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The 30 Best Movies on Peacock Right Now

The Fall Guy
The Fall Guy. Photo: Universal Studios
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This article is updated frequently as movies leave and enter Peacock. New titles are indicated with an asterisk.

Who’s ready for another streaming service? NBCUniversal jumped into the crowded pool in 2020 with the launch of Peacock, a destination for everything from classic monster movies to episodes of 30 Rock to original programming. But as with all of these services, it can all be a little overwhelming. The truth is that Peacock’s film catalogue is a little thin and a little strange (there’s an amazing number of B-movies like Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus), but it does have some of the weight of the Universal brand and all its history, including classic franchises and recent hits (and the service will likely have more when licensing deals expire with other streaming platforms). But until the selection expands, you can’t go wrong with any of the following films.

This Month’s Editor’s Pick

*The Fall Guy

Year: 2024
Runtime: 2h 26m
Director: David Leitch

Why can’t people just have fun at the movies anymore? The Fall Guy bombed at the theaters, but it’s already found a bit of life on digital and streaming, available exclusively for subscribers on Peacock. Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt star in a clever, funny homage to the men and women who put their bodies in jeopardy for our entertainment.

The Fall Guy

The Act of Killing

Year: 2013
Runtime: 2h 39m
Director: Joshua Oppenheimer

You’ve never seen a documentary quite like The Act of Killing. One of the best films of the 2010s, Joshua Oppenheimer’s film unpacks the Indonesian genocides of the 1960s and how the men who perpetrated them have never faced consequences. These men act out their crimes in reenactments, leading to what’s almost an exorcism for both the killer and the survivors. It’s breathtaking.

The Act of Killing

Apocalypto

Year: 2006
Runtime: 2h 17m
Director: Mel Gibson

Mel Gibson, king of the brutal historical blockbuster, took an honest risk when he helmed this story of the Yucatan in Mexico around 1502. Told entirely in the Mayan language, Apocalypto is the story of Jaguar Paw, a young hunter whose tribe is invaded by outsiders. The film made an absolute fortune at the box office and has a loyal following.

Apocalypto

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

Year: 2009
Runtime: 2h 2m
Director: Werner Herzog

Director Werner Herzog was an unexpected choice for an unexpected sequel to Abel Ferrara’s 1992 film Bad Lieutenant, but this isn’t your normal sequel. In fact, it has nothing really to do with that first film other than it also centering a corrupt cop. Nicolas Cage gives one of his most unhinged and impressive performances here, and that’s really saying something.

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

Bernie

Year: 2011
Runtime: 1h 44m
Director: Richard Linklater

Richard Linklater directed this black comedy based on the true story of Bernie Tiede (Jack Black), a man who befriended an elderly Texas woman named Marjorie Nugent (Shirley MacLaine) and ended up murdering her. It’s a quirky little movie with one of Black’s best performances and a great supporting turn by Matthew McConaughey.

Bernie

The Beyond

Year: 1981
Runtime: 1h 27m
Director: Lucio Fulci

Dario Argento gets the most attention from Giallo fans, but you should take the time to fall under the spell of Lucio Fulci too. The Beyond is one of his most beloved films, a 1981 supernatural horror story of a woman who inherits a motel in Louisiana only to learn the hard way that it might just be a portal to Hell. Don’t you hate when that happens?

The Beyond

The Blair Witch Project

Year: 1999
Runtime: 1h 21m
Directors: Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sanchez

When this movie dropped at Sundance, it felt like something entirely new. Two decades of found footage imitators has dulled some of its impact, but The Blair Witch Project remains the model for how to do this kind of DIY horror well. And it’s still pretty damn terrifying.

The Blair Witch Project

Burning

Year: 2018
Runtime: 2h 28m
Director: Lee Chang-dong

The best foreign language film of 2018 has finally landed on Peacock and should definitely be seen by anyone who fell in love with Steven Yeun’s Oscar-nominated work in Minari or his stellar acting on Netflix’s Beef. Lee Chang-dong adopts a novella by Haruki Murakami into a riveting dissection of class and gender in modern Korea. Yeun is mesmerizing as the mysterious Ben, someone who our protagonist starts to think might be a killer. Don’t miss this one.

