Top 10 Movies To Watch This Week on Disney Plus | June 1-7, 2025
So youโre stuck in scrolling purgatory again, huh? Endlessly thumbing through Disney Plus, 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.
Captain America: Brave New World (2025)

Sam Wilsonโs officially rocking the shield nowโand Brave New World throws him straight into the deep end. This isnโt a rehash of Steve Rogersโ glory days. Itโs grittier, heavier, more politically messy. And yes, Harrison Ford joins the party as President Thaddeus Ross (aka the guy whoโs about to go full Red Hulk).
Thereโs a lot going on hereโgovernment secrets, new threats, and Sam trying to figure out what kind of Captain America the world needs now. It leans hard into political thriller territory, more Winter Soldier than Avengers spectacle. And with a stacked cast (Giancarlo Esposito, Liv Tyler, Tim Blake Nelson as The Leaderโyeah, that Leader), the stakes feel real.
Itโs not all smooth flying, though. The plot gets tangled, and thereโs some CGI bloat. But if youโre down for a Cap story with more edge and moral gray than spandex and stars-and-stripes speeches, this oneโs worth watching unfold.
Doctor Who: Joy to the World (2024)

The Doctor Who Christmas specials are basically tradition at this pointโand Joy to the World delivers exactly what you want with just enough weirdness to feel fresh. Ncuti Gatwa is fully in the groove as the Fifteenth Doctor, bringing that charm-chaos combo we didnโt know we needed. And Nicola Coughlan as โJoyโ? Total scene-stealer.
The setup is pure Whovian holiday madness: a woman finds a mysterious portal in her floor, dinosaurs show up, reality wobbles, and somehow itโs all connected to a big emotional gut punch (because Doctor Who loves to make you cry on Christmas). Itโs funny, sweet, a little scary, and full of heartโbasically the recipe thatโs kept this show running for 60 years.
If you dipped out of Who during the rougher patches, this one might be your reentry point. It feels fun again. Big scarf energy, but make it modern.
Latinos in Hollywood: Owning Our Destiny (2024)

This one isnโt a movieโitโs a flex. Latinos in Hollywood is part history lesson, part celebration, and part well-deserved callout of an industry thatโs taken way too long to give credit where itโs due. Hosted by John Quiรฑones, itโs got interviews with everyone from Eva Longoria to Edward James Olmos, and it doesnโt pull punches.
Youโll get the highs (breakthroughs, big wins, culture-shifting moments) but also the lowsโlike how often Latino creatives are asked to shrink themselves to fit someone elseโs version of โmarketable.โ But this isnโt a doc that wallows. It uplifts. It highlights power, talent, and resilience.
Whether youโre plugged into the scene or just realizing how many of your favorite shows and films were shaped by Latino voices, this oneโs a fast, powerful watch. Bonus: itโll make you want to root for every underdog in the industry all over again.
Blink (2024)

This oneโs beautiful in a really quiet, gutting kind of way. Blink follows a Canadian family racing to see the world before two of their kids go blind from a rare genetic disorder. Itโs part travelogue, part love letter, part gentle heartbreak.
The footage is stunningโmountains, oceans, temples, citiesโbut the real magic is in the little moments. A sibling giggle. A pause at sunset. Parents just trying to give their kids something unforgettable while they still can. Itโs emotional, but not manipulative. Just honest. Tender. Grateful.
If youโre in a โwhy does anything matter?โ kind of headspace, this is the movie to press play on. It’ll remind you that sometimes the most powerful thing we can do is just see each other while we still have time.
Sugarcane (2024)

This one hits hardโbut it needs to. Sugarcane takes a close, unflinching look at Canadaโs residential school system, told through the voices of Indigenous survivors and families still living with the damage. Itโs about the unmarked graves. The cover-ups. The silence. And what it means to finally start telling the truth.
Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie direct with this quiet intensityโno dramatics, no frills, just people speaking plainly about the pain theyโve carried. And thatโs what makes it land. Itโs not trying to shock you. Itโs trying to show you. And it doesโwith empathy, with clarity, and with deep respect.
This isnโt a casual background watch. Itโs one you sit with. If youโre the kind of person who wants to understand more, who believes truth mattersโeven when itโs uncomfortableโput this on. Let it speak.
Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019)

