Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Apple TV | June 15-21, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Apple TV, 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.
Hala (2019)

Thereโs something quietly powerful about Hala. It doesnโt shoutโit doesnโt need to. The film follows a 17-year-old Muslim-American girl, played with heart-aching honesty by Geraldine Viswanathan, as she tries to balance the expectations of her Pakistani upbringing with her own desires and independence. Thereโs skateboarding, poetry, secret crushesโand all the complicated, contradictory feelings that come with them.
Writer-director Minhal Baig draws from personal experience, and you can feel it. The film is tender without being soft, sharp without being preachy. Itโs not about rebellion for the sake of dramaโitโs about figuring out who you are when every version of โrightโ is tugging you in a different direction.
If youโve ever felt like youโre living two lives just to make everyone else comfortable, Hala will hit close.
Here We Are: Notes for Living on Planet Earth (2020)

This oneโs short, sweet, and sneakily profound. Here We Are is a 36-minute animated love letter to our planet, filtered through the wide eyes of a curious 7-year-old on Earth Day. Jacob Tremblay voices the kid, Chris OโDowd and Ruth Negga play the parents, and Meryl Streep steps in with some cosmic narration, because of course she does.
Based on Oliver Jeffersโ childrenโs book, itโs simple enough for kids, but thoughtful enough to land with adults. Thereโs humor, warmth, and a sense of scale that somehow fits into half an hour. Also, itโs gorgeous. Like, pause-and-screenshot gorgeous.
If your soul needs a little reminder that Earth is still a pretty magical place, this oneโs a good reset button.
Who Are You, Charlie Brown? (2021)

If youโve ever cried over a Peanuts stripโor just wondered how someone made melancholy feel so cozyโthis doc is for you. Who Are You, Charlie Brown? blends interviews with animators, friends, and famous fans (hi, Lupita Nyongโo) to piece together the story of Charles Schulz, the man behind the round-headed kid and his emotionally articulate dog.
Itโs a love letter, sure, but it doesnโt sugarcoat. It shows Schulzโs quiet battles with insecurity, his deeply personal creative process, and how he put everything into his comics without ever making it obvious. Plus, the animation snippets woven throughout are pure nostalgia.
If youโve got a soft spot for earnestness, jazz piano, and philosophical kids, this oneโs like a warm blanket and a thoughtful hug.
Sharper (2023)

You know that feeling when youโre not sure whoโs playing who? Sharper lives there. Itโs a glossy, twisty con-artist thriller where no one is who they seemโnot even for a second. Julianne Moore, Sebastian Stan, and Justice Smith bounce through a web of lies, double-crosses, and luxury penthouses, and by the time the plot untangles, youโll realize the fun was in trying to stay ahead.
Director Benjamin Caron keeps things sleekโthink velvet lighting, soft jazz, and tension you can cut with a glance. It’s like House of Games meets Succession, but with less yelling and more smirking.
If youโre in the mood for something sexy, cerebral, and just slightly unhinged, Sharper delivers the scam with style.
The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)

You think you know Macbeth, right? Think again. Joel Coen takes Shakespeareโs darkest play and strips it bareโwhatโs left is all shadows, fog, and creeping dread. Shot in stark black and white, it feels like watching a nightmare unfold on stage and screen at the same time.
Denzel Washington? Heโs incredible. His Macbeth isnโt some cartoon villainโheโs exhausted, unraveling, and dangerously sure of himself. And Frances McDormand? Icy, sharp, and just… off, in the best way. You watch her eyes and know everythingโs about to fall apart.
Itโs still Shakespeare, yesโthere are no shortcuts thereโbut itโs Shakespeare filtered through a minimalist, psychological horror lens. If you’re down for something moody and bold that doesnโt hand-hold, this one pulls you in and doesnโt let go.
Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)