Burning

Casino

Year: 1995
Runtime: 2h 58m
Director: Martin Scorsese

Often in the massive shadow of Scorsese’s masterful ‘90s crime saga, time has been kind to this epic tale of the founding of Las Vegas, a film that features some of the master’s most ambitious filmmaking. Robert De Niro plays Ace Rothstein, the guy who ended up managing the Tangiers in Vegas just as the mob was taking full control of the city in the desert. Sharon Stone does her career-best work here, and Joe Pesci is pretty phenomenal too.

Casino

Do the Right Thing

Year: 1989
Runtime: 1h 59m
Director: Spike Lee

Over 35 years after its release, Spike Lee’s masterpiece feels as urgent and current as the day it was released. After the unrest in early 2020, many people seemed to revisit this classic, to discover it’s lost none of its power. In fact, every viewing of Do the Right Thing feels fresh and new again. It’s one of the best films ever made.

Do the Right Thing

Donnie Darko

Year: 2004
Runtime: 2h 13m
Director: Richard Kelly

It’s a mad world in Richard Kelly’s sci-fi hit starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Drew Barrymore, Patrick Swayze, and Jena Malone. Darko made almost nothing in theaters but developed a loyal following on the home market, becoming one of the more acclaimed sci-fi films of the ‘00s. Join in the conversation that seems to constantly surround this film (and maybe Kelly will be encouraged to make another one soon — he hasn’t directed in over a decade). Note that the version on Peacock is the slightly inferior director’s cut, but still worth a look.

Donnie Darko

Field of Dreams

Year: 1989
Runtime: 1h 45m
Director: Phil Alden Robinson

If you build it, he will come. One of the best baseball movies ever made is really a story about fathers and sons. Phil Alden Robinson directed Kevin Costner to one of the most beloved performances of his career as an average Iowan who hears a voice that tells him to build a baseball field. Redemption, U.S. history, and, of course, a love of America’s pastime intertwine in this moving drama with an incredibly loyal fan base.

Field of Dreams

Fitzcarraldo

Year: 1982
Runtime: 2h 37m
Director: Werner Herzog

The production of this film (chronicled in the great doc Burden of Dreams) is almost more interesting than the movie as director Werner Herzog actually had a crew haul a 320-ton steamship up a hill and fought on the regular with the maniacal star Klaus Kinski. The cool thing about the movie is you can see the chaotic production right there on the screen, as Herzog captures the insanity of his subject matter in a way that required a little instability.

Fitzcarraldo

*Get Out

Year: 2017
Runtime: 1h 44m 
Director: Jordan Peele

Get Out is the one that really changed the current state of horror, reminding studios how acclaimed and popular the genre could be if treated with the right respect. It also won its creator an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, launching one of the most interesting careers of the current era. It’s held up remarkably well, and it’s hardly ever available on streaming services, so take this chance while you can to rewatch a movie whose influence is still shaking the industry.

Get Out

Glengarry Glen Ross

Year: 1992
Runtime: 1h 40m
Director: James Foley

David Mamet wrote the adaptation of his Pulitzer Prize-winning play and pulled off the rare trick of a nearly perfect version of a stage hit. It helps a great deal to have a cast of legends, and this one includes Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Alex Baldwin, Ed Harris, Alan Arkin, Kevin Spacey, and Jonathan Pryce — every single one of them perfect in their part.

Glengarry Glen Ross

The Harry Potter movies

Year: Various
Runtime: Various
Director: Various

J.K. Rowling is horrible now, but the books and films that emerged from her work continue to maintain and even build an incredibly loyal audience. They have a habit of rolling on and off streaming sites, and they’re back on Peacock for now, waiting for the entire family to have a marathon of the story of the Boy Who Lived. Like any massive franchise, they’re a rollercoaster of quality, but Prisoner of Azkaban and Goblet of Fire rule.

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

Ichi the Killer

Year: 2001
Runtime: 2h 9m
Director: Takashi Miike

Despite being one of Takashi Miike’s breakthrough films internationally, his action flick is still banned in several countries around the world. You may think you know what you’re in for, but Ichi is its own special category of crazy, as anyone who’s seen it can attest. When it was released, it was the kind of film that one had to special order from online companies, and now it can be streamed directly to your phone while you’re on the bus. Isn’t technology wonderful?

