‘A Working Man’ Tops Amazon Prime’s Most-Watched Movies List This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Movies
From pulse-pounding action to comfort-watch classics, this week’s Prime Video queue is stacked with titles people are clicking on right now. Below, you’ll find essential details—who made each film, who stars in it, and what each story is about—so you can decide what to play next without any guesswork.
Per your request, we’re counting down from 10 to 1 while keeping the order of your original list intact. Each entry includes quick plot context plus the key creatives behind the camera and the principal cast in front of it.
10. ‘Wolf Man’ (2025)

Leigh Whannell directs and co-writes this modern take on Universal’s classic monster, centering on a family in rural Oregon whose desperate fight for survival turns into a transformation nightmare. Christopher Abbott plays Blake, with Julia Garner as his wife Charlotte and Sam Jaeger among the supporting cast; the film features cinematography by Stefan Duscio and a score by Benjamin Wallfisch. Produced by Jason Blum for Blumhouse Productions, it runs just over 100 minutes and was released by Universal Pictures.
Set largely over one terrifying night, ‘Wolf Man’ blends siege-thriller tension with body-horror beats as the unseen attacker’s curse reshapes the danger inside the house. Whannell collaborated with Corbett Tuck on the screenplay, and advance materials emphasized an R-leaning approach that leans into practical effects and transformation set-pieces.
9. ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ (2023)

This animated adventure from directors Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic tells an origin story for the Brooklyn plumbers who find themselves in the Mushroom Kingdom’s war against Bowser. Matthew Fogel wrote the screenplay, with Chris Meledandri and Shigeru Miyamoto producing; voice leads include Chris Pratt (Mario), Anya Taylor-Joy (Princess Peach), Charlie Day (Luigi), Jack Black (Bowser), Keegan-Michael Key, Seth Rogen, and Fred Armisen.
The film was produced by Illumination, Nintendo, and Universal Pictures and features a Brian Tyler score threaded with themes by Koji Kondo. Its brisk 92-minute runtime and family-friendly tone helped it become one of the highest-grossing video-game adaptations to date.
8. ‘The Beekeeper’ (2024)

David Ayer directs this action thriller about Adam Clay, a retired operative from a clandestine organization known as the “Beekeepers,” who wages a one-man war after his friend falls victim to a phishing ring. Jason Statham leads the cast as Clay, with Emmy Raver-Lampman as FBI agent Verona Parker, Josh Hutcherson as tech scion Derek Danforth, Jeremy Irons as security chief Wallace Westwyld, and Phylicia Rashad and Minnie Driver in key roles; Kurt Wimmer wrote the screenplay.
Backed by Miramax and Cedar Park, ‘The Beekeeper’ was distributed in the U.S. by Amazon MGM Studios and in the U.K. by Sky Cinema. The movie’s plot scales from a small-town scam to a national conspiracy, with set-pieces in Massachusetts and Boston and a runtime of approximately 105 minutes.
7. ‘The Pickup’ (2025)

Directed by Tim Story, this heist-comedy pairs Eddie Murphy with Pete Davidson in a caper that begins with an armored-truck job gone sideways and escalates into a high-stakes casino cash grab. The script comes from Matt Mider and Kevin Burrows; the ensemble includes Keke Palmer, Eva Longoria, Andrew Dice Clay, Ismael Cruz Córdova, Jack Kesy, and a cameo turn from Marshawn Lynch.
Produced by Davis Entertainment, The Story Company, and Eddie Murphy Productions, ‘The Pickup’ runs about 94 minutes and was released by Amazon MGM Studios via Prime Video. Larry Blanford handled cinematography and Christopher Lennertz composed the score.
6. ‘Last Breath’ (2025)

A narrative retelling of the 2012 North Sea saturation-diving crisis, ‘Last Breath’ follows a team working at depth when a storm severs critical lines and leaves a diver with minutes of air. Alex Parkinson—who co-directed the 2019 documentary of the same incident—directs this dramatization starring Finn Cole as Chris Lemons, with Simu Liu and Woody Harrelson as members of the dive team and support crew.
The film focuses on the procedures, equipment, and split-second decision-making that define saturation diving, using a mix of staged sequences and operational details drawn from the real event off the coast of Aberdeen. Reviews highlighted its emphasis on process and the peril of deep-sea work.
5. ‘The Bourne Identity’ (2002)