This oneโs heavy. Killers of the Flower Moon tells a story that most history books left outโthe systematic murder of Osage Nation members in 1920s Oklahoma after oil was discovered on their land. Itโs long, yes (Scorsese doesnโt do short), but every minute matters. This isnโt just a crime epic. Itโs a reckoning.
Leonardo DiCaprio plays a man caught between love and greed. Robert De Niro is chilling as the โfriendlyโ uncle with sinister motives. But the real standout? Lily Gladstone, who gives a performance so quiet and powerful it leaves dents.
Itโs beautifully shot, painfully relevant, and doesnโt look away from the ugliness of power. If youโre ready for a film that asks a lot but gives more in return, this is it.
When You Finish Saving the World (2022)

Imagine a mother and son who love each other but have absolutely no idea how to connect. Thatโs the heart of When You Finish Saving the World, Jesse Eisenbergโs directorial debut. Julianne Moore runs a domestic abuse shelter with exhausting earnestness. Finn Wolfhard is her teenage sonโan aspiring influencer who writes political folk-pop songs for his fans. Yes, really.
Theyโre both trying to be heroes, just not for each other.
Itโs awkward. Itโs sharply observed. And itโs kind of hilarious in the way only deeply uncomfortable family dynamics can be. If you liked the emotional weirdness of Lady Bird or the existential cringe of The Squid and the Whale, this oneโs in that orbit.
Nomadland (2020)

Sometimes a film doesnโt just tell a storyโit shifts your whole perspective. Nomadland does that. Frances McDormand plays Fern, a woman in her 60s who loses everything in the Great Recession and takes to the road in a van. But this isnโt some Eat, Pray, Love thing. Itโs quieter. Sadder. Braver.
Director Chloรฉ Zhao blends real nomads with McDormandโs fictional journey, and the result feels almost documentary-like. Thereโs beauty in the solitude, pain in the freedom, and a kind of grace in just… getting by.
If youโve ever felt unmoored or wondered what it means to start over, Nomadland sits with you in that spaceโand it doesnโt rush to move on.
Jojo Rabbit (2019)

This one walks a tightropeโand somehow doesnโt fall. Jojo Rabbit is a satirical WWII comedy about a 10-year-old Nazi loyalist whose imaginary friend is Adolf Hitler (played with absurd flair by Taika Waititi). But beneath the dark humor and absurd premise, itโs a story about unlearning hate and choosing empathy.
Roman Griffin Davis gives a heartbreakingly funny performance as Jojo. Scarlett Johansson is warm and luminous as his mom. And Thomasin McKenzie brings quiet defiance as the Jewish girl hiding in their attic.
Itโs weird. Itโs tender. And it works way better than it should. If you want to laugh, cry, and maybe wonder how it pulled off that tone, this oneโs a trip worth taking.
Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (2024)

You might think you know the story: movie star becomes Superman, then tragedy strikes. But Super/Man isnโt just a recapโitโs a reckoning. This documentary gets close. Really close. It takes you from Christopher Reeveโs breakout fame to the accident that changed everythingโand then it goes deeper, into the years after, when he had every reason to give up but didnโt.
You see him wrestle with his identity, his anger, his hope. There are old home videos, gut-punch interviews, moments that are raw and messy and beautiful. It doesnโt make him into a myth. It makes him real. And somehow, thatโs even more powerful.
If youโve ever needed a reminder of what strength looks likeโactual, everyday, no-superpowers strengthโthis one lands hard.
And Thatโs a Wrap
So there you goโten stories, ten different worlds, all waiting for you on Apple TV+. Whether itโs a teen poet quietly rebelling in Hala, a Shakespearean fever dream in Macbeth, or a real-life superhero refusing to be defined by tragedy in Super/Man, every one of these films has something to sayโand says it in a way that sticks.
Youโve got soul-searching (Nomadland, When You Finish Saving the World), stylish cons (Sharper), history that hits hard (Killers of the Flower Moon), and gentle reminders to look up and breathe (Here We Are). Some will make you cry. A few might make you mad. All of them will make you feel something.