Ichi the Killer

Mighty Aphrodite

Year: 1995
Runtime: 1h 34m
Director: Woody Allen

Peacock added an array of Woody Allen movies recently, and Mighty Aphrodite is the best of the bunch, a film that won Mira Sorvino an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. She plays a prostitute in this loose adaptation of Pygmalion that also won Sorvino a Golden Globe and a gaggle of critics awards. She’s wonderful here and reason alone to watch it.

Mighty Aphrodite

Moneyball

Year: 2011
Runtime: 2h 13m
Director: Bennett Miller

Adapted from the 2003 book by Michael Lewis, Moneyball recounts the management of the Oakland Athletics, and how they changed the way the game is run by bringing analytics into the mix. Brad Pitt gives one of his best performances as general manager Billy Beane, a man who knew he would have to find a new way to evaluate talent if the A’s were going to compete. It’s a rich, smart, riveting movie that’s extra-interesting given what the Oakland franchise is going through in 2024.

Moneyball

Monkey Man

Year: 2024
Runtime: 2h 1m
Director: Dev Patel

A passion project for the Oscar-nominated actor, this action flick sometimes feels like a hybrid of every action movie that made him fall in love with the genre. Clearly inspired by the brutal efficiency of the John Wick franchise, Monkey Man is about a fighter who trains to get vengeance on the people who destroyed his life. It’s a bit clunky, but plays well at home, where action movies usually do even better than in theaters.

Monkey Man

Night of the Living Dead

Year: 1968
Runtime: 1h 37m
Director: Clive Barker

It’s really hard to overstate the impact that George A. Romero’s classic black-and-white masterpiece had on not just the zombie genre but DIY microbudget horror filmmaking. So many people have been chasing that game-changing impact of Night of the Living Dead in the half-century since it came out, but it’s the original that’s passed the test of time.

Night of the Living Dead

Nightbreed

Year: 1990
Runtime: 1h 42m
Director: Clive Barker

Clive Barker wrote and directed an adaptation of his Cabal and released it to a much more muted response than greeted his hit Hellraiser. Over the years, Nightbreed has developed a loyal following, in part due to the various versions of it now available. The one on Amazon is the theatrical, in which Craig Sheffer plays a man who becomes convinced his therapist is a serial killer, and his own investigation leads him to a tribe of monsters. Good times.

Nightbreed

Nosferatu the Vampyre

Year: 1979
Runtime: 2h 4m
Director: Werner Herzog

In 1979, Werner Herzog released his daring vision of the classic F.W. Murnau film Nosferatu. Klaus Kinski plays Count Dracula, Isabelle Adjani is Lucy Harker, and Bruno Ganz is Jonathan Harker in this unforgettable mood piece, a movie that’s so unsettling that one wonders if Kinski might actually be a bloodsucker. It remains one of Herzog’s most popular films for a reason.

Nosferatu the Vampyre

Passion Fish

Year: 1992
Runtime: 2h 15m
Director: John Sayles

The brilliant writer/director John Sayles delivered one of his most beloved films in the 1992 drama about a soap opera star (Mary McDonnell) who has been paralyzed after being hit by a cab. She returns to her family home, where she crosses paths with a nurse (Alfre Woodard) who refuses to give up on her. It’s moving in a way that feels genuine, never manipulative.

Passion Fish

The Proposition

Year: 2005
Runtime: 1h 44m
Director: John Hillcoat

There aren’t a lot of great Westerns on any streaming service, but this more modern one is worth your time. John Hillcoat directs a gritty, vicious script by Nick Cave (of The Bad Seeds fame) and draws excellent performances from a cast that includes Guy Pearce, Ray Winstone, Emily Watson, John Hurt, and a movie-stealing Danny Huston. With riveting cinematography by Benoit Delhomme, The Proposition is a Western that looks phenomenal, unfolding like a visualization of one of Cave’s albums.

The Proposition

Requiem for a Dream

Year: 2000
Runtime: 1h 41m
Director: Darren Aronofsky

Darren Aronofsky adapted Hubert Selby Jr.’s novel of the same name into one of the most harrowing films about addiction that has ever been made. Jared Leto, Ellen Burstyn, Marlon Wayans, and Jennifer Connelly star in a film that looks at four different spirals into drug abuse and the horrors that can often come with it. The performances are unforgettable, but it’s the incredible visual confidence that Aronofsky displayed in only his second film that makes this such a riveting experience.

