The 35 Best Movies on Amazon Prime (February 2022)

The 35 Best Movies on Amazon Prime (February 2022)

The Wrap

Published

Finding a good movie to watch on Amazon Prime Video can be difficult to say the least. While Amazon’s robust library of titles is available to every Amazon Prime subscriber, they don’t exactly make it easy to find what you’re looking for. That’s where we come in. Below, we’ve assembled a growing list of the best movies on Amazon Prime right now. Our carefully curated selection runs the gamut from crowd-pleasing blockbusters to Oscar-winning dramas to delightful rom-coms and beyond. There’s a little something for everyone, so stop the endless scrolling and simply choose one of these great movies to watch.

Check out our list of the best movies on Amazon Prime video below. The list will be updated weekly with new titles.

*Die Hard*

20th Century Fox

One of the best blockbusters ever made, there’s never really a bad time to watch “Die Hard.” The 1988 film from director John McTiernan stars Bruce Willis as NYC-based cop John McClane, who travels to Los Angeles to visit his estranged wife at her place of business, only to happen upon a terrorist hostage situation. As the only person unseen by the terrorists, McClane sneaks his way around the LA high-rise, sabotaging the terrorists every chance he can get. This one’s a pulse-pounding thriller, dark comedy and effective romance all in one, with an iconic Alan Rickman performance to boot.

*(500) Days of Summer*

Searchlight Pictures

Before Marc Webb directed “The Amazing Spider-Man” movies, he burst onto the scene with 2009’s romantic dramedy “(500) Days of Summer.” The film chronicles a relationship in a fractured narrative, flashing forward and backwards to follow a man named Tom (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and his 500-day relationship with a girl named Summer (Zooey Deschanel). While seeing different stages of their relationship out of order, the audience gets deeper into Tom’s point of view, and the film ends with a smart reversal of the “boy pines for girl” trope.

*The Rock*

Disney

It’s quite possible that Michael Bay has never made a better film than “The Rock,” which pairs Sean Connery and Nicolas Cage in a thrilling action film that sees the two breaking into Alcatraz prison. Cage is an FBI agent who enlists the help of a notorious criminal played by Connery to break into Alcatraz to free hostages being held by a rogue Marine (played by Ed Harris) who threatens to unleash a toxin on San Francisco. The film is both ridiculous and ridiculously entertaining.

*Lincoln*

Disney

There are those that will tell you “Lincoln” is “minor Spielberg,” but those people are wrong. This 2012 drama had long been a passion project of Steven Spielberg’s, and as realized is a thoughtful, insightful and surprisingly funny chronicle of the American governmental process. The film doesn’t take the “cradle to grave” route to Lincoln’s story but instead focuses on his efforts to pass the 13th Amendment. In doing so, Spielberg creates one of the best films about political process ever made, while also digging deep into the contradictions in Lincoln himself. As portrayed by Daniel Day-Lewis, it’s a complex, fascinating portrayal of a man trying to do best by himself and his country, but who doesn’t always have the right answers. The film is far deeper than a simple “that was nice” story, and is “West Wing”-esque in its compelling chronicle of the political process. In short, it’s masterful and it’s absolutely top tier Spielberg.

*Déjà Vu*

Disney

If you’re looking for a gritty thriller with a time-travel twist, Tony Scott’s hypnotic “Déjà vu” is a lot of fun. The 2006 film stars Denzel Washington as an ATF agent who travels back in time in order to prevent a terrorist attack, but when he ends up falling in love he finds himself with dual missions. The sci-fi is played pretty down-and-dirty here, and while it doesn’t make a ton of sense, Washington gives a compelling lead performance and the ensemble cast – which includes Paula Patton, Val Kilmer and Bruce Greenwood – is killer.

