Every Movie Coming to Amazon Prime in November 2025
Prime Video’s November slate mixes fresh festival titles with crowd-pleasing classics and big-screen franchises, so there’s something to line up for every movie night. A few highlights arrive in the final days of October while the big drop hits on November 1, spanning spy capers, Hitchcock thrillers, holiday favorites, and new originals. Below you’ll find plot essentials, key cast and creators, and exactly when each title lands on Prime Video so you can plan what to stream first. From a new Ibsen reimagining to time-tested noirs and superhero swings, here’s the full list of arrivals to queue up right away.
‘Species II’ (1998)

A returning Mars astronaut brings back alien DNA and begins a deadly transformation, forcing scientists and a hardened operative to turn again to the hybrid Sil for a desperate countermeasure. Natasha Henstridge, Michael Madsen, and Marg Helgenberger reprise their roles in Peter Medak’s sequel as the outbreak spreads and a breeding imperative drives the carnage. The film expands the franchise’s government-lab lore with new containment attempts and genetic twists. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Double Indemnity’ (1944)

Billy Wilder’s landmark noir follows an insurance salesman drawn into a murder scheme by a calculating housewife, with a suspicious claims investigator closing in. Co-written by Wilder and Raymond Chandler from James M. Cain’s novel, it helped formalize genre hallmarks including flashback confession, fatal attraction, and hard-edged voiceover. Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, and Edward G. Robinson headline the seven-Oscar-nominated classic. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Rob Roy’ (1995)

Liam Neeson portrays 18th-century Scottish hero Rob Roy MacGregor in a tale of honor, debt, and defiance against an aristocratic adversary. Jessica Lange, John Hurt, and Tim Roth co-star, with Roth winning the BAFTA and earning an Oscar nomination for his villain. Michael Caton-Jones directs a historical drama that balances clan politics with personal vengeance across the Highlands. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Rear Window’ (1954)

A recuperating photojournalist confined to his apartment begins watching his neighbors and suspects a murder across the courtyard, drawing in his socialite girlfriend and a skeptical detective. Alfred Hitchcock crafts a masterclass in suspense largely on a single set with James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Thelma Ritter, and Raymond Burr. The film adapts Cornell Woolrich’s short story and was screened in competition at the Venice Film Festival. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Arthur Christmas’ (2011)

Aardman and Sony Pictures Animation imagine Santa’s high-tech delivery operation run from a NASA-style control room with the S-1, a massive sleigh-like craft staffed by thousands of elves. When one present goes undelivered, Santa’s well-meaning son Arthur sets out to fix the mistake before dawn, with voice performances by James McAvoy, Hugh Laurie, Bill Nighy, Jim Broadbent, and Imelda Staunton. Look for fun tech details like the S-1’s invisibility skins and cookie-to-fuel green systems. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Species III’ (2005)

After the events of the previous films, a new hybrid emerges and becomes the focus of competing scientific agendas and survival instincts. The story shifts to lab corridors and clandestine experiments as researchers debate cures and weaponization while the alien lineage evolves. Expect franchise mythology about DNA, accelerated growth, and lethal mating strategies to continue. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Be Cool’ (2005)

Chili Palmer leaves the movie business to manage a rising singer and quickly finds the music industry just as cutthroat, with rival promoters and thugs complicating a new deal. F. Gary Gray directs the follow-up to ‘Get Shorty’ with John Travolta, Uma Thurman, Vince Vaughn, Cedric the Entertainer, André Benjamin, Dwayne Johnson, Christina Milian, and more. Based on Elmore Leonard’s novel, it mixes label politics, cross-town shakedowns, and cameos from music icons. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Agent Cody Banks’ (2003)

A teen operative for a secret CIA program is tasked with getting close to a classmate to stop a nanobot plot that threatens national security. Frankie Muniz leads with Hilary Duff, Angie Harmon, and Ian McShane in a kid-friendly spy adventure featuring gadget training and undercover missions that collide with high school life. Harald Zwart directs this box-office hit that later spawned a London-set sequel. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Hot Pursuit’ (2015)

An earnest San Antonio officer is assigned to protect the widowed wife of a cartel figure as they dash across Texas with criminals and crooked cops on their trail. Anne Fletcher directs Reese Witherspoon and Sofía Vergara in a chase-heavy buddy comedy that plays out across safe houses, back roads, and a climactic sting. The setup leans on mismatched-partner hijinks wrapped around a witness-transfer conspiracy. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Scrooged’ (1988)