Requiem for a Dream

Short Term 12

Year: 2013
Runtime: 1h 36m
Director: Destin Daniel Cretton

Long before she would be Captain Marvel, Brie Larson played a worker at a group home for troubled teenagers in this powerful drama. Based on his own experience, Destin Daniel Cretton wrote and directed this critical darling that now looks like a launchpad for a generation of stars including Larson, Lakeith Stanfield, Rami Malek, Stephanie Beatriz, John Gallagher Jr., and Kaitlyn Dever.

Short Term 12

Sign o’ the Times

Year: 1987
Runtime: 1h 25m
Director: Prince

One of the best concert films of all time is sitting on Peacock waiting for you to jam to it. Largely produced as a tie-in to the 1987 album of the same name, which wasn’t selling like they hoped, this film captures Prince at his most electric, and has really stood the test of time.

Sign o’ the Times

Sophie’s Choice

Year: 1982
Runtime: 2h 30m
Director: Alan Pakula

Meryl Streep gives one of the best performances of all time in this story of a writer (Peter MacNicol) living in Brooklyn who befriends an Auschwitz survivor (Streep) and her beau (Kevin Kline) shortly after the Holocaust. Through flashbacks, we see Sophie’s harrowing journey, including what the title heartbreakingly refers to — a phrase that has been co-opted in the four decades since to refer to any difficult decision.

Sophie's Choice

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

Year: 1974
Runtime: 1h 23m
Director: Tobe Hooper

What’s so stunning about this horror masterpiece is what it doesn’t show. So many people remember this flick as a gore-filled nightmare, but Hooper actually lets your mind do most of the work, rarely showing as much as the film’s reputation. It’s still an unforgettable film, one that changed the indie horror landscape forever.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

*They Live

Year: 1988
Runtime: 1h 34m
Director: John Carpenter

John Carpenter adapted the short story “Eight O’Clock in the Morning” into one of the master filmmaker’s best works. Roddy Piper, Keith David, and Meg Foster star in the story of a pair of sunglasses that reveal that the people in power in this country aren’t human. A movie that works as social satire and sheer horror, it’s remained powerful and felt current while other films of its era have entirely disappeared from memory.

They Live

*The Thing

Year: 1982
Runtime: 1h 48m
Director: John Carpenter

John Carpenter directed one of the best horror films of all time in this sci-fi masterpiece about a group of American researchers at a remote base in Antarctica when, well, they’re visited by something. The real problem is that their alien visitor can take the form of anyone around them, leading to one of the best films ever made about paranoia and distrust.

The Thing

Train to Busan

Year: 2016
Runtime: 1h 58m
Director: Yeon Sang-ho

A legitimate phenomenon that has grossed almost $100 million worldwide, this 2016 South Korean movie is one of the best zombie flicks of its era. It’s simple — zombies on a train — but that’s one of the reasons it works so well. It has a propulsive, non-stop energy and it feels like its legacy is just getting started.

Train to Busan

Trust

Year: 2010
Runtime: 1h 44m
Director: David Schwimmer

Friends fans may be surprised to learn that star David Schwimmer is also a hell of a director, as evidenced by this empathetic, searing 2010 drama. Liana Liberato stars as a 14-year-old girl who befriends a man on the internet who turns out to be a predator. Liberato is excellent, as are Catherine Keener and Clive Own as her parents.

Trust

*United 93

Year: 2006
Runtime: 1h 50m
Director: Paul Greengrass

Paul Greengrass takes a you-are-there approach to the tragedy that took place aboard United Airlines Flight 93 on September 11th and produced arguably the best drama about that horrible day. With shaky, handheld camerawork, you feel like you’re really on the plane when it’s taken over by terrorists as it unfolds in terrifying real time.

United 93

Zodiac

Year: 2007
Runtime: 2h 37m
Director: David Fincher

David Fincher’s masterpiece is more about the impact of crime than crime itself. The fact that he made a sprawling epic about an unsolved murder is daring enough, but what’s most remarkable is how much this movie becomes less and less about figuring out the identity of the Zodiac Killer and more about the impact of obsession. It’s one of the best films of the ‘00s.

Zodiac

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The 30 Best Movies on Peacock Right Now