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We did leave off superhero movies, however. That could be its own list. The same goes for action comedies like The Other Guys. You’re rewatching that for the jokes and light tone, not for any of its action.
7) Machete

The sequel, Machete Kills, is way too much, to the point it’s overwhelming right off the bat, but Robert Rodriguez’s first Machete is still a great time. Its reality is certainly heightened, but we don’t have disguise-swapping assassins or Mel Gibson in an X-34 Landspeeder from Star Wars: A New Hope.
Instead, we get Danny Trejo being a machete-toting James Bond getting dragged into a fight with some unscrupulous, immigration-despising politicians. It’s a relatively simple political thriller with some wacky stuff thrown in for good measure. It’s a great mixture of a few genre film references, a serious topic, and scenes where a man uses another man’s intestines to escape a building.
6) Fast Five

Fast Five was the movie that took a successful, but still somewhat niche, franchise and made it even more widely appealing. Just look at the box office jump from the fourth film to the fifth.
It took already-charming characters and put them in the middle of a bombastic heist scenario. It wasn’t the first time the franchise had touched upon heists, of course, but the Fast Five finale was undoubtedly bigger and more invigorating. It’s just an exciting movie that rarely slows down and, when it does, it’s just fun to spend time with the crew as they bond or poke fun at one another.
Stream Fast Five on TNT.
5) Dredd

There are several reasons Dredd is easy to sit down and watch repeatedly (for those who have seen it even once, anyway). For one, it’s not very long. Given how intense it is, it couldn’t be particularly long without being overwhelming.
Then there are the trio of performances by Karl Urban, Olivia Thirlby, and Lena Headey, each of which couldn’t be any better. But perhaps the main reason is that it’s not a particularly deep movie. You can have it on in the background and look away every now and then without losing any crucial information. That sounds like a slight against it, but it isn’t. This is just a rollercoaster that makes you pull G’s until the credits roll, it doesn’t necessarily want you to do much thinking while everything is going on.
Stream Dredd on HBO Max.












