Here Are the Top 10 Most-Watched Movies on Peacock This Week, Including ‘The Phoenician Scheme’
Peacock’s latest top-ten lineup is a comfort-food buffet: animated showstoppers, razor-sharp teen comedies, and a thriller or two for good measure. It’s a snapshot of what people actually watch when they want pure fun—familiar characters, generous laughs, and stories that go down easy after a long day.
What makes this mix pop is the range. You can jump from high-energy martial arts hijinks to biting satire without losing the feel-good momentum. Below, we count down from #10 to #1, highlighting why each title has viewers hitting play this week.
10. ‘Clueless’ (1995)

‘Clueless’ remains a sparkling time capsule of wit, wardrobe, and well-aimed self-awareness. Its heroine may be gloriously oblivious at first, but the movie’s empathy gives every joke a soft landing.
The appeal endures because the satire never curdles; it invites you in rather than talking down. Rewatches deliver the same fizzy charm—zingers, glow-ups, and a romance that sneaks up right when you need it.
9. ‘Kung Fu Panda 3’ (2016)

‘Kung Fu Panda 3’ leans into big-hearted spectacle—slick set pieces, zippy banter, and a quest that treats identity like an adventure instead of a lecture. It’s breezy, colorful, and reliably crowd-pleasing.
What keeps families returning is the warmth between the characters. The humor lands fast, the action flows, and the story finds a sweet spot between goofy and sincere.
8. ‘Kung Fu Panda’ (2008)

‘Kung Fu Panda’ still punches above its weight with a classic underdog arc and laugh-out-loud timing. Watching a noodle-shop dreamer crash headfirst into destiny never stops being fun.
The action rhythms are crisp, the world-building is inviting, and the jokes roll in without drowning the heart. It’s an easy recommendation when you want a win you can feel.
7. ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ (2024)

‘The Phoenician Scheme’ scratches the itch for sleek intrigue: shifting loyalties, quiet double-crosses, and a breadcrumb trail of clues. It’s the kind of thriller that makes you lean forward without shouting for attention.
Tight pacing and deliberate reveals give every scene a purpose. By the time the final pieces click, the payoff feels earned and satisfying.
6. ‘Kung Fu Panda 2’ (2011)

‘Kung Fu Panda 2’ levels up the emotions while keeping the jokes and jaw-dropping choreography. The theme of finding one’s place hits harder, and the set pieces pop with inventive rhythm.
It’s a model sequel—deeper character beats, sharper stakes, and an antagonist who raises the bar. You can feel the confidence from frame one.
5. ‘Mean Girls’ (2004)

‘Mean Girls’ endures because it’s ruthlessly funny and weirdly tender, clocking the rules of the cafeteria with unnerving accuracy. Every line feels engineered to be quoted for eternity.
Beneath the bite is a story about belonging and kindness, which is why it never goes out of style. It skewers the social ladder while letting its characters grow.
4. ‘Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa’ (2008)

‘Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa’ takes the original’s chaos and expands it with bigger vistas and louder laughs. The ensemble chemistry is the engine, and scene-stealers keep the momentum high.
Visual gags arrive in waves, the pacing sprints, and the heart sneaks in around the edges. It’s exactly the sort of sequel you throw on when you want guaranteed giggles.
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 sparkles with elastic slapstick and fish-out-of-zoo antics that play across generations. The central quartet’s chemistry is a joke-delivery machine.
The secret sauce is how effortlessly it balances silliness with sincerity. Whether it’s a nostalgic revisit or a kid’s first spin, it lands every time.
1. ‘Bring It On’ (2000)

‘Bring It On’ rules because it blends sports-movie adrenaline with whip-smart humor. The cheer routines snap, the rivalries crackle, and the energy is irresistible.
What keeps it on top is the mix of accountability and ambition wrapped in pure showmanship. It’s brisk, quotable, and built for repeat viewing—no wonder it’s leading the pack.
Tell us which picks you loved most this week—and which moments you’re still quoting—in the comments.


