‘Bring It On’ & 9 Other Movies Top Peacock’s Most-Watched List This Week
Peacock’s weekly chart is a cozy chaos of comfort rewatches, family-friendly favorites, and a couple of curveballs. From animated animal antics to teen comedies that basically defined an era, the lineup shows how well a good laugh (or a well-timed eye roll) still plays at home. It’s also a reminder that a great stunt sequence or a killer one-liner can be just as bingeable as prestige TV.
What’s fun about this mix is how it hops across tones without losing steam: sharp teen satire sits alongside kung fu slapstick, while a cheerleading classic keeps pace with globe-trotting penguins and power-kicking pandas. Below, we count down the week’s most-watched titles from #10 to #1, spotlighting why each one has people pressing play right now.
10. ‘Clueless’ (1995)

Even decades later, ‘Clueless’ keeps its grip on pop culture with razor-witty dialogue, a sun-splashed Beverly Hills vibe, and a lead who’s lovable even when she’s hilariously out of touch. It’s the rare teen comedy that still feels fresh, thanks to its warm heart and self-aware humor.
Beyond the quotable moments and iconic fashion, what endures is how confidently it balances satire with sincerity. Rewatchers come for the laughs and stay for the glow-up arc, the unexpectedly sweet romance, and the reminder that growth can be both messy and fun.
9. ‘Kung Fu Panda 3’ (2016)

‘Kung Fu Panda 3’ doubles down on big-hearted adventure, pairing gravity-defying battles with gentle lessons about identity and belonging. Po’s journey continues to resonate as he juggles old friends, new family ties, and responsibilities he never asked for but embraces anyway.
Visually lush set pieces and playful banter make it a breezy crowd-pleaser. It’s comfort cinema at its best—easy to drop into, satisfying to finish, and perfect for family movie night.
8. ‘Kung Fu Panda’ (2008)

The original ‘Kung Fu Panda’ remains a blast: a classic underdog tale wrapped in kinetic martial-arts comedy. Po’s leap from noodle shop dreamer to Dragon Warrior is told with warmth, timing, and a joyful reverence for training-montage magic.
Its lasting appeal comes from the blend of earnest messaging and meticulous action choreography. Viewers return for the belly laughs, the inventive set pieces, and the reminder that greatness can come from the unlikeliest places.
7. ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ (2024)

‘The Phoenician Scheme’ scratches the itch for a sleek, modern thriller—think shadowy motives, high-stakes maneuvering, and a tangle of loyalties that won’t sit still. It’s the kind of movie that invites you to play detective from the couch.
What keeps eyes glued is the drip-feed of revelations and the tight pacing. Every scene nudges the story forward, building tension until the final turns snap into place with satisfying precision.
6. ‘Kung Fu Panda 2’ (2011)

‘Kung Fu Panda 2’ raises the emotional stakes without losing the comedic snap that made the first film soar. Po’s quest widens into a meditation on heritage and courage, while the action scales up with inventive, rhythmically choreographed showdowns.
It’s a case study in animated sequel craftsmanship: richer world-building, deeper character beats, and a villain whose menace sharpens the film’s themes. The result is a sequel that stands proudly on its own.
5. ‘Mean Girls’ (2004)

‘Mean Girls’ stays endlessly rewatchable because it’s brutally honest and wickedly funny in equal measure. The cafeteria politics, the burn-book chaos, the social calculus—every beat lands with precision and quotability.
Underneath the zingers is a surprisingly tender look at belonging and empathy. It skewers cliques without cynicism, and that balance keeps audiences coming back for both the laughs and the catharsis.
4. ‘Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa’ (2008)

‘Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa’ takes the fish-out-of-water charm of its predecessor and ups the scale with bigger environments and broader character arcs. The ensemble chemistry remains the fuel, with side characters stealing scenes left and right.
Sight gags, snappy pacing, and a steady stream of visual punchlines make it a reliable family pick. It’s the kind of sequel that leans into its strengths—energy, absurdity, and heart—and rides them to a crowd-pleasing finish.
3. ‘Borderline’ (2014)

‘Borderline’ leans into French neo-noir tension—measured pacing, morally gray decisions, and a steady tightening of the screws. It’s a character-first thriller that lets silences speak, drawing you into a world where duty and impulse collide and nothing is cleanly resolved.
What hooks viewers is the precision: careful reveals, grounded stakes, and an atmosphere that hums with unease. Scenes stack with quiet inevitability until the final turns snap into place, delivering a payoff that feels both earned and unsettling.
2. ‘Madagascar’ (2005)

‘Madagascar’ still pops with elastic animation and fish-out-of-zoo humor that plays for both kids and adults. The New York quartet’s misadventures land thanks to sharp voice work and a steady cadence of gags.
Its staying power is simple: lovable characters, bright slapstick, and a travel-gone-sideways premise that keeps delivering. Whether it’s a first watch for younger viewers or a nostalgic spin for grown-ups, it’s always a good time.
1. ‘Bring It On’ (2000)

‘Bring It On’ sticks the landing as a sports comedy with real spark—snappy routines, sharper dialogue, and a competitive fire that’s impossible to resist. It captures the rush of performance and the jitters of leadership with verve.
What keeps it evergreen is the blend of ambition, accountability, and team chemistry. It’s fast, funny, and fiercely watchable—no wonder it’s topping the list this week.
Share your favorites from this week’s lineup—and the moments you can’t stop quoting—in the comments.


