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So here you’ll find the 10 best movies released on Netflix in 2025, ranked from tenth to first. This is obviously just one person’s opinion and isn’t based on viewership or overall reviews. But I watch a lot of movies and spend most of my time at work writing about streaming, and these are the Netflix films in 2025 I believe we should spend more time talking about.
10. Nonnas
This one snuck under a lot of people’s radars, but it makes the list because it is such a joy to watch. A warm hug in movie form, one that’s easily accessible and endlessly rewatchable.
Nonnas, based on the true story of a man who owns an Italian restaurant and employs real grandmothers as the chefs, is a showcase not only for the comfortable adult dramadies that we desperately need more of, but also the power that earnestness can provide a film. This is the most sincere Vince Vaughn has been in years (maybe ever), and his supporting cast of “nonnas” is excellent. Susan Sarandon, Lorraine Bracco, Talia Shire, and Brenda Vaccaro shine in every scene of this movie.
9. The Thursday Murder Club
Speaking of great casts, The Thursday Murder Club has one of the best core ensembles of any Netflix movie this year. Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley, and Celia Imrie make for a fantastic foursome of golden sleuths, and they’re supported by some truly phenomenal turns from Tom Ellis, Naomi Ackie, and David Tennant.
Directed by Home Alone‘s Chris Columbus, and based on the book by Richard Osman, The Thursday Murder Club follows a group of retirees who form a club to solve cold cases, only to stumble into a current mystery.
8. Ballad of a Small Player
While the first two movies on this list focused on ensemble casts, Ballad of a Small Player makes the Top 10 because of a single performance. If you like Colin Farrell, you’re going to want to watch this.
Farrell and Conclave director Edward Berger team up for a frantic and frenzied dark comedy about a debt-riddled gambler trying to run from the truth of his past. It’s a little over the place, but you’d be hard-pressed to call Ballad of a Small Player boring, and Farrell brings that “silly, but with a deadly edge” kind of energy that he has perfected over the years. This may not be for everybody, but Farrell’s performance makes it more than worth it.
7. Steve
Another movie anchored by a great performance, Steve is absolute showcase for Cillian Murphy. Fresh off winning his Oscar for Oppenheimer, Murphy stars in Steve as a teacher at a reform school trying to balance the needs of his students with his own instability.
The film surrounding Murphy in Steve is much stronger all-around than what Farrell has in Ballad of a Small Player, and it’s less of an acquired taste. It’s sharp, focused, and it packs a punch when you aren’t quite expecting it.
6. Jay Kelly
The latest film from Noah Baumbach put two absolute legends of the screen opposite one another for most of its runtime, and the fireworks are exactly as magical as you’d expect. George Clooney is still one of the most interesting leading men we’ve ever seen in Hollywood, and Adam Sandler continues to prove that he’s far more than the comedian we all grew up watching. While Clooney plays the titular Jay, it’s honestly Sandler that steals the show.
Jay Kelly is a deeply funny but thoroughly heartbreaking exploration of what a life well lived really looks (and doesn’t look) like. The ending packs an absolute wallop, so be prepared to end on a reflective, melancholy note.
5. Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
It would be shocking if a new Wallace & Gromit movie โ featuring the decades-in-the-making return of iconic cartoon villain Feathers McGraw โ wasn’t totally great. This is one series that has yet to let us down, and the folks at Aardman Animation didn’t start here.
Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl doesn’t quite hit the highs of something like Curse of the Were-Rabbit, but that’s an impossibly high bar. This hilarious movie deals with our reliance on technology and how deep friendships face challenges over the years, bringing forth a well-rounded picture that stacks up against just about any other animated feature this year.
4. Train Dreams
Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar’s latest collaboration has been making “Best Of” lists left and right, and for good reason. Train Dreams, inspired heavily by Terrence Malick, is a dramatic and thoughtful journey through the entirety of one man’s life.
Joel Edgerton gives the performance of a lifetime as a man who settles down and starts a family out in Idaho, and spends much of his life working for the rail company. This is a beautiful movie, both in its picture and its soul, and reflects one of the truest American stories we’ve had in years.








