‘Honey Don’t’ Tops Peacock’s Most-Watched Movies List for this Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Movies
Peacock’s film carousel has been busy, and this week’s most-watched picks range from cozy animated favorites to cult-comedy classics and fresh theatrical arrivals. To make it easy to catch up, here’s a clean countdown that keeps the same order you’re seeing on the service, so you can jump straight to what everyone’s streaming.
Each entry below includes straightforward details—story setup, key cast, and the creative minds behind the camera—so you know exactly what you’re getting before you hit play. Let’s dive in.
10. ‘How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World’ (2019)

Dean DeBlois writes and directs the trilogy capstone as Hiccup leads Berk into a new era while protecting Toothless and exploring rumors of a secret dragon utopia. Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera, Cate Blanchett, Kit Harington, Gerard Butler, and Craig Ferguson return, with Bonnie Arnold and Brad Lewis producing for DreamWorks Animation.
The story advances the human-dragon coexistence thread, introducing a Light Fury counterpart and pushing Hiccup’s leadership arc toward difficult, permanent choices. The film closes core character journeys and expands the series’ creature design and flight cinematography, using new environments and swarm-scale sequences to bring the saga to a full-circle farewell.
9. ‘Puss in Boots: The Last Wish’ (2022)

DreamWorks Animation returns to the ‘Shrek’ universe with Antonio Banderas voicing the swashbuckling feline who confronts the cost of burning through eight of his nine lives. Directed by Joel Crawford with Januel Mercado as co-director, the film features Salma Hayek Pinault, Harvey Guillén, Florence Pugh, Olivia Colman, Ray Winstone, Wagner Moura, and John Mulaney; the screenplay is by Paul Fisher and Tommy Swerdlow.
The plot follows a quest for the mythical Last Wish, drawing multiple fairy-tale factions into a race while Puss grapples with mortality and fame. A painterly, stylized action look—mixing frame-rate experimentation and bold linework—distinguishes it visually from earlier entries while keeping the franchise’s fairy-tale mash-up DNA.
8. ‘Ghostbusters’ (1984)

Ivan Reitman directs this paranormal comedy about three New York parapsychologists who start a ghost-removal business. Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, and Ernie Hudson headline, with Sigourney Weaver, Rick Moranis, and Annie Potts rounding out the ensemble; the script is by Aykroyd and Ramis, from a concept Aykroyd developed.
The story tracks the team from Columbia University failures to city-saving first responders as a Sumerian deity threatens Manhattan. Elmer Bernstein’s score, Ray Parker Jr.’s theme, and Richard Edlund’s effects work define the film’s blend of deadpan humor and spectacle, laying groundwork for sequels, spin-offs, and cross-media continuations.
7. ‘Scary Movie’ (2000)

Keenen Ivory Wayans directs this hit horror send-up with a screenplay credited to Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans, Buddy Johnson, Phil Beauman, and the writing duo of Aaron Seltzer and Jason Friedberg. The cast features Anna Faris, Regina Hall, Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans, Jon Abrahams, Shannon Elizabeth, and Lochlyn Munro.
The film parodies late-’90s slashers and teen thrillers, weaving together a murder-mystery framework with gags that reference titles like ‘Scream’ and ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer.’ Its success kicked off a multi-film series, establishing recurring characters and a template of rapid-fire movie and pop-culture riffs.
6. ‘Monster House’ (2006)

Directed by Gil Kenan and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg and Robert Zemeckis, this performance-capture animated feature follows neighborhood kids who discover the creepy house across the street is literally alive. The voice cast includes Mitchel Musso, Sam Lerner, Spencer Locke, Steve Buscemi, Catherine O’Hara, and Maggie Gyllenhaal, from a screenplay by Dan Harmon, Rob Schrab, and Pamela Pettler.
The plot blends suburban legend with haunted-house mechanics as the trio investigates the property’s origin story and mounts a Halloween-timed takedown. The film’s hybrid production pipeline uses motion-capture performances translated into stylized CG, allowing for dynamic camera moves and elaborate set destruction.
5. ‘Corpse Bride’ (2005)

Tim Burton and Mike Johnson co-direct this stop-motion gothic romance about Victor, who accidentally proposes to a dead bride and gets whisked to the Land of the Dead. Voices include Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Emily Watson, Albert Finney, and Richard E. Grant, with a screenplay by John August, Pamela Pettler, and Caroline Thompson and music by Danny Elfman.
The production showcases hand-crafted puppetry and elaborate miniature sets, with camera rigs capturing subtle facial mechanisms for expressive performances. The story balances macabre whimsy with a Victorian-era love triangle, contrasting the drab living world with the colorful, jazz-tinged afterlife sequences.
4. ‘Scream’ (1996)

Wes Craven directs Kevin Williamson’s meta-slasher about high-schoolers in Woodsboro targeted by a phone-taunting killer in a Ghostface mask. Neve Campbell leads as Sidney Prescott, with Courteney Cox, David Arquette, Skeet Ulrich, Matthew Lillard, and Rose McGowan in a cast that helped reboot ’90s horror.
The plot toggles between whodunit mechanics and rules-aware characters who’ve seen every scary movie, using movie-logic bait-and-switches to keep suspects rotating. Marco Beltrami’s score and Craven’s set-piece staging lock the tone, while Williamson’s script seeds the franchise mythology that subsequent entries keep unraveling.
3. ‘The Grinch’ (2018)

Illumination’s animated take on Dr. Seuss’s classic features Benedict Cumberbatch voicing the green grouch who schemes to steal Christmas from Whoville. Directed by Yarrow Cheney and Scott Mosier from a screenplay by Michael LeSieur and Tommy Swerdlow, it’s produced by Chris Meledandri and Janet Healy, with Angela Lansbury and Rashida Jones among the supporting voice cast.
The film expands the Grinch’s backstory and day-to-day routines with Max, adds new Whoville threads, and layers modern slapstick onto Seuss’s rhyme-rooted narrative. Danny Elfman’s score and Illumination’s bright, rounded character designs deliver a family-friendly holiday package that stays close to the source while filling a feature-length runtime.
2. ‘M3GAN 2.0’ (2025)

Gerard Johnstone returns to direct this sequel to ‘M3GAN,’ with a screenplay by Johnstone and story by Johnstone and Akela Cooper. The cast includes Allison Williams and Violet McGraw reprising their roles, joined by Ivanna Sakhno and Jemaine Clement; it is produced by Jason Blum and James Wan under the Blumhouse and Atomic Monster banners.
The story continues the techno-thriller thread of a child-companion AI whose protective protocols escalate into danger, expanding the corporate and legal fallout introduced in the first film. The production carries forward the sleek robotics design and calibrated tone of the original, while building out new settings and characters that extend the franchise’s focus on AI ethics and guardianship.
1. ‘Honey Don’t!’ (2025)

Ethan Coen directs and co-writes with Tricia Cooke in this neo-noir dark comedy anchored by Margaret Qualley as private investigator Honey O’Donahue, whose casework leads her into a string of suspicious deaths tied to a Bakersfield church. The film features Aubrey Plaza, Chris Evans, and Charlie Day, with production by Working Title and Focus Features, and music by Carter Burwell.
Set against small-town institutions and cult entanglements, the story follows Honey’s probes into local power and a religious operation, blending detective beats with jet-black humor. Coen and Cooke position the film as part of their planned trilogy of pulpy B-movie riffs, with Coen’s regular collaborators contributing behind the scenes on cinematography and post-production to keep the brisk, sub-90-minute pace tight.
Share your own watchlist picks in the comments and tell us which titles you’re cueing up next.