*Mission: Impossible*

Paramount Pictures

The “Mission: Impossible” franchise is one of the most consistently great franchises still running, and it all started with director Brian De Palma’s 1996 film – which holds up tremendously well. Tom Cruise plays IMF agent Ethan Hunt who, went a mission goes wrong and his entire team is murdered, is on the run as he’s fingered for the crime. De Palma brings a great paranoia thriller vibe to the whole proceedings, and at the time Cruise was proving himself as an action movie lead.

*Mission: Impossible III*

Paramount Pictures

The “Mission: Impossible” franchise didn’t quite embrace the team aspect of the series until the third entry, which finds Tom Cruise relying on a team that includes Maggie Q, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Ving Rhames to bring down a dastardly villain played by Philip Seymour Hoffman (who is legitimately great in the role). The film marked J.J. Abrams’ first feature film directorial effort, and he crafted the most personal “Mission” film to date as the story finds Ethan trying to balance his professional life with his relationship with his fiancé Julia, played by Michelle Monaghan. It brings a romantic flavor to the proceedings that helps set the film apart.

*The Village*

Disney

M. Night Shyamalan’s 2004 thriller “The Village” was deemed something of a disappointment upon release, but it’s only grown in stature over the years. The film takes place in a small village where the townspeople are afraid of mysterious creatures in the woods beyond their town. But when someone is deathly injured, a young blind woman (Bryce Dallas Howard) is sent outside the property for help. Shyamalan and cinematographer Roger Deakins are a match made in heaven, and the ensemble cast – which includes Joaquin Phoenix, William Hurt and Sigourney Weaver – is one of Shyamalan’s best.

*Nightcrawler*

Open Road Films

If you’re in the mood for a dark thriller with a powerhouse lead performance, check out 2014’s “Nightcrawler.” Written and directed by Dan Gilroy, the film is a darkly comic look at the world of local news media, as Jake Gyllenhaal plays a stringer named Lou who records violent events and sells them to a local Los Angeles news station. But as Lou’s ambition grows, his motives become even more murky. The film certainly has shades of a modern “Taxi Driver” with Gyllenhaal delivering a transformative performance that gets under your skin. The whole thing is anchored by terrific co-starring turns from Renee Russo and Riz Ahmed.

*The Courier*

Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions

“The Courier” is a great “dad movie,” and that’s pejorative. This Cold War thriller is based on a true story and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Greville Wynne, a British businessman who was recruited by the Secret Intelligence Service to serve as a messenger between a Russian spy source and the British government in the 1960s. What begins as an exciting romp turns deadly serious, and Cumberbatch commands the screen in the lead role (flanked by Rachel Brosnahan as his wife and Jessie Buckley as his handler). This one’s taut, compelling and surprisingly emotional.

*The Lighthouse*

A24

The 2019 film “The Lighthouse” absolutely will not be for everyone, but if it’s up your alley there’s much to love here. An esoteric and atmospheric thriller that’s wildly ambiguous – to the point that even the plot of the movie is up for interpretation – the film takes place in the 1890s and stars Robert Pattinson as a young man who reports for duty as a lighthouse keeper on a small island with another man, played by Willem Dafoe. Strange goings-on ensue, and the film evolves into a horror picture, dark comedy or psychological thriller depending on what you think is actually happening. It hails from the mind of “The Witch” filmmaker Robert Eggers.

*The Grand Budapest Hotel*

Searchlight Pictures

Wes Anderson’s Oscar-winning 2014 film “The Grand Budapest Hotel” is one of his best. The story takes place across multiple time periods – 1985, 1968 and 1932 – and the frame changes aspect ratios with each different period, as it tells the story of a hotel run by a fastidious concierge named Gustave H. (played delightfully by Ralph Fiennes). Antics ensue as Gustave H. tries to keep the hotel in order amidst rapid change in his country, and the bountiful ensemble cast – which includes Tony Revolori, Saoirse Ronan, Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray and Willem Dafoe – is killer.

