Christmas is lower than every week away, and you’ll find loads of holiday movies on Prime Video.
But what in the event you’re not within the festive mood? If that’s the case, you’re reading the appropriate article.
Watch With Us has compiled a brief list of three new-to-Prime Video movies which might be value your time this weekend.
From Merv’s cute dog antics to Bullet Train’s wildly entertaining comedic violence, these movies are guaranteed to entertain everyone in your household.
‘Merv’ (2025)
When you’re a fan of Marley & Me, you’ll like Merv — and don’t worry, the dog lives on this one. That’s less of a spoiler and more of a guarantee to calm down and watch a sweet rom-com about Russ (Charlie Cox), a depressed teacher who remains to be bummed his lady love, Anna (Zooey Deschanel), broke up with him. Their dog, Merv, is down too, and the one way he could be glad again is for his human owners to reconcile. That’s a tall order, though, as Russ is cynical about every little thing now, and Anna is withholding a secret that might change every little thing for the higher. Will love prevail, if only to make Merv a glad, good boy again?
Merv is like how I take my coffee — light and sweet, with simply enough kick to get me through a few hours. Cox is an unexpected but welcome comedic delight because the down-and-out Russ, while Deschanel capably channels her Recent Girl “adorkable” personality to a personality not that different from Jess. As rom-coms go, Merv is certainly one of the higher straight-to-streaming ones, so test it out now before the 2026 Oscar hopefuls crowd your streaming watchlists.
Merv is streaming on Prime Video.
‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ (2024)
Hear me out — what if the much-maligned, box office bomb follow-up to 2019’s Joker is definitely good? Flawed yet fascinating, Joker: Folie à Deux takes some wild swings and isn’t all the time successful, however it’s unlike any comic book sequel you’ll ever see.
After causing mass carnage in Gotham City within the last movie, Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) is now committed to Arkham State Asylum, where he meets fellow prisoner Lee Quinzel (Lady Gaga). Lee’s just as tousled as he’s, and so they soon bond in a series of musical numbers that exist only of their heads. Their skewed sense of reality clashes with Arthur’s criminal trial, which spotlights his growing and dangerous influence on Gotham’s disenfranchised. Will Lee help Arthur change into the Joker again and finish what he began in the primary film?
When you’re expecting Joker: Folie à Deux to be like every other musical you’ve seen, well, you’re going to be upset. The musical numbers, while outlandish, are nonetheless true to the source material — they’re exactly what two disturbed people would dream up to flee the cruel reality of their very own making. The movie can be a sly commentary on the primary movie’s breakout success, questioning why anyone would see its pathetic subject as an emblem to encourage anyone.
Joker: Folie à Deux is streaming on Prime Video.
‘Bullet Train’ (2022)
Brad Pitt, a world league of assassins and a speeding train — is there the rest it is advisable to make a winning motion comedy? Bullet Train cribs from other motion movies, however it steals all the great parts and comes up with a distracting tale of unstylish hit men attempting to kill one another while aboard a nonstop Japanese bullet train.
Pitt stars as Ladybug, an unlucky assassin who experiences more misfortune while fulfilling a contract. All he must do is retrieve a suitcase stuffed with money from a train, but he’s as an alternative dragged right into a gang war involving the White Dragon (Michael Shannon), a robust yakuza crime lord, and the Dragon’s son (Logan Lerman), who’s killed while boarding the train. Everyone thinks Ladybug did it, but he’s innocent (for once). That won’t stop the Dragon or his cadre of assassins from coming after him with every little thing they’ve got — guns, knives, samurai swords, even a lethal, oversized teddy bear.
If this all sounds excessive, that’s since it’s imagined to be. And while there’s a little bit of calculation behind every “outlandish” motion sequence, there’s no denying Bullet Train works. Pitt relies on his easy charm to coast through, while the colourful supporting forged, which incorporates Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Brian Tyree Henry as twin brothers(!), have a blast playing killers with funky tastes in fashion.


