Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Apple TV | June 1-7, 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 1-7, 2025โbecause your time is too valuable for another โmehโ movie night.
Good One (2024)

Not much happens in Good One, but somehow it says everything. Itโs just a teenage girl, her dad, and his old buddy hiking through the Catskills for a few days. Thatโs it. But the way the tension builds between the adultsโthose tiny jabs and weird silences? Yeah, that stuffโs doing the heavy lifting.
Sam, the daughter, is stuck watching these two guys try (and fail) to connect, and slowly realizing she might be the most mature person on the trip. Itโs super quiet, super naturalโalmost awkward at timesโbut thatโs the point. This is the kind of movie where a single look or a long pause hits harder than a full speech.
If youโre into those slow, emotionally observant character studies that sneak up on youโlike Leave No Trace or early Greta Gerwig energyโyouโll want to sit with this one.
Star Trek: Section 31

So Michelle Yeoh is back as Philippa Georgiou, and this time sheโs leading her own Star Trek spy thriller. Yes, itโs canon. No, itโs not your grandpaโs Enterprise. This is the shadowy, morally gray corner of the universeโsecret missions, ethical knots, the kind of Federation business no one wants to talk about.
Itโs slick and intense and honestly kind of refreshing. Yeoh kills it as alwaysโcool, calculating, but with just enough emotion under the surface to keep you guessing. And the vibe? Less โboldly go,โ more โquietly manipulate while everyone else is watching the stars.โ
If you love sci-fi but wish it leaned more into the political thriller zoneโwith action, betrayal, and galaxy-sized consequencesโthis is your jam.
September 5 (2024)

This oneโs stressful in all the right ways. September 5 drops you right into the 1972 Munich Olympics, just as everything goes to hell. A terrorist attack unfolds live, and an American broadcast team suddenly has to figure out how to cover itโwhile itโs happening. No oneโs prepared. Everyoneโs scrambling. And the worldโs watching.
Peter Sarsgaard plays the anchor holding it together on the outside while falling apart behind the scenes. Itโs tight, fast, and full of moral landmines. Do you report everything? Edit the truth? Whatโs too muchโand whatโs not enough?
Itโs like Network meets Argo, but way more intimate. If you like real-time tension and messy, human ethics under pressure, this one will keep your heart in your throat.
Touch (2024)

Touch is one of those rare, grown-up love stories that doesnโt try to impress youโit just feels real. A man goes looking for the girl he loved fifty years ago. She disappeared. He never stopped wondering. And now heโs crossing continents to find her.
Itโs slow, emotional, and full of that aching, what-could-have-been kind of energy. Youโre watching memories collide with reality in this very quiet, very vulnerable way. Thereโs a lot of silence, a lot of stillnessโand thatโs kind of the point. The camera just sits with people, and lets the feelings rise on their own.
If youโve ever had a love that stayed with you, even if it didnโt lastโyeah. This one will hit you where it hurts, softly.
The Room Next Door (2024)

Pedro Almodรณvar put Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in a house together and said, โGo.โ The result? An hour and a half of heartbreak, memory, and quiet reckoningsโwrapped in perfect outfits and gorgeous light.
The storyโs simple: one friend is dying, the other shows up after years of silence. What unfolds is a slow, beautiful unpacking of their entire relationshipโwhat went unsaid, what was misunderstood, what still matters even now.
Itโs tender. Itโs sharp. And it doesnโt flinch from the ugly stuff. Itโs about old friendships, chosen family, and facing the end with honesty and maybe a little grace. No melodrama, no big speechesโjust two brilliant actors quietly breaking your heart.
If you want something small but devastating, this is the one. Bring tissues. And maybe call an old friend after.
Nickel Boys (2024)

This oneโs gonna stay with you. Nickel Boys is based on Colson Whiteheadโs novel, and if youโve read it, you knowโitโs devastating. The story follows two Black boys at a so-called โreform schoolโ in 1960s Florida thatโs really just a brutal, violent institution hiding behind a shiny government sign.
Itโs not a trauma-porn movie. Itโs quiet, restrained, and deeply empathetic. Ethan Herisse (from When They See Us) gives a performance thatโs all dignity and buried rage, and RaMell Ross directs with the same careful eye he brought to his doc Hale County This Morning, This Evening. You can feel the weight of history in every frame, but itโs never just about painโitโs about survival, too.
If you can handle something heavy, and you want to watch a film that means something, Nickel Boys hits hardโand for all the right reasons.
Between the Temples (2024)

