sketchy or not?), and thenโ€ฆ well, Justin Long shows up and the whole vibe changes. And then things get really weird. Director Zach Cregger (yes, from Whitest Kids Uโ€™ Know) pulls off a wild tonal balancing actโ€”funny, terrifying, and totally unhinged.

If Malignant and The Descent had a mutant baby raised on Reddit threads, this is it. Itโ€™s gross, itโ€™s bold, itโ€™s totally its own beast. And yes, you will scream.

Zero Dark Thirty (2012)

Top 10 Movies: Zero Dark Thirty | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Zero Dark Thirty | Courtesy of Prime Video

This one doesn’t flinch. Zero Dark Thirty is the decade-long hunt for Osama bin Laden told with clinical precision and a deep undercurrent of obsession. Jessica Chastain plays Maya, a CIA operative who basically gives up her whole life chasing one target. It’s not a hero arcโ€”itโ€™s a character study in singular focus.

Director Kathryn Bigelow keeps it tense but restrained. The film isnโ€™t flashyโ€”it just builds. Through failures, missed leads, moral gray zones, and political fallout. When the final raid finally comes, itโ€™s not triumphant. Itโ€™s quiet. Methodical. Weirdly sad. You realize the cost of it allโ€”both politically and personally.

If you liked The Report or Munich, this is that same kind of slow-burn intensity. Itโ€™s less about what happened, more about how it happenedโ€”and the toll it took.

Z (2019)

Top 10 Movies: Z | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: Z | Courtesy of Prime Video

On paper, Z sounds like a standard creepy kid movieโ€”young boy has an imaginary friend, things get spooky. But this one goes deeper. The friend isnโ€™t just imaginary. Heโ€™s violent, demanding, and oddly real. And the film slowly peels back layers until you realize this isnโ€™t just about the kidโ€”itโ€™s about the mom.

Keegan Connor Tracy gives a seriously underrated performance here. You watch her sanity start to unravel as she figures out what โ€œZโ€ really is, and what he wants. Itโ€™s not flashy, but it gets under your skin. Thereโ€™s something deeply unsettling about the way childhood trauma seeps into the presentโ€”and how it hides in places you thought were safe.

If you liked The Babadook or Mama, this fits right into that spaceโ€”haunting, emotional, and low-key devastating. You come for the ghost story, but you stay for the psychological unraveling.

St. Vincent (2014)

Top 10 Movies: St. Vincent | Courtesy of Prime Video
Top 10 Movies: St. Vincent | Courtesy of Prime Video

This oneโ€™s all heartโ€”and just the right amount of grump. Bill Murray plays Vincent, a broke, bitter old guy who ends up babysitting the kid next door. He drinks too much, gambles too much, and says whatever he wants. But as the story unfolds, you realize thereโ€™s more to him than bad habits and bathrobes.

Melissa McCarthy is surprisingly grounded here as the kidโ€™s stressed-out mom, and Naomi Watts brings comic chaos as a pregnant Russian sex worker. But itโ€™s the bond between Vincent and the kid (played perfectly by Jaeden Martell) that gives the film its soul. Itโ€™s messy and funny and quietly devastating in places you donโ€™t expect.

If About a Boy or As Good As It Gets made you tear up while laughing, St. Vincent is your jam. It’s rough around the edges, but underneath all the sarcasm and cigarettes, it’s got a whole lot of heart.

And Thatโ€™s a Wrap

This batch? A total rollercoaster. Youโ€™ve got horror that digs into your grief (Talk to Me), war stories that shake you to your core (Warfare), and ghost tales told from the other side (Presence). Every one of these films has something under the surfaceโ€”nothingโ€™s just noise or spectacle. They hit, they linger, they say something.

From the gut-punch of Dear Zachary to the wild ride that is Barbarian, this list doesnโ€™t play by the rules. Some go quiet (St. Vincent), some go full chaos (Z), and some just stare you in the face and ask, โ€œWhat now?โ€ (Zero Dark Thirty, anyone?). Even the films with the simplest setupsโ€”haunted houses, imaginary friends, missions gone sidewaysโ€”land with surprising weight.

So whatever headspace you’re inโ€”haunted, hopeful, heartbroken, or just hungry for something that means somethingโ€”thereโ€™s a story here thatโ€™s ready to mess you up in the best way. You know the drill: lights off, phone down, play.

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