*Sleepless in Seattle*

TriStar Pictures

Once upon a time, Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan were the King and Queen of romantic comedies. Their second film together, 1993’s “Sleepless in Seattle,” still stands as one of the most romantic and moving romcoms ever made. Ryan plays a Baltimore Sun reporter engaged to a man she doesn’t really love who hears on the radio one night a widower (Tom Hanks) recounting the story of losing his wife and raising his young son. Nora Ephron co-wrote and directed the film, and that heartwarming finale still gets us choked up all these years later.

*Before Midnight*

Sony Pictures Classics

Richard Linklater brought his “Before” trilogy to a conclusion with the brutally honest 2013 romantic drama “Before Midnight.” If 1995’s “Before Sunrise” was about young strangers falling in love and 2004’s “Before Sunset” was about adults realizing they belong together, “Before Midnight” is about the challenges of marriage and parenthood and facing the potential that maybe you’re not meant to be together. Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy vacillate between flirtatious, contentious and raw as we follow one evening in the lives of Jesse and Celine. A case could be made that this is the best film of the three.

*Brittany Runs a Marathon*

Amazon Studios

The 2019 comedy “Brittany Runs a Marathon” manages to be both hilarious and inspiring at the same time, as Jillian Bell stars as a twentysomething woman living in New York City named Brittany who decides to try and get her life together – and to start, she’s going to train to run the New York Marathon. But as Brittany gets deeper and deeper into running, making new friends along the way, she discovers that a change on the inside may be what’s most prudent to pointing her life in the right direction. Bell is fantastic in the lead role, and writer/director Paul Downs Colaizzo’s script is pleasantly surprising in where it takes Brittany’s story.

*Suspiria*

Amazon Studios

After he made the Oscar-winning romance “Call Me by Your Name,” filmmaker Luca Guadagnino took on a horror classic with 2018’s “Suspiria.” Set in 1988 Berlin, the film stars Dakota Johnson as a young woman leaving her Mennonite family in Ohio to audition for and train as a dancer at an esteemed academy. But as her training continues, it becomes clear that perhaps this dance troupe has something more sinister, more witchy going on. The brilliance of Guadagnino’s take on the story is how it uses the supernatural horror to tell a real-life horror story about fascism, and the festering wound of evil. Tilda Swinton is mesmerizing pulling double duty here as the dance troupe’s leader and a male doctor curious about the goings-on at the school.

*The Report*

Amazon Studios

If a real-life investigative thriller in the vein of “All the President’s Men” is more your speed, check out “The Report.” Released in 2019, the true-story drama stars Adam Driver as Daniel Jones, a staffer for Senator Dianne Feinstein (played by Annette Bening) who is tasked with investigating the CIA’s use of torture following the 9/11 attacks. Writer/director Scott Z. Burns crafts a film that is taught with tension, but also powerful in its pursuit of the truth. The ensemble includes Jon Hamm, Michael C. Hall, Corey Stoll, Ted Levine and Maura Tierney.

*Late Night*

Amazon Studios

Screenwriter Mindy Kaling pulled from the world of late night television for her 2019 comedy “Late Night,” which stars Emma Thompson as a veteran late night TV personality who is in danger of being pushed out by the network, and enlists the help of a new (and inexperienced) writer (played by Kaling) to bring some diversity to her all-male writing staff. The comedy has shades of a mismatched buddy film, behind-the-scenes Hollywood tale and middle-aged drama, and it’s anchored by a terrific performance from Thompson as a woman struggling to keep up with the times.

*Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol*

Paramount Pictures

One of the best “Mission: Impossible” movies is certainly the fourth installment, “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol” – aka the one where Tom Cruise hangs off the tallest building in the world. “The Incredibles” and “Ratatouille” director Brad Bird made his live-action debut with the film, which embraces the “team” aspect of the “Mission” franchise by pairing Ethan Hunt up with an assembly of characters who are on the run after being framed for an explosion at the Kremlin. Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton and Simon Pegg make for excellent team members in this adventurous entry in the franchise.

*The Prestige*

Warner Bros.

