Welcome to your mental vacation, we hope you enjoy an action-packed itinerary. Your trip will take you from a Japanese POW camp to a dystopian version of Chicago, and everywhere in between. The characters you'll meet on your journey have little use for small talk and prefer to lead with their feet and fists, but don't be offended. It's not you, it's them.
With denouements set around the world and redemption arcs that eschew the erudite in favor of pure, physical effort, this list of the best action films currently streaming on Netflix has something for everyone on your couch to enjoy.
Baby Driver (2017)
An action crime movie two decades in the making, director Edgar Wright puts the pedal to the metal with Baby Driver, transforming what could have been just another heist film into a stylistic masterpiece with a soundtrack to match. The movie follows a young getaway driver named Baby (Ansel Elgort) whose attempts to extricate himself from a life of crime go awry after he is forced to participate in a post office robbery.
Baby is a fantastic character — a young, Southern kid with tinnitus and a tragic past — surrounded by violent sadists, and the film is part mixtape, part love story, and part Reservoir Dogs-style murder romp. EW’s critic writes that Baby Driver “is a candy-colored action movie opera, where the music doesn’t just accompany the action — it fuels it.” —Ilana Gordon
Where to watch Baby Driver: Netflix
EW grade: A– (read the review)
Director: Edgar Wright
Cast: Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, Lily James, Eiza González, Jon Hamm, Jamie Foxx, Jon Bernthal
Cold Pursuit (2019)
Liam Neeson has established himself in Hollywood as the purveyor of characters not to be trifled with. In Cold Pursuit, he once again plays a father seeking vengeance for wrongs perpetrated upon his family, only this time, he lives in a Colorado resort town called Kehoe where he works as a snowplow driver. What distinguishes Cold Pursuit from other offerings in Neeson’s arsenal of justice-hunting characters is the humor inherent in the film’s script. While not quite a comedy, the movie likes to veer into Tarantino territory, adorning fight scenes with bon mots and clever dialogue.
The result could have left viewers cold, but Neeson and Laura Dern’s performances as grieving parents, and Hans Petter Moland’s fast-moving direction, help ground a film that EW’s critic describes as “the daffiest and most delirious” of Neeson’s recent work. Also starring Emmy Rossum as a local cop, Cold Pursuit is a thriller that doesn’t take long to heat up. —I.G.
Where to watch Cold Pursuit: Netflix
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: Hans Petter Moland
Cast: Liam Neeson, Laura Dern, Emmy Rossum, Michael Eklund
Da 5 Bloods (2020)
Wars and wounds collide in Spike Lee's 2020 film Da 5 Bloods, a meditation on race, generational trauma, and American intervention. Toggling between the past and present, the film follows four Black war veterans as they return to Vietnam, intent on recovering a locker of gold bars and the body of their fallen friend and squad leader, Stormin' Norman (Chadwick Boseman), both of which were lost during a napalm strike.
Guided in their quest by Tiên, the ex-girlfriend of one of the former soldiers, and forced to confront landmines — both real and emotional — the remainder of the squad must reconcile the horrors of their past with the difficulties of their present if they hope to escape Vietnam for a better future. Incorporating archival newsreel for additional context, Da 5 Bloods is a war film with action sequences, but many of the battles pit man against his memory. —I.G.
Where to watch Da 5 Bloods: Netflix
EW grade: A– (read the review)
Director: Spike Lee
Cast: Chadwick Boseman, Delroy Lindo, Jonathan Majors, Norm Lewis, Isiah Whitlock Jr.
Divergent (2015)
In a dystopic version of Chicago, 16-year-olds are sorted into different factions, depending on the human virtues they possess. But when it’s Tris Prior’s (Shailene Woodley) turn to be tested to determine which faction she belongs in, Tris learns that she falls into a separate class altogether. Categorized as Divergent, Tris is told that she has the power to think for herself, which makes her impervious to mind control, and a danger to the system.
Told to conceal her identity, Tris chooses to join the Dauntless faction, which prioritizes bravery, but struggles to follow the commands of her instructor (Theo James) and keep up with her rival (Miles Teller). Also starring Kate Winslet in the role of steely leader Jeanine Matthews, and based on the best-selling series of young adult novels, Divergent unfolds like a science fiction version of Harry Potter, with similar elements to The Hunger Games. —I.G.
Where to watch Divergent: Netflix (last day to watch: September 30)
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: Neil Burger
Cast: Shailene Woodley, Theo James, Miles Teller, Kate Winslet, Ashley Judd, Jai Courtney, Ray Stevenson, Zoë Kravitz, Tony Goldwyn, Maggie Q
The Equalizer 3 (2023)
In the third entry of The Equalizer saga, Denzel Washington's Robert McCall finds solace in the simplicity of sipping tea along the Amalfi Coast...and beating the living hell out of those foolish enough to cross his path. Turning away from his life as an indestructible DIA officer, the former Marine seeks sanctuary from the scars of his violent past in a quaint Italian town but is disrupted once his newfound friends face threats from the Camorra, a local Mafia-like group.