A modern spin on Dickens finds a ruthless TV executive visited by three spirits on Christmas Eve who force him to confront past choices and present cruelties during a live broadcast. Richard Donner directs Bill Murray with Karen Allen, Bobcat Goldthwait, and Carol Kane in supporting roles. The film keeps the original tale’s moral arc while swapping Victorian London for cutthroat network television. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Good Will Hunting’ (1997)

A brilliant but troubled Boston janitor is discovered to have a prodigious talent for mathematics and begins therapy while navigating loyalty and ambition. Directed by Gus Van Sant from a screenplay by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, the drama stars Robin Williams, Damon, Affleck, Minnie Driver, and Stellan Skarsgård. The story balances mentorship, academia, and Southie friendships as a genius is asked to choose a future. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’ (2017)

Peter Parker returns to Queens after the airport battle and tries to balance high school with neighborhood heroics as salvage boss Adrian Toomes turns tech from past battles into black-market weaponry. Jon Watts directs Tom Holland with Michael Keaton, Robert Downey Jr., Marisa Tomei, Zendaya, and Jacob Batalon, integrating the character into the larger Marvel timeline. The story anchors Spider-Man in school life while building to a tense face-off with the Vulture. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Till’ (2022)

This biographical drama centers on Mamie Till-Mobley’s pursuit of justice after the 1955 lynching of her 14-year-old son Emmett in Mississippi. Chinonye Chukwu directs Danielle Deadwyler with Jalyn Hall, Whoopi Goldberg, and Haley Bennett, focusing on Mamie’s choices and activism rather than depicting the violence on screen. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival and opened in U.S. theaters in October. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Overboard’ (2018)

A wealthy yacht owner with amnesia is duped by a mistreated worker into believing they are married and living a modest life, flipping the premise of the 1987 original. Eugenio Derbez and Anna Faris star in Rob Greenberg’s remake that plays the ruse for screwball complications and family bonding. The bilingual comedy became a sleeper box-office hit on a modest budget. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Larry Crowne’ (2011)

After a downsizing, a big-box employee heads back to community college where he falls in with a scooter-riding campus crew and enrolls in a speech class that changes his outlook. Tom Hanks directs and stars opposite Julia Roberts, co-writing the script with Nia Vardalos and drawing on his own time at Chabot College. The story leans into adult reinvention with midlife education and small-scale optimism. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Vertigo’ (1958)

A retired San Francisco detective hired to follow a magnate’s wife becomes obsessed as he battles crippling acrophobia, leading to a haunting cycle of pursuit and transformation. Alfred Hitchcock directs James Stewart and Kim Novak in a psychological thriller noted for Bernard Herrmann’s score, San Francisco locations, and the pioneering dolly-zoom effect. The film is adapted from the French novel ‘D’entre les morts’ and underwent a major restoration in the 1990s. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Chicago’ (2002)

Two murder suspects in Jazz Age Chicago turn their cases into a media circus as a slick lawyer spins headlines to keep them out of prison. Rob Marshall directs with Renée Zellweger as Roxie Hart, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Velma Kelly, and Richard Gere as Billy Flynn, adapting the Broadway musical from the 1975 stage hit. The film won Best Picture and five other Oscars with choreography-driven numbers woven into a courtroom narrative. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Mariah Carey’s All I Want for Christmas Is You’ (2017)

Inspired by Mariah Carey’s song and picture book, this animated feature follows young Mariah as she hopes to prove she’s ready to care for a puppy by looking after an unruly dog for the holidays. Carey narrates and provides original music alongside Breanna Yde and Henry Winkler in the voice cast. Universal’s animation partners produced the film for a family audience with a brisk ninety-one minute runtime. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Species’ (1995)

When a lab-engineered human-alien hybrid escapes a government facility, a specialist team tries to stop her before she breeds. Roger Donaldson directs a cast led by Natasha Henstridge, Ben Kingsley, Marg Helgenberger, Michael Madsen, Alfred Molina, and Forest Whitaker in the first entry of the sci-fi horror franchise. The story blends pursuit, genetic experiments, and urban set pieces that kick off in Los Angeles. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2’ (2015)