Filmmaker Christopher Nolan has always been a fan of mysteries and complex stories, and nowhere is that more present than in his 2006 film “The Prestige” – which is literally about magicians. Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale play dueling magicians in 1890s London, as Jackson’s showman-like character becomes obsessed with a seemingly impossible illusion that Bale’s character is staging. This is a film about the lengths to which one will go for their art, and what they sacrifice in return. It’s one of Nolan’s best.

*Something’s Gotta Give*

Sony Pictures

If you’re in the mood for a feel-good movie, you can’t go wrong with a Nancy Meyers film — and her 2003 romantic comedy “Something’s Gotta Give” fits that bill. The film stars Diane Keaton as a successful playwright who is forced to look after her daughter’s much-older boyfriend (Jack Nicholson) after a heart attack, and against all odds these two complete opposites begin to attract. The film has the wit and humor of Meyers’ other films, but also a strong emotional center as the story of a successful 50-something single woman. Keaton and Nicholson are both pretty terrific here, and as with all of Meyers’ films, the house at the center of it is to die for.

*Inside Llewyn Davis*

CBS Films

Oscar Isaac embodies the life of a soulful and melancholic folk singer in the 2013 Coen Brothers film “Inside Llewyn Davis.” Set in 1961 just before Bob Dylan took folk mainstream, the story follows a week in the life of Llewyn Davis, a struggling folk musician who can’t keep his life in order. The film features a tremendous soundtrack with Isaac doing his own performing and singing, and a robust ensemble that includes Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake, F. Murray Abraham and Adam Driver. This is the Coen Brothers at their saddest.

*It’s a Wonderful Life*

Liberty Films

If you’re looking to get into the holiday spirit, you can’t go wrong with Frank Capra’s 1946 classic “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The film stars James Stewart as George Bailey, a man extremely down on his luck who, after attempting to take his own life, is shown what life in his small town would look like had he never existed. While the film is ultimately uplifting, it’s far darker than many remember, and is a brilliant tale about life and the relationships we make (and take for granted) along the way.

*The Royal Tenenbaums*

Buena Vista Pictures

Wes Anderson’s 2001 comedy “The Royal Tenenbaums” is a perfect blend of melancholy and dry humor. The film follows three gifted siblings who found immense success as kids, but in adulthood have faltered. Their eccentric and slightly estranged father tells them that he’s dying, which brings the kids together for a series of misadventures that force them to confront their troubled upbringing. The excellent ensemble is led by Gene Hackman and Anjelica Huston and includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Luke Wilson, Ben Stiller, Bill Murray, Danny Glover and Owen Wilson.

*Cold War*

Amazon Studios

If you’re into period dramas, the 2018 film “Cold War” is a must-see. Directed and co-written by Pawel Pawlikowski, the Polish-language drama takes place in Poland and France and begins in the 1940s before ending in the 1960s as it follows the relationship between a musical director and a young singer he discovers. Against the backdrop of their love affair, the war rages on.

*The Big Sick*

Amazon Studios/Lionsgate

A romantic comedy straight from the heart, the based-on-a-true-story “The Big Sick” is delightful and emotional all at once. Written by Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon, the film is based on the origins of their relationship as Gordon slipped into a coma soon after they started dating, and Nanjiani was forced to confront his own fears and contend with Gordon’s parents all with the uncertainty of her condition looming large. Zoe Kazan portrays Gordon in the film with a hearty dose of moxie, and Nanjiani delivers a complex performance that clearly pulls from the depths of his personal life – not just his relationship with Kazan’s character, but his own relationship to his family.

*The Handmaiden*

CJ Entertainment

“Oldboy” filmmaker Park Chan-wook’s 2016 epic erotic drama “The Handmaiden” is absolutely one of his best films, and is a blast from start to finish. The psychological thriller plays out in three parts chock full of twists and turns, but begins as the story of a con man who conspires with a pickpocket to hatch a plan that would involve marrying a Japanese heiress and committing her to an asylum, thus stealing her wealth. But the film takes a number of turns as various romantic and sexual entanglements ensue. This one’s for adults only.

