The streaming landscape is a crowded one. From Netflix to Hulu to Peacock, there are over a dozen major streaming services out there vying for your hard-earned dollars and valuable time. One of the more underrated ones is Paramount+, a streamer that has access to the vast Viacom library of past and present hits.
What does that mean? Well, you can watch all the best Mission: Impossible movies, lots of Star Trek, SpongeBob SquarePants, The Godfather, Breakfast at Tiffanyâs, some of the Scream movies, and many more. Paramount+ has hundreds of movies, so weâve created a list that highlights the very best of them.
We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Released in 2002, Smile was a surprise box office hit, a horror movie about trauma that resonated with a mass audience. Naturally, a sequel was greenlighted, and in 2024, the original movieâs director, Parker Finn, crafted Smile 2, a leaner, meaner follow-up that tops the original in almost every way.
Pop star Skye Riley (Naomi Scott) seemingly has it all: a successful career, lots of money, and global fame. But sheâs haunted by the death of her former boyfriend, and itâs that lingering trauma that makes her the victim to Smileâs malevolent entity, which preys on the pain and fear of its victims. As Skye watches helplessly as her friends and family fall prey to the parasite, she must find a way to overcome her own personal demons to beat it once and for all.
âAre you not entertained?â Those immortal words were shouted by Russell Crowe in Gladiator, a 2000 movie that brought back the sword-and-sandals epic from the dead and earned Crowe an Oscar for Best Actor. The movie itself won Best Picture, and itâs not hard to see why; itâs epic in scope and tells a universal story about the need to be with oneâs family, even if they are dead and chilling out in the afterlife.
The soldier Maximus (Crowe) is understandably mad that his wife and child have been murdered by the new emperor Commodus (Joker 2âs Joaquin Phoenix) and that heâs been left for dead, only to be found and forced into slavery. The only thing that sustains Maximus is his thirst for revenge, which leads him to train and fight as a gladiator so he can get close to Commodus and kill him.
Horror films are in vogue right now, but some still slip through the cracks. Thatâs what happened with The Last Voyage of the Demeter, a movie with a troubled production history that was ignored by many when it was released in August 2023. Thatâs a shame, as the film boasts incredible cinematography, score, and visual effects work that successfully brings its horror narrative to bloody life.
The movie adapts one chapter in Bram Stokerâs classic vampire novel Dracula called The Captainâs Log. Aboard the massive merchant ship the Demeter, a motley crew of workers discovers that among the cargo lies a vampire that is systematically killing them. Stranded in an unforgiving sea with land miles away, the remaining crew must band together to try to find some way to stop the evil creature from consuming them all.
1997 was a great year for movies, and among the best that year was Curtis Hansonâs noir thriller L.A. Confidential. Adapted from James Ellroyâs novel, the film is set in 1953 Los Angeles, populated with movie stars, corrupt cops, prostitutes who are molded to look like famous actresses, and tabloid reporters looking for the next big scandal.
They might have found one when a bloody shootout occurs at the Nite Owl coffeehouse, a massacre that gradually pulls together three different men to find out why it happened. But Bud White (Russell Crowe), Ed Exley (Guy Pearce), and Jack Vincennes (Kevin Spacey) soon realize something more sinister and far-reaching is at play. Can they trust each other long enough to solve the mystery?
The Hours takes a simple concept â three different people decide to hold a party one day â and spins a complex movie that spans three different time periods with three different female protagonists. But what unites Virginia in 1920s England, Laura in 1950s Los Angeles, and Clarissa in 2000s New York City is one book: Mrs. Dalloway, whose title heroine wakes up one day, arranges and attends a party, and then contemplates suicide.
The beauty of The Hours is how deftly it manages to juggle three different narratives that all intersect at one point with each other. Nicole Kidman deservedly won an Oscar for her work as Virginia Woolf, the writer of Mrs. Dalloway, but just as good are Meryl Streep as Clarissa, who strains to juggle the demands of an ex-lover with her current one, and Julianne Moore as Laura, who is trapped in a boring marriage. The Hours also boasts a wonderful score by the composer Phillip Glass, which you may want to play as you contemplate your own mortality or if you just want to hear something beautiful.