This oneโs weird and warm in the best way. Jason Schwartzman plays a Jewish cantor whoโs going through a quiet meltdownโheโs lost his wife, his faith, and maybe his voice. Then out of nowhere, his childhood music teacher (played by Carol Kane, absolute chaos angel) shows up and signs up for adult Bat Mitzvah lessons. And yeah, everything starts to shift.
Itโs a small, strange movie about grief, tradition, and figuring out who you are after the big stuff happens. Thereโs singing, awkwardness, bad haircuts, and these great little moments where youโre laughing and then suddenly kind of choked up.
It feels like if A Serious Man had a cousin who went to therapy and started doing yoga. If you like movies that are a little off-center but still full of heart, this oneโs a gem.
Once Upon a Time in Uganda (2021)

If you love movies about moviesโand you like your underdog stories scrappy, loud, and full of actual joyโOnce Upon a Time in Uganda is your next watch. Itโs a documentary about Isaac Nabwana, a brickmaker turned action director in Kampala, and the totally DIY film movement he accidentally created: Wakaliwood.
Weโre talking homemade props, zero-budget explosions, kung fu moves that make no senseโand so much heart. The doc follows Isaac and Alan Hofmanis, a film nerd from NYC who moves to Uganda to help bring Wakaliwood to the world. Itโs chaotic and hilarious, but itโs also super moving. You feel how much this stuff means to them.
If Be Kind Rewind was real and way more badass, itโd look like this. Highly recommend watching it with friends and cheering out loud.
Bird (2024)

Andrea Arnold (Fish Tank, American Honey) is back, and sheโs still the queen of finding beauty in the margins. Bird is about a 12-year-old girl named Bailey, growing up somewhere in the UK with her dad and little brother. Thereโs no plot twist, no big arcโjust life, messy and tender and real.
Barry Keoghan plays her dad, and heโs exactly the right mix of charming and totally unreliable. The camera just follows Bailey, watching her take care of everyone while still trying to be a kid. It’s the kind of film where the quiet stuffโbrushing your brotherโs hair, climbing on rooftops, zoning out in classโhits harder than any dramatic monologue ever could.
Itโs raw and lovely and sometimes hard to watch. If you liked The Florida Project or Wendy and Lucy, this oneโs right in that lane. Small story, big feelings.
The Way I See It (2020)

So this oneโs technically a political docโbut donโt let that scare you off. The Way I See It follows Pete Souza, who was the official White House photographer for both Reagan and Obama, and itโs basically a behind-the-scenes photo album with heart, soul, and a surprising amount of bite.
Souza goes from quiet observer to reluctant truth-teller as he reflects on how leadershipโand decencyโused to look, and what weโve lost. The footage is stunning, but itโs his commentary that really lands. Heโs not a pundit, heโs just a guy who spent years in the room where it happened. And now heโs using those photos to say something.
If you need a little reminder that empathy and character still matter, this one delivers. Might make you tear up. Might make you vote. Either way, itโs worth a watch.
Wrap Up
So yeah, this weekโs lineup doesnโt play it safeโand thatโs the point. Whether itโs a teenage girl quietly watching the adults around her fall apart (Good One), or Michelle Yeoh skulking through the shadows of the Star Trek universe (Section 31), these picks actually say something. Theyโve got soul, bite, weirdness, heart.
Youโve got love stories that span continents (Touch), real-time newsroom panic (September 5), and friendship breakups that feel like emotional sucker punches (The Room Next Door). Thereโs heavy hitters like Nickel Boysโwhich might leave you speechlessโand joyful chaos like Once Upon a Time in Uganda, which might make you want to grab a camcorder and make your own movie.
And whether itโs a pre-teen holding her whole family together (Bird) or a White House photographer quietly sounding the alarm (The Way I See It), thereโs a thread running through all of this: perspective. These are stories about seeing clearly, about who gets to tell the story, and what we do with the truth once we have it.
So yeahโyour watchlist? Handled. Just pick your mood, clear a little space, and hit play.