Doug Liman’s spy thriller adapts Robert Ludlum’s novel into a lean story about an amnesiac assassin piecing together his past while evading CIA killers across Europe. Tony Gilroy and William Blake Herron wrote the screenplay; Matt Damon stars as Jason Bourne opposite Franka Potente, with Chris Cooper, Clive Owen, Brian Cox, and Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje in supporting roles.
Shot in locations including Paris, Prague, and Rome, the film introduced the franchise’s grounded style, with John Powell providing the score and Oliver Wood serving as cinematographer. Universal Pictures released the movie in 2002, launching a series of sequels and spin-offs.
4. ‘Black Bag’ (2025)

Steven Soderbergh directs this London-set espionage thriller written by David Koepp, following British counterintelligence officer George Woodhouse as he probes a shortlist of suspected traitors—one of whom is his own wife. Michael Fassbender plays George, Cate Blanchett plays Kathryn, and the cast also features Marisa Abela, Tom Burke, Naomie Harris, Regé-Jean Page, and Pierce Brosnan.
Produced by Casey Silver and Gregory Jacobs, ‘Black Bag’ runs 94 minutes with music by David Holmes and editing by Mary Ann Bernard. Focus Features handled U.S. distribution, with earlier March 2025 dates in France via Universal’s local arm.
3. ‘The Map That Leads to You’ (2025)

Adapted from J.P. Monninger’s novel, this romantic drama is directed by Lasse Hallström and follows Heather, a meticulous planner on a post-grad European trip, whose chance meeting with free-spirited traveler Jack changes her route—and her plans. The film stars Madelyn Cline and KJ Apa, with Sofia Wylie and Madison Thompson as Heather’s friends and Josh Lucas among the supporting cast; the screenplay is by Vera Herbert and Les Bohem.
Produced by Temple Hill Entertainment and distributed by Amazon MGM Studios, ‘The Map That Leads to You’ was filmed in Spain and released on Prime Video with a runtime just under 100 minutes. Its travelogue settings—Barcelona, Pamplona, Porto, and more—frame a story about timing, illness, and second chances.
2. ‘Wrath of Man’ (2021)

Guy Ritchie’s action thriller reteams the director with Jason Statham for a Los Angeles cash-truck infiltration plot that hides a revenge mission. Ritchie co-wrote the script with Ivan Atkinson and Marn Davies, adapting the 2004 French film ‘Cash Truck’; cast members include Holt McCallany, Jeffrey Donovan, Josh Hartnett, Scott Eastwood, Eddie Marsan, and others.
The film tracks a mysterious new hire known only as “H” as his lethal proficiency draws suspicion and eventually reveals the heist-gone-wrong he’s determined to avenge. Produced by Miramax and Toff Guy Films, it runs 119 minutes with music by Christopher Benstead and cinematography by Alan Stewart.
1. ‘A Working Man’ (2025)

David Ayer directs and co-writes (with Sylvester Stallone) this adaptation of Chuck Dixon’s novel ‘Levon’s Trade’, starring Jason Statham as Levon Cade, a former Royal Marines commando working construction in Chicago who’s drawn back into violence to rescue his boss’s kidnapped daughter. The cast includes Michael Peña, David Harbour, Jason Flemyng, Maximilian Osinski, and others; Fred Raskin edits, with music by Jared Michael Fry.
Produced by Black Bear, Cedar Park, Punch Palace Productions, and Balboa Productions, and distributed by Amazon MGM Studios, ‘A Working Man’ runs 116 minutes. The film’s development traces back to a Stallone-conceived adaptation, with principal photography taking place in the U.K. in spring 2024 before its wide release the following March.
Share what you’re watching first—and which title you think everyone should queue up next—in the comments!