After an accident, the gang jumps the hot tub again and lands in a future where a tech mogul twist forces them to fix timelines to save their friend. Steve Pink returns to direct with Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, and Clark Duke joined by Adam Scott and Gillian Jacobs for the sequel. The comedy leans on paradox jokes and pop-culture riffs across shifting years. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Fearless’ (2006)

Jet Li stars as real-life martial artist Huo Yuanjia whose high-profile bouts in the early 1900s became symbols of national pride. Ronny Yu’s period action drama stages showcase matches with international fighters and traces Huo’s path from personal tragedy to public redemption. Li has described the film as his final dedicated wushu showcase. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘This Christmas’ (2007)

The Whitfield family gathers in Los Angeles for their first full reunion in years and old secrets collide with new romances over a lively holiday week. Preston A. Whitmore II writes and directs with an ensemble that includes Delroy Lindo, Idris Elba, Loretta Devine, Regina King, and Chris Brown. The soundtrack and story thread the Donny Hathaway standard through family comedy and drama. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London’ (2004)

Teen agent Cody Banks goes undercover with a youth orchestra in London to retrieve stolen mind-control technology while juggling a new partner and cover identity. Frankie Muniz returns alongside Anthony Anderson and Hannah Spearritt under director Kevin Allen. The sequel shifts the series’ spy gadgets and stings to royal estates and city landmarks. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Entourage’ (2015)

The big-screen continuation of the HBO series finds movie star Vincent Chase directing a costly studio project that puts agent Ari Gold’s career on the line while the crew navigates Hollywood deals and cameos. Doug Ellin writes and directs with the original ensemble headed by Adrian Grenier, Kevin Connolly, Kevin Dillon, Jerry Ferrara, and Jeremy Piven. The plot mirrors the show’s insider tone with a production-in-trouble arc driving the stakes. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘The Cutting Edge’ (1992)

A temperamental pairs skater teams with a former hockey player after an injury ends his pro prospects and the unlikely duo trains for Olympic competition. Paul Michael Glaser directs from a script by Tony Gilroy with Moira Kelly and D. B. Sweeney sparring through rink drills and choreography. The story builds to an Albertville showdown with a signature throw move at center ice. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Hannah and Her Sisters’ (1986)

Three sisters in New York weave through relationships and career turns over two years framed by successive Thanksgiving dinners. Woody Allen writes, directs, and co-stars with Mia Farrow, Michael Caine, Barbara Hershey, and Dianne Wiest in a multi-thread ensemble piece. The film earned multiple Oscars and is often cited among the filmmaker’s most acclaimed works. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Missing in Action’ (1984)

Vietnam veteran Colonel James Braddock returns to Southeast Asia to investigate reports of American POWs and mounts a clandestine rescue mission. Joseph Zito directs with Chuck Norris leading raids through jungles, rivers, and city safe houses in the first film of the action series. The release sparked two follow-ups that expanded Braddock’s campaign. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Child’s Play’ (2019)

A widowed mom gifts her son a high-tech Buddi doll that has had its safety protocols disabled, turning the toy into a violent protector that learns from its environment. Lars Klevberg directs with Aubrey Plaza, Gabriel Bateman, Brian Tyree Henry, and Mark Hamill voicing Chucky in a reimagined origin. The update switches supernatural possession for malfunctioning AI within a connected-home setting. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Hanna’ (2011)

Raised off the grid by her ex-CIA father, a teenage girl trained for survival embarks on a journey across Europe while a ruthless intelligence chief hunts her. Joe Wright directs with Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana, and Cate Blanchett, set to an electronic score by The Chemical Brothers. The thriller blends fairy-tale motifs with hand-to-hand chase sequences from Finland to Germany and Morocco. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Flamin’ Hot’ (2023)

This biographical dramedy follows Richard Montañez as he works his way up at Frito-Lay and champions a chili-spiced snack that becomes a cultural hit. Eva Longoria makes her feature directing debut with Jesse Garcia and Annie Gonzalez starring in a story drawn from Montañez’s memoir and his account of the product’s creation. The film premiered at SXSW and later rolled out on streaming. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘The Poughkeepsie Tapes’ (2007)

Framed as a true-crime documentary, this found-footage horror assembles interviews and evidence from hundreds of videotapes left by a serial killer in upstate New York. John Erick Dowdle directs a pseudo-doc that traces investigations, victim profiles, and contested leads. After premiering at Tribeca, the title had a troubled release history before reaching home media years later. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Benny & Joon’ (1993)

