‘Playdate’ Is Amazon Prime’s Most-Watched Movie of the Week
Looking for something that everyone’s pressing play on right now? Here are the Prime Video titles viewers are flocking to this week—each with quick, useful details like what it’s about, who’s in it, and how you can watch on Prime.
‘No Time to Die’ (2021)

Daniel Craig’s final outing as James Bond brings back Léa Seydoux and Ralph Fiennes, introduces Ana de Armas in a standout sequence, and pits Bond against Rami Malek’s bio-tech villain. On Prime, the film is available to rent or buy, with UHD options listed and X-Ray film trivia accessible on supported devices. The title runs approximately 2 hours 43 minutes and includes the post-Craig coda that wraps this 007 era. You’ll find it within Prime’s Bond hub alongside legacy titles.
‘Play Dirty’ (2025)

Shane Black’s heist thriller adapts Richard Stark’s Parker novels, with Mark Wahlberg as Parker and LaKeith Stanfield as Grofield, backed by Rosa Salazar and Keegan-Michael Key. Released via Prime Video in October 2025, it runs about 128 minutes and features a caper that tangles with the New York mob. Alan Silvestri provides the score, and Amazon MGM Studios handles distribution. It’s currently streaming on Prime.
‘A Working Man’ (2025)

David Ayer directs Jason Statham in an adaptation of Chuck Dixon’s novel ‘Levon’s Trade,’ following an ex-Royal Marine construction worker who hunts the traffickers who abducted his boss’s daughter. The film opened in March 2025 and is now available on Prime, with UHD and X-Ray features on supported devices. Expect gritty fight choreography and a Chicago-set man-on-a-mission plot. The project pairs Ayer’s tough-guy sensibility with a screenplay co-written by Sylvester Stallone.
‘The Woman in the Yard’ (2025)

Produced by Blumhouse and directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, this psychological horror centers on a grieving mother confronting a spectral figure that threatens her family. Prime lists rental and purchase options in UHD, with the title surfacing in horror rows alongside other new-to-digital releases. It transitioned to PVOD shortly after theaters and later headed to subscription streaming per studio windows. Runtime is under 90 minutes for a tight, late-night watch.
‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ (2023)

Illumination and Nintendo’s family hit follows Mario and Luigi through the Mushroom Kingdom with voice performances by Chris Pratt, Anya Taylor-Joy, Charlie Day, and Jack Black. On Prime, it’s available in UHD to rent or buy, with X-Ray details and Kids profiles support. The feature runs about 1 hour 28 minutes, making it an easy family-night pick. It remains one of Prime’s evergreen animated best-sellers.
‘Wicked’ (2024)

Jon M. Chu’s musical adaptation stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, telling the Oz prequel story of Elphaba and Glinda with large-scale musical numbers and extensive world-building. On Prime, you’ll typically find both the standard and “Bonus X-Ray” editions, with sing-along and behind-the-scenes extras accessible via X-Ray after purchase or rental. The film arrived on digital shortly after its theatrical run and later made its subscription-streaming debut on Peacock in 2025. Prime’s listing shows a runtime of roughly 2 hours 40+ minutes.
‘Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy’ (2025)

Shannon Thornton stars as a New York fashion designer whose snowy Colorado trip detours into self-discovery, with Tosin Morohunfola co-starring as a rugged local who upends her plans. Written and directed by Tyler Perry, the holiday melodrama is a 2025 release now streaming on Prime. The listing includes accessibility features like subtitles and audio descriptions. If you’re curating festive options, this title appears in several current “best holiday on Prime” roundups.
‘Red One’ (2024)

Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans headline this globe-trotting holiday caper from director Jake Kasdan, where North Pole security teams with a notorious bounty hunter to rescue a kidnapped Santa. The film premiered on Prime Video in December 2024 and quickly set a Prime viewing record with 50 million global views in its first four days. Expect a 2-hour-plus runtime, big set pieces, and a family-friendly action tone. It’s available to stream on Prime Video.
‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas’ (2000)

Ron Howard’s live-action take on Dr. Seuss stars Jim Carrey as the Grinch, with makeup effects by Rick Baker and production design that recreates Whoville in full, candy-colored scale. The family favorite runs 1 hour 45 minutes and is available to rent or buy on Prime, often surfacing in holiday collections. It includes X-Ray details and HDR/UHD options on supported devices. If you prefer the animated special, Prime also lists the 1966 version separately.
‘Playdate’ (2025)

This action-comedy pairs Kevin James with Alan Ritchson as two suburban dads whose casual get-together with their kids turns into a frantic run-for-it when armed mercenaries crash the afternoon. Directed by Luke Greenfield, it leans into buddy-movie mayhem with cameos from Alan Tudyk and Stephen Root. The feature runs about 1 hour 34 minutes and is streaming on Prime Video in 4K UHD with X-Ray support. If you’re browsing Top 10 rows on Prime, you’ll spot it there thanks to a strong debut.
What did you watch on Prime this week—any surprises on this list? Tell us in the comments.