There are teen movies, and then thereâs Clueless. Amy Heckerlingâs modern take on Jane Austenâs classic novel Emma was a sleeper hit in the summer of 1995, and itâs never really gone out of style since then. Thatâs the mark of a true classic, a comedy thatâs still funny today and a portrait of teenage life thatâs still relevant, even if their cell phones are the size of bricks.
Cher (Alicia Silverstone) may look like your typical spoiled Beverly Hills teenage girl, but she secretly has a heart of gold. She and her friend Dionne (Stacey Dash) team up to help find true love for the people around them, which includes their tragically inept teacher, Miss Geist (Twink Caplan), and new student Tai (Brittany Murphy). It may also include Cher herself, as she begins to realize she has feelings for her ex-stepbrother, Josh (Paul Rudd).
Hereâs a movie that takes the phrase âtalk to the handâ seriously. The hand in question is severed and embalmed, and itâs rumored to have the power for anyone to communicate with someone deceased as long as they grip it and say the words âtalk to me.â Thatâs exactly what Mia (Sophie Wilde) does, and she quickly realizes sheâs unleashed something sinister that could jeopardize her friends and herself. Can she find a way to stop the evil sheâs unwillingly unleashed?
Talk to Me was a word-of-mouth hit in 2023, and itâs due to both the talented directors, Danny and Michael Phillippou, and the intense lead performance by Wilde. The horror movie uses the familiar trauma trope in new ways, and the ending is a keeper. Itâs the rare horror movie where you look forward to the inevitable sequel instead of dreading it.
Whatâs the best Bond movie ever? A serious case could be made for Martin Campbellâs Casino Royale. The 2006 entry successfully rebooted the franchise for a new generation, casting the blond-haired, blue-eyed Daniel Craig as a Bond who literally doesnât joke around. He has no time for quips, martinis (shaken or stirred), or even romancing beautiful Bond girls. As embodied by Craig, heâs a blunt force instrument designed solely to complete the mission set before him by MI6, which is still headed by M (Judi Dench).
His mission in Casino Royale is a dangerous one: He must infiltrate a high-stakes poker game and play against Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen), a banker who helps fund some of the worldâs most notorious terrorists. Bond must team with Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), a beautiful treasury agent who loathes 007, to lure Le Chiffre into a trap and figure out who his latest employer is, whoâs been bankrolling a series of violent acts in Florida and Uganda.
One of the big hits on Broadway right now is the Tony Award-winning The Outsiders, a musical reimagining of S.E. Hintonâs classic novel. It is also inspired by Francis Ford Coppolaâs 1983 adaptation, and while flawed, his film still stands as an entertaining tale of youth gone wild in the heartland of 1950s America.
The main conflict in The Outsiders is between two groups: the Greasers, which consists of brothers Sodapop (Rob Lowe) and Ponyboy (C. Thomas Howell), and the Socs, an affluent bunch that counts the beautiful Cherry Valance (Diane Lane) as one of its members. When Ponyboy falls for Cherry, it starts a chain of events that leads to violence and death. Will any of these teens make it to see their high school graduation? Or will they fall prey to the same cycle of violence that claimed previous generations?
This list wouldnât be complete without a Tom Cruise picture. The actor has had a long association with Paramount Pictures, so naturally, there are a ton of Cruise pictures on Paramount+. One of the best is War of the Worlds, a 2005 remake helmed by none other than Steven Spielberg. His take is different from the 1953 version as he focuses more on the dysfunctional family dynamics of Cruiseâs character Ray, an absentee dad who is trying to repair his fractured relationships with his children, Rachel (Dakota Fanning) and Robbie (Justin Chatwin).
But make no mistake â this is, first and foremost, a sci-fi action movie told by one of the best filmmakers ever to do it. As the aliens invade Earth and easily decimate cities around the world, Cruiseâs Ray tries desperately to save his family while avoiding being vaporized by the lethal extraterrestrials. War of the Worlds doesnât get enough credit as an all-too-effective movie with almost unbearable amounts of tension.
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