An overprotective brother cares for his mentally ill sister whose life changes when a gentle eccentric inspired by silent-era comedians enters their orbit. Jeremiah S. Chechik directs with Johnny Depp, Mary Stuart Masterson, and Aidan Quinn, featuring physical set pieces that homage Keaton and Chaplin. The Spokane-set romance became a sleeper success and broadened Depp’s comic persona. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Heartbreakers’ (2001)

A mother-daughter con team runs wedding and seduction schemes until an IRS problem forces one last, high-stakes score in Palm Beach. David Mirkin directs with Sigourney Weaver, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Ray Liotta, Gene Hackman, and Jason Lee. The plot stacks overlapping grifts and romantic complications as targets and partners collide. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘A Beautiful Mind’ (2001)

The drama charts mathematician John Nash from his graduate days at Princeton through groundbreaking work and the onset of schizophrenia, then follows his later recognition by the Nobel committee. Ron Howard directs from Akiva Goldsman’s adaptation of Sylvia Nasar’s biography with Russell Crowe and Jennifer Connelly leading the cast. The film won Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay at the Academy Awards. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Miracle on 34th Street’ (1947)

After the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, a department-store Santa who calls himself Kris Kringle sets off a legal and public debate over his identity as he touches a skeptical family. George Seaton writes and directs with Maureen O’Hara, John Payne, Edmund Gwenn, and Natalie Wood. The New York holiday setting spans from courtroom hearings to bustling Midtown storefronts. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Happy Gilmore’ (1996)

A failed hockey player with a powerful swing turns to professional golf to save his grandmother’s house and clashes with a smug tour star. Dennis Dugan directs with Adam Sandler, Julie Bowen, Christopher McDonald, and Carl Weathers as the story skips from driving-range trials to televised tournament showdowns. The film became a cult favorite and returned to theaters in spring 2025 ahead of a sequel. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection’ (1990)

Colonel Scott McCoy and his team are sent into the fictional nation of San Carlos to capture cartel boss Ramón Cota after a DEA mission goes sideways. Chuck Norris leads the sequel with Billy Drago as the antagonist and Aaron Norris in the director’s chair as the operation escalates from extradition to jungle sieges. The Cannon Group produced the follow up that continues the series focus on hostage rescues and counternarcotics raids. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘The Great Outdoors’ (1988)

Two families try to share a lakeside vacation in Wisconsin where water skis, bears, and in-law rivalries spark a string of mishaps. John Hughes wrote the screenplay for director Howard Deutch with John Candy and Dan Aykroyd headlining and Annette Bening making her film debut. Universal released the comedy at a brisk ninety minutes and it became a summer sleeper at the box office. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Hot Tub Time Machine’ (2010)

Four friends discover that a malfunctioning resort tub has sent them back to 1986 and they have to replay one wild weekend to get home. Steve Pink directs John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark Duke, and Lizzy Caplan as the group collides with past choices and a running gag about a bellhop’s arm. The film blends time travel mechanics with eighties references across a snowy party town. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Bones and All’ (2022)

Set in late eighties America, a young woman who is an eater meets a drifter on the road and the pair travel across the Midwest while confronting a violent compulsion. Luca Guadagnino directs Taylor Russell and Timothée Chalamet with Mark Rylance in a pivotal supporting role and a score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. The film premiered at Venice where Guadagnino won the Silver Lion and Russell received the festival’s emerging talent award. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Annie Hall’ (1977)

A New York comedian looks back on his relationship with an aspiring singer as the story moves through therapy sessions, split-screen gags, and memory digressions. Woody Allen directs and stars opposite Diane Keaton with Gordon Willis as cinematographer and editors Ralph Rosenblum and Wendy Greene Bricmont shaping the film’s structure. The film won Best Picture along with directing, actress, and original screenplay at the Academy Awards. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Child’s Play’ (1988)

After a dying killer performs a ritual in a toy store, his soul enters a Good Guy doll that is gifted to a young boy and begins a string of murders in Chicago. Tom Holland directs with Catherine Hicks, Chris Sarandon, Alex Vincent, and Brad Dourif voicing Chucky as detectives track the origin of the doll. The film launched a long running horror franchise centered on the foulmouthed slasher icon. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid’ (1982)

