Best Movies to Stream this Weekend on Apple TV+, Including ‘All of You’
Apple TV+ has a strong lineup right now, with brand-new originals debuting alongside recent theatrical arrivals and a few platform-defining hits. If you’re looking to queue up something fast—whether it’s a survival thriller based on real events, a high-concept romance, or a slick crime caper—there’s plenty to stream without leaving your couch.
Below are ten films available on Apple TV+ that cover fresh 2025 premieres first, then recent Apple Originals, and finally a couple of modern standouts. For each pick, you’ll find the essentials—what it’s about, who made it, and who’s in it—so you can jump straight to the ones that fit tonight’s plan.
‘The Lost Bus’ (2025)

Inspired by true events surrounding the 2018 Camp Fire, ‘The Lost Bus’ follows a determined father and a dedicated teacher who race to shepherd 22 children to safety as a wildfire bears down on their route. The film stars Matthew McConaughey and America Ferrera, with additional roles for Yul Vazquez and Ashlie Atkinson, charting the split-second decisions and contested roads that shape the escape.
Directed by Paul Greengrass and co-written with Brad Ingelsby, the feature adapts Lizzie Johnson’s nonfiction work ‘Paradise: One Town’s Struggle to Survive an American Wildfire’. Behind the scenes, James Newton Howard provides the score and Pål Ulvik Rokseth serves as cinematographer, bringing procedural intensity and on-the-ground logistics to the survival story.
‘All of You’ (2025)

‘All of You’ is a British-American sci-fi romance that centers on two best friends whose lives are upended by a technology claiming it can identify your perfect match. The story tracks their relationship across years as timing, missed chances, and a single piece of tech push them toward choices that can’t easily be undone. Imogen Poots leads the cast alongside Brett Goldstein, with appearances by Zawe Ashton and Jenna Coleman.
William Bridges directs and co-writes with Brett Goldstein, shaping the speculative premise around character-focused storytelling. Produced out of the U.K. and U.S., the film debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival before landing on Apple TV+, where its intimate scope and long-arc structure are foregrounded by careful editing and a grounded near-future design.
‘The Gorge’ (2025)

Set around a vast canyon, ‘The Gorge’ follows two elite sentries on opposing sides who are forced into a wary alliance as escalating incursions expose a threat far stranger than expected. Miles Teller and Anya Taylor-Joy star, with Sigourney Weaver in a pivotal supporting role, as surveillance routines, long-distance communications, and hostile engagements drive the plot from standoff to cooperation.
Scott Derrickson directs from a screenplay by Zach Dean, staging large-scale set pieces that exploit vertical terrain—rope ascents, narrow ledges, subterranean passages—while keeping procedure and resourcefulness front and center. The production draws on Apple Original Films and Skydance backing to deliver canyon-spanning action balanced with character-level tactical problem-solving.
‘Highest 2 Lowest’ (2025)

‘Highest 2 Lowest’ reimagines a classic kidnapping scenario inside the world of wealth and celebrity, following a high-profile figure whose family becomes the leverage in a meticulously planned ransom scheme. Denzel Washington leads an ensemble that includes Jeffrey Wright, Ilfenesh Hadera, and John Douglas Thompson, with cameos tied to New York’s music scene reflecting the story’s cultural backdrop.
Spike Lee directs, with Apple Original Films and A24 producing. The film is photographed by Matthew Libatique and edited by Barry Alexander Brown, grounding the investigation in press conferences, boardrooms, and back-channel negotiations while a ticking-clock manhunt narrows toward a high-stakes exchange.
‘Fountain of Youth’ (2025)

‘Fountain of Youth’ teams estranged siblings Luke and Charlotte Purdue—played by John Krasinski and Natalie Portman—on a globe-trotting chase for clues to the legendary spring said to grant eternal life. The ensemble also features Eiza González, Domhnall Gleeson, Arian Moayed, Laz Alonso, Carmen Ejogo, and Stanley Tucci, weaving family history with heist-crew dynamics.
Guy Ritchie directs from a screenplay by James Vanderbilt, with Apple Studios and Skydance mounting the production. The adventure pivots through museums, archives, and archaeological sites as coded artifacts point the way, while the siblings’ conflicting methods shape the pace and structure of the search.
‘Apple Music Live: Fuerza Regida’ (2025)

‘Apple Music Live: Fuerza Regida’ captures the regional Mexican group onstage in Mexico City with a set spanning corridos tumbados staples and tracks from the ‘111XPANTIA’ era. Frontman Jesús Ortiz Paz anchors a lineup driven by requinto, tuba, and bajo sexto, with multi-camera coverage designed for on-demand viewing.
Presented by Apple Music and Apple TV+, the concert special runs around an hour and twenty-five minutes and documents call-and-response moments, instrumental breakdowns, and stacked harmonies. The production provides a polished record of the band’s current tour setup and live arrangements.
‘Wolfs’ (2024)

‘Wolfs’ pairs two rival professional fixers who unexpectedly land the same cleanup job in New York, turning a routine call into a spiraling night of complications neither can fully control. George Clooney and Brad Pitt headline, with Amy Ryan, Austin Abrams, and Poorna Jagannathan in supporting roles.
Jon Watts writes and directs, with Apple Studios backing alongside producers including Clooney, Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, and Grant Heslov. The film’s tight, chaptered structure tracks pickup, containment, and fallout, supported by Larkin Seiple’s cinematography and Theodore Shapiro’s score.
‘The Family Plan’ (2023)

‘The Family Plan’ follows Dan Morgan, a former government assassin living undercover as a suburban dad whose past resurfaces, forcing a cross-country escape with his unsuspecting family. Mark Wahlberg stars with Michelle Monaghan, while Zoe Colletti and Van Crosby play the kids; Maggie Q, Saïd Taghmaoui, and Ciarán Hinds round out the cast.
Directed by Simon Cellan Jones from a screenplay by David Coggeshall, the film blends road-movie momentum with set-piece chases as old enemies close in. Produced by Apple Studios and Skydance, the plot uses the family’s evolving awareness—hotel stops, identity switches, and close calls—to drive both the action and the domestic stakes.
‘Sharper’ (2023)

Set in New York’s world of inherited wealth, ‘Sharper’ unfolds as a neo-noir of intersecting cons told in chapters that reveal each character’s angle. The ensemble features Julianne Moore, Sebastian Stan, Justice Smith, Briana Middleton, and John Lithgow, with Moore also serving as a producer alongside Apple Studios and A24.
Benjamin Caron directs from a screenplay by Brian Gatewood and Alessandro Tanaka. Charlotte Bruus Christensen’s photography and Clint Mansell’s score shape the sleek presentation as forged identities, controlled reveals, and the mechanics of the long con reposition earlier scenes in a puzzle-box structure.
‘Greyhound’ (2020)

‘Greyhound’ dramatizes the Battle of the Atlantic as a first-time U.S. Navy convoy commander leads Allied merchant ships through the mid-ocean “Black Pit” while German U-boats close in. Tom Hanks stars as Commander Ernest Krause and wrote the screenplay based on C. S. Forester’s novel ‘The Good Shepherd’, with Stephen Graham and Elisabeth Shue in supporting roles.
Directed by Aaron Schneider and produced with Playtone, the film emphasizes naval procedure—active sonar hunts, zig-zag patterns, coded transmissions, and replenishment windows—across a compact runtime. Practical shipboard staging and radio-room tension frame the command decisions that determine whether the convoy reaches air-cover range intact.
Enjoyed the picks? Share which Apple TV+ films you’re queuing up this weekend—and what we should add next time—in the comments.