*Manchester by the Sea*

Amazon Studios

“Manchester by the Sea” is a brilliant film, but fair warning it’s also a significant bummer. This 2016 film won Oscars for Best Actor and Best Original Screenplay and stars Casey Affleck as a janitor living in Massachusetts who is suddenly tasked with caring for his nephew following his brother’s abrupt death. The event triggers substantial trauma that Affleck’s character has yet to process, and what follows is a somber, sometimes darkly funny and ultimately touching meditation on grief and guilt.

*One Night in Miami*

Amazon Studios

Regina King’s 2020 drama “One Night in Miami” is an excellent snapshot of a moment in time, and how four of the most famous African-Americans in history each approached the changing societal landscape of the 1960s. Set over the course of one night in 1964, the story follows four friends – Cassius Clay (Eli Goree), Malcolm X (Kingsley Ben-Adir), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) and Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr.) – as a night of celebrating soon turns into a night of lively conversation about their roles and responsibilities to the African-American community. The film is cleverly drawn and tremendously compelling, and provides much food for thought as it connects the struggles of the 1960s to today.

*The Vast of Night*

Amazon Studios

If you like hidden gems, 2020’s “The Vast of Night” is one of the most exciting indies of the last few years. Set in 1950s New Mexico, the story takes place over the course of one evening where a young switchboard operator and a radio DJ pick up a mysterious audio frequency that may or may not be inhuman in nature. This small-scale sci-fi mystery is light on effects but heavy on evocative filmmaking, intrigue and dimensional characters. It’s so good, a scene with a man talking about his experience with aliens over the radio will have you on the edge of your seat.

*Fight Club*

20th Century Fox

David Fincher’s 1999 film “Fight Club” is woefully misunderstood, and in that regard is well worth revisiting if you haven’t seen it in a while. Based on Chuck Palahniuk’s novel of the same name, the story follows a disillusioned young man (played by Edward Norton) whose life is suddenly given meaning when he meets a freewheeling soap salesman named Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). The two start a fight club, which then leads to them starting an entire anarchic enterprise that quickly spirals out of control. But “Fight Club” is not about a fight club, it’s about toxic masculinity – or, more specifically, the fragility of the male ego and the impact of consumerism on male culture in the 1990s. It’s also kind of a twisted romantic comedy at heart, with Helena Bonham Carter’s colorful Marla serving as the object of both Tyler and the narrator’s affection.

*Sound of Metal*

Amazon Studios

2019’s “Sound of Metal” is an indie with a heart of gold – and an Oscar-winning one at that. The film stars Riz Ahmed as a metal drummer named Ruben who begins to lose his hearing. He leaves his bandmate to go to a facility for Deaf recovering addicts, where he begins to learn how to live his life differently but also struggles with his own demons. Ahmed gives a powerhouse performance, and the film’s sound design puts you right in Ruben’s headspace.

*Love and Friendship*

Amazon Studios

If it’s a lovely costume dramedy you’re in the mood for, 2016’s “Love and Friendship” is an absolute delight. Based on the Jane Austen novel “Lady Susan,” the film is written and directed by Whit Stillman and stars Kate Beckinsale as a recently widowed woman who sets out to secure wealthy husbands for herself and her daughter. A comedy of errors ensues, with Beckinsale and Chloe Sevigny sharply leading an ensemble that also includes Stephen Fry, Tom Bennett and Xavier Samuel.

*Midsommar*

A24

“Midsommar” is a film that will churn your stomach in the best way. The A24 horror movie hails from “Hereditary” writer/director Ari Aster and stars Florence Pugh as a young woman grieving the death of her family who follows her boyfriend and his friends to Sweden to attend a festival that only occurs once every 90 years. But once they arrive, the group finds themselves in the midst of a deadly pagan ritual. The terror of the film comes not from jump scares but from the palpable tension and horrific visuals that Aster conjures, with Pugh serving as the film’s emotional center. This is a deeply upsetting film, but a great one. You’ve been warned.

Full Article