A private eye takes a case from a femme fatale and stumbles into a conspiracy that is stitched together with footage from classic noirs. Carl Reiner directs Steve Martin and Rachel Ward while the production integrates scenes of Bogart, Bacall, and other vintage stars to create a new mystery. Miklós Rózsa supplied the score in one of his final film credits. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Uncle Buck’ (1989)

A bachelor is roped into caring for his brother’s kids and finds himself sparring with a strong-willed teen while solving everyday crises in suburban Chicago. John Hughes writes and directs with John Candy and Amy Madigan leading and Macaulay Culkin stealing scenes before his breakthrough the next year. Universal released the film in August and it became one of Candy’s biggest hits. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘In the Heat of the Night’ (1967)

A Philadelphia detective passing through Mississippi is detained during a murder investigation and ends up assisting the local police chief as tensions rise. Norman Jewison’s drama stars Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger and features a score by Quincy Jones with the title song performed by Ray Charles. The film won Best Picture along with four other Academy Awards and later spawned sequels and a television series. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘The Delta Force’ (1986)

An airliner hijacking leads an elite U.S. unit to plan a rescue that stretches from the tarmac to urban strongholds. Menahem Golan directs with Chuck Norris and Lee Marvin leading an ensemble that includes Martin Balsam, Robert Forster, and George Kennedy with music by Alan Silvestri. The film marked Marvin’s final screen role and launched a series of sequels. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Bill & Ted Face the Music’ (2020)

Middle-aged best friends are told they must finally write the song that unites the world while their daughters recruit history’s great musicians to help save reality. Dean Parisot directs Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter with Kristen Schaal, Samara Weaving, Brigette Lundy-Paine, and William Sadler in supporting roles. The film opened in theaters and premium video on demand on the same day in August 2020 after a decade of development. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘All Dogs Go to Heaven’ (1989)

A German Shepherd con artist returns to Earth from the afterlife to help an orphan girl who can talk to animals while his former partner schemes on the side. Don Bluth directed the animated feature with Burt Reynolds and Dom DeLuise voicing the leads and Judith Barsi as Anne-Marie. The film became a home video favorite and later spawned a sequel and TV series. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde’ (2003)

Elle Woods heads to Washington to advocate for animal rights once she discovers a connection between her dog’s family and a cosmetics lab. Reese Witherspoon returns alongside Sally Field, Regina King, Jennifer Coolidge, Luke Wilson, and Bob Newhart as director Charles Herman-Wurmfeld moves the story to Capitol Hill. MGM released the sequel in July 2003 and it grossed over one hundred million worldwide. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Legend’ (1985)

A forest dweller must protect the last unicorns and rescue a princess as the Lord of Darkness plots to plunge the world into night. Ridley Scott directs Tom Cruise, Mia Sara, and Tim Curry with cinematographer Alex Thomson and different scores in the U.S. and European cuts. The film exists in multiple versions including a later director’s cut that restores Jerry Goldsmith’s music. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘The Break-Up’ (2006)

A Chicago couple’s relationship ends but neither person agrees to move out of their shared condo and a stalemate turns into a messy war of attrition. Peyton Reed directs Vince Vaughn and Jennifer Aniston with a supporting cast that includes Jon Favreau, Joey Lauren Adams, and John Michael Higgins. Universal released the film in June 2006 and it opened number one at the domestic box office. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 1.
‘Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy’ (2025)

A New York fashion designer follows a holiday crush to Colorado and gets stranded by a snowstorm where a chance encounter sets up a new path in love and work. Tyler Perry wrote and directed the Prime Video original starring Shannon Thornton with Brittany S. Hall, Inayah, and Aaron O’Connell among the cast. Amazon MGM Studios is releasing the film as part of Perry’s multi picture pact in the run up to the holidays. Available to stream on Prime Video on Wednesday November 5.
‘The Alto Knights’ (2025)

Barry Levinson directs Robert De Niro in dual roles as mob bosses Frank Costello and Vito Genovese whose feud reshapes New York’s underworld in the mid twentieth century. The crime drama was previously developed under the title ‘Wise Guys’ before being retitled and dated for a wide release ahead of its streaming window. Irwin and Charles Winkler produce with Jason Sosnoff as the film traces a friendship that turns into an all out power struggle. Available to stream on Prime Video on Friday November 7.
‘Tatsuki Fujimoto 17-26’ (2025)