Post-Endgame Spider-Man is kind of a messโand thatโs what makes Far From Home so fun. Peterโs grieving Tony, trying to confess his crush to MJ, and also, you know… accidentally trusting a fake hero who turns out to be a gaslighting illusionist with drones and daddy issues. Typical teen stuff.
Itโs got all the Euro-trip charmโVenice canals, Prague fireworks, awkward hotel roomsโand still manages to pull off some killer action set pieces. Tom Holland nails the โjust trying to be a kidโ vibe, and Jake Gyllenhaal is unhinged in the best way as Mysterio.
Itโs not the deepest Marvel movie, but itโs one of the most entertaining. Sweet, funny, full of heartโand that post-credit twist? Still slaps.
Jim Henson: Idea Man (2024)

If you grew up on The Muppets, Sesame Street, or honestly just appreciate creative weirdos who change the worldโIdea Man is worth your time. Ron Howard directs this look at Jim Hensonโs life, and while it doesnโt dig super deep, it does capture just how much this guy reshaped what โkidsโ TVโ could be.
You get interviews, old sketches, behind-the-scenes footageโall the nostalgic goldโbut also a sense of how restless and ambitious Henson really was. The puppets were just the start. He wanted to build whole worlds, and in a lot of ways, he did.
Itโs not a perfect doc, but itโs heartfelt and full of wonder. And by the end, you kind of just want to go hug a felt frog and make something weird and beautiful of your own.
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023)

Thereโs animated moviesโand then thereโs Across the Spider-Verse. This thing is a straight-up visual symphony. Every frame feels like it was designed by a different genius with a different color palette and a different heartbeat. Itโs chaotic in the best way.
Miles Morales is back, Gwenโs got a whole arc of her own, and the Spider-Verse just gets so much bigger. Itโs not just alternate dimensions nowโitโs full-blown identity crises, generational trauma, and existential โwhat does it mean to be a heroโ vibes. And somehow, it still cracks jokes and lands emotional gut punches.
If you thought the first one was bold, this sequel says, โHold my sketchbook.โ Itโs wild, weird, gorgeous, and ends on a cliffhanger thatโll make you yell at your TV. In short: itโs a masterpiece.
Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023)

Look, itโs not perfect. Itโs not Raiders. But if you grew up with Indy, Dial of Destiny will still hit you in the nostalgia. Harrison Fordโs back in the fedora, chasing down a time-bending artifact while trying to outrun his age, his regrets, and Mads Mikkelsenโs Nazi villain (because some things never change).
Phoebe Waller-Bridge brings a fun energy as his goddaughter-slash-sidekick, and the action is big, if a little over-CGโd at times. But honestly? The movieโs best moments are the quiet onesโIndy reflecting on what heโs lost, what he still believes in, and whether any of it still matters.
If you want pure pulp adventure, it might feel a little weighed down. But if youโre here to say goodbye to a legend? Itโs a solid farewell.
Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008)

Okay, letโs be realโthis movie got dunked on when it first dropped. And yeah, if you went in expecting a Star Wars film with all the big-screen polish and gravitas of the originalsโฆ this wasnโt that. The Clone Wars (the movie) was basically the pilot for the animated series, and it feels like itโrough around the edges, weird pacing, and a plot centered around rescuing Jabba the Huttโs kidnapped baby slug. Not exactly Empire Strikes Back.
But hereโs the thing: it planted the seeds for one of the best things the franchise ever did. It introduced Ahsoka TanoโAnakinโs snarky new Padawan who would go on to become one of the most beloved characters in the whole galaxy. It gave us more of the Anakin we wish the prequels had leaned into: cocky, charming, complicated. And it cracked open the door for that incredible TV run that added depth to the clones, the Jedi, and the war itself.
So yeah, itโs clunky. And if you’re not already a fan, it might feel like an awkward intro. But if you treat it as the warm-up for something bigger (and way better), itโs kind of a must-watch.
