‘Elio’ Tops Disney+’s Most-Watched Movies List Again This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Movies
It’s a packed week on Disney+, with family favorites, Pixar standouts, a live-action reimagining, and a Marvel team-up all landing near the top of viewers’ queues. Below, you’ll find quick, fact-focused rundowns for each title—what it’s about, who made it, and who stars—so you can pick your next watch without any fuss.
This countdown runs from 10 to 1. Each entry includes concise plot context plus the key cast, creators, and behind-the-scenes credits that matter to fans.
10. ‘Ice Age’ (2002)

‘Ice Age’ pairs a woolly mammoth (Manny), sloth (Sid), and saber-toothed tiger (Diego) on a trek to return a lost human baby to its family during a prehistoric migration, intercut with Scrat’s acorn-chasing misadventures. The voice cast includes Ray Romano, John Leguizamo, Denis Leary, and Jack Black.
Directed by Chris Wedge (with Carlos Saldanha credited as co-director in production materials) and written by Michael Berg, Michael J. Wilson, and Peter Ackerman from Wilson’s story, the feature was Blue Sky Studios’ first film, produced with 20th Century Fox Animation and distributed by 20th Century Fox.
9. ‘The Princess and the Frog’ (2009)

Set in 1920s New Orleans, ‘The Princess and the Frog’ follows Tiana, a hardworking waitress whose encounter with a frog prince launches a bayou quest that reimagines classic fairy-tale beats. The voice cast features Anika Noni Rose, Bruno Campos, Keith David, Michael-Leon Wooley, Jim Cummings, Jenifer Lewis, Oprah Winfrey, Terrence Howard, John Goodman, and others.
The film was written and directed by Ron Clements and John Musker, with additional screenplay credit to Rob Edwards and music by Randy Newman. Produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, it marked a return to hand-drawn animation and earned multiple award nominations.
8. ‘Elemental’ (2023)

‘Elemental’ is set in Element City, where fire-element Ember Lumen and water-element Wade Ripple meet and challenge their communities’ long-held rules, with the story weaving immigration themes into a rom-com framework. The voice cast includes Leah Lewis, Mamoudou Athie, Ronnie del Carmen, Shila Ommi, Wendi McLendon-Covey, and Catherine O’Hara.
Directed by Peter Sohn, the film’s screenplay is credited to John Hoberg, Kat Likkel, and Brenda Hsueh from a story by Sohn, Hoberg, Likkel, and Hsueh, with Thomas Newman composing the score and Pixar producing for Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures.
7. ‘The Parent Trap’ (1998)

In ‘The Parent Trap’, identical twins separated at birth meet at summer camp and conspire to reunite their divorced parents. Lindsay Lohan plays the dual roles of Hallie Parker and Annie James, with Dennis Quaid and Natasha Richardson as the parents.
Nancy Meyers directed the film in her feature debut, with a screenplay by David Swift, Nancy Meyers, and Charles Shyer. Produced by Walt Disney Pictures and distributed by Buena Vista, it remakes Disney’s 1961 film and adapts Erich Kästner’s 1949 novel ‘Lisa and Lottie’.
6. ‘Ratatouille’ (2007)

‘Ratatouille’ centers on Remy, a rat with a passion for cuisine, who forms an unlikely partnership with a young kitchen worker in Paris to pursue fine-dining greatness. The principal voice cast includes Patton Oswalt, Lou Romano, Ian Holm, Brad Garrett, Janeane Garofalo, Brian Dennehy, and Peter O’Toole.
Directed by Brad Bird (from a story by Jan Pinkava, Jim Capobianco, and Bird) and produced by Pixar, the film features music by Michael Giacchino and meticulous culinary detail in its animation and staging, released by Buena Vista (under the Walt Disney Pictures banner).
5. ‘The Incredibles’ (2004)

In ‘The Incredibles’, a family of undercover superheroes—Bob and Helen Parr and their children—must come out of retirement to confront Syndrome, whose vendetta threatens global catastrophe. The voice cast features Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Spencer Fox, Jason Lee, and Samuel L. Jackson.
The film was written and directed by Brad Bird and produced by Pixar for Walt Disney Pictures, blending superhero action with 1960s-inspired production design and score, and cementing the franchise that would later continue with the 2018 sequel.
4. ‘Incredibles 2’ (2018)

‘Incredibles 2’ picks up as the Parr family works to restore public trust in superheroes; Elastigirl leads a new campaign while Mr. Incredible navigates at-home duties, all as a new adversary—the Screenslaver—emerges. Voice performances include Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Huck Milner, and Samuel L. Jackson.
Written and directed by Brad Bird for Pixar and Walt Disney Pictures, the sequel continues the retro-futurist worldbuilding of the first film, with Michael Giacchino returning as composer and Pixar handling production under its feature pipeline.
3. ‘Thunderbolts*’ (2025)

Set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, ‘Thunderbolts*’ assembles a team including Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh), Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), Red Guardian (David Harbour), U.S. Agent (Wyatt Russell), Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen), Taskmaster (Olga Kurylenko), the Sentry (Lewis Pullman), and Valentina Allegra de Fontaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus). The film positions this group for a globe-spanning mission that ties together characters introduced across prior MCU installments.
The movie is directed by Jake Schreier, with writing credits that include Eric Pearson and Joanna Calo; Kevin Feige produces for Marvel Studios. Following strike-related delays, the release was scheduled for 2025 as the project continued through rewrites and production, with filming and casting updates documented throughout early 2024–2025.
2. ‘Lilo & Stitch’ (2025)

This live-action take on ‘Lilo & Stitch’ reimagines the 2002 story of a lonely Hawaiian girl who adopts a chaos-prone alien designated Experiment 626, with events unfolding across Kauaʻi as galactic authorities close in. Maia Kealoha plays Lilo, Chris Sanders voices Stitch, Sydney Agudong plays Nani, and Zach Galifianakis appears among the principal cast.
Directed by Dean Fleischer Camp from a screenplay by Chris Kekaniokalani Bright (with development history involving Mike Van Waes), the film had a theatrical run in May 2025 before arriving on Disney+ in early September 2025. Disney has highlighted the film’s streaming availability, following its strong box-office performance.
1. ‘Elio’ (2025)

Pixar’s ‘Elio’ follows Elio Solís, an 11-year-old who’s accidentally beamed into the Communiverse and mistaken for Earth’s ambassador, sparking a first-contact adventure that forces him to navigate alien politics and an interstellar crisis. The voice cast is led by Yonas Kibreab, with Zoe Saldaña, Brad Garrett, Jameela Jamil, and others in supporting roles.
The film is produced by Pixar for Walt Disney Pictures, with direction credited to Madeline Sharafian, Domee Shi, and Adrian Molina; the screenplay is by Julia Cho, Mark Hammer, and Mike Jones, from a story developed by Molina, Sharafian, Shi, and Cho. It premiered in June 2025 and features music by Rob Simonsen and editing by Anna Wolitzky and Steve Bloom.
Share your own top picks—and what you’re streaming next—down in the comments!