Prime Video adapts eight early one shot stories by the creator of ‘Chainsaw Man’ with episodes produced by studios like Lapin Track, 100studio, Studio Kafka, and P.A. Works. Directors across the anthology include Nobuyuki Takeuchi and Tetsuaki Watanabe as the lineup covers tales such as ‘Nayuta of the Prophecy’ and ‘Mermaid Rhapsody’. Amazon lists the anthology for a November debut as part of the streamer’s anime slate. Available to stream on Prime Video on Friday November 7.
‘Baywatch’ (2017)

A legendary lifeguard team investigates a drug operation threatening their beach while a disgraced Olympian joins the squad and clashes with the leader. Seth Gordon directs Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron with Priyanka Chopra Jonas as the villain and Alexandra Daddario in the ensemble. Paramount released the feature spinoff of the TV series and it grossed nearly one hundred eighty million worldwide. Available to stream on Prime Video on Sunday November 9.
‘Playdate’ (2025)

A newly unemployed dad accepts a meetup with another stay at home father and discovers his host has pulled him into a mercenary plot that spirals across the suburbs. Luke Greenfield directs the action comedy starring Kevin James and Alan Ritchson with Sarah Chalke, Alan Tudyk, Stephen Root, and Isla Fisher supporting. Amazon MGM Studios is releasing the film directly to Prime Video. Available to stream on Prime Video on Wednesday November 12
‘Belén’ (2025)

This legal drama follows a young woman in Tucumán who is criminally charged after a medical emergency and the fearless lawyer who turns her case into a broader fight for justice. Prime Video presents the film internationally as ‘Belén’ and it is adapted from Ana Correa’s nonfiction book ‘Somos Belén’ with Dolores Fonzi directing and starring. The Argentine release premiered in September with festival play at San Sebastián before the streaming window. Available to stream on Prime Video on Friday November 14 as a subscription streaming release.
‘Drop’ (2025)

A widowed mother on her first date in years begins receiving anonymous phone messages that threaten her family unless she follows escalating instructions over the course of a single night. Christopher Landon directs with Meghann Fahy and Brandon Sklenar leading an ensemble that plays the thriller’s real time setup inside an upscale restaurant. The film opened digitally in spring 2025 and now arrives on subscription streaming. Available to stream on Prime Video on Friday November 14 as a subscription streaming release.
‘Mamma Mia!’ (2008)

On a Greek island a bride secretly invites three men from her mother’s past in hopes of discovering which one is her father as an ABBA driven wedding weekend unfolds. Phyllida Lloyd directs an ensemble that includes Meryl Streep, Amanda Seyfried, Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth, Stellan Skarsgård, Christine Baranski, and Julie Walters from Catherine Johnson’s stage musical. The global box office hit features songs produced by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus. Available to stream on Prime Video on Saturday November 15 as a subscription streaming release.
‘The Iron Claw’ (2023)

This biographical sports drama traces the Von Erich wrestling family from Texas through triumphs and devastating losses as brothers push to fulfill their father’s ambitions. Sean Durkin writes and directs with Zac Efron as Kevin Von Erich alongside Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson, Maura Tierney, and Holt McCallany. The film was released by A24 and later hit streaming with a runtime just over two hours. Available to stream on Prime Video on Wednesday November 19 as a subscription streaming release.
‘The Age of Disclosure’ (2025)

This feature documentary assembles testimony from dozens of government and military insiders to argue that world powers have hidden evidence of non human intelligence for decades. Prime Video’s listing describes a global cover up and efforts to reverse engineer advanced technology while positioning the film as a contemporary investigation. The release pairs a limited theatrical play with a streaming debut on Amazon’s platform. Available to stream on Prime Video on Friday November 21 as a documentary premiere.
‘Mickey 17’ (2025)

Bong Joon Ho adapts Edward Ashton’s novel about an expendable worker on a deep space colonization mission who can be regenerated after death and discovers a conspiracy that threatens the expedition. The cast features Robert Pattinson with Naomi Ackie, Steven Yeun, Toni Collette, and Mark Ruffalo and the film reteams Bong with composer Jung Jae il and editor Yang Jin mo. The science fiction black comedy runs over two hours and marked Bong’s return to English language filmmaking. Available to stream on Prime Video on Wednesday November 26 as a subscription streaming release.
That wraps the month, so tell us which of these late month arrivals you’re most excited to watch in the comments.