This propels Robert back into action, igniting a carnage-soaked battle for their freedom, as well as his own. While treading formulaic ground for action sequels, The Equalizer 3 also provides everything you could possibly ask for: a tension-laced opening, squeaky-clean pacing/editing, picturesque mise-en-scène, and heavily-stylized combat. —James Mercadante
Where to watch The Equalizer 3: Netflix
Director: Antoine Fuqua
Cast: Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning, Eugenio Mastrandrea, David Denman, Gaia Scodellaro, Remo Girone
Extraction (2020)
When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose, making you an ideal candidate for a job as a black-market mercenary. After Tyler Rake (Chris Hemsworth), a former member of the Australian Army Special Air Service Regiment, is recruited to rescue Ovi, the recently kidnapped son of the biggest drug lord in India, he finds that his very particular set of skills — and history of family trauma — are more than enough to extract the kid. But when the city is locked down, it's anybody's guess whether Rake can safely return Ovi to his family.
Representing Sam Hargrave's directorial debut after years of serving as stunt coordinator on some of the biggest Marvel projects around (The Avengers, Deadpool, Thor: Ragnorak), the film is in capable (if violent) hands, but still manages to cultivate moments of tenderness and redemption amongst the casualties. —I.G.
Where to watch Extraction: Netflix
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: Sam Hargrave
Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Rudhraksh Jaiswal, Randeep Hooda, Priyanshu Painyuli, Golshifteh Farahani, Pankaj Tripathi, David Harbour
The Foreigner (2017)
A father’s pursuit of vengeance is on full display in The Foreigner, an action film that an EW writer describes as Jackie Chan’s take on Taken. A two-hander that stars Chan opposite Pierce Brosnan in the role of a First Minister of Northern Ireland and former IRA leader, The Foreigner gives Chan a chance to stretch both his acting and fighting muscles as a grieving father whose most recent loss reawakens traumas from earlier in his life.
Chan’s nuanced performance is equally matched by a committed showing from Brosnan, whose character is trying to walk the political tightrope while not burning bridges with his old ideological comrades. A lean action thriller marked by solid acting and excellent fight sequences, The Foreigner will remind you that Jackie Chan is so much more than just powerful kicks and one-liners. —I.G.
Where to watch The Foreigner: Netflix
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: Martin Campbell
Cast: Jackie Chan, Pierce Brosnan
Godzilla Minus One (2023)
Godzilla Minus One won the 2024 Oscar for Best Visual Effects, but the film is so much more than a monster movie with incredible CGI. Set in Japan, a country ravaged by the after-effects of World War II, the film follows a failed kamikaze pilot as he is haunted both by his performance during the war and a gargantuan monster with a heat ray capable of razing Tokyo.
A love story disguised as a horror movie, Godzilla Minus One offers stunning performances, a fascinating historical perspective, and — of course — the kind of city-trampling mayhem one would expect when selecting a Godzilla movie. You know they did a good job when the filmmaker has you sympathizing with both the monster and the citizens rallying to defeat it. —I.G.
Where to watch Godzilla Minus One: Netflix
Director: Takashi Yamazaki
Cast: Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada, Munetaka Aoki, Hidetaka Yoshioka, Sakura Ando, Kuranosuke Sasaki
Gran Turismo (2023)
A rags-to-riches story for the modern gaming community, Gran Turismo is a biographical sports action movie about Jann Mardenborough, a British teenager whose skills playing the Gran Turismo videogame earn him an opportunity to compete as a professional race car driver. The film spent ten years in development before being picked up by director Neill Blomkamp (District 9), who delivered something unique. His interpretation is neither an adaptation of the game, nor a completely faithful depiction of the events experienced in Mardenborough’s life, but remains a fun, uplifting racing movie nonetheless.
The real Jann Mardenborough makes an appearance in the film, acting as his own stunt double in the racing scenes, and David Harbour and Orlando Bloom take on the roles of Mardenborough’s racing trainer and a Nissan executive, respectively. The movie may have suffered financially from premiering around the time of Barbenheimer, but it’s still worth catching from your couch. —I.G.
Where to watch Gran Turismo: Netflix
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Cast: David Harbour, Orlando Bloom, Archie Madekwe, Darren Barnet, Geri Halliwell Horner, Djimon Hounsou
Gunpowder Milkshake (2021)
After honing her ass-kicking prowess in both the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the Jumanji franchise, Karen Gillan struts confidently into the leading role for Navot Papushado's action flick. If you enjoy Atomic Blonde (2017) or Birds of Prey (2020), you will revel in Gunpowder Milkshake, where Gillian stars as Sam — a highly-trained killer targeted by her ex-employers, who must forge alliances with her assassin mother (Lena Headey) and her former hitwoman comrades to survive.
With a stacked lineup of powerhouses like Michelle Yeoh, Angela Bassett, and Carla Gugino, the film offers 114 minutes of nonstop thrill, which Gillian described to EW as "humorous at times and [doesn't] take itself too seriously, but [takes] the action seriously enough." —J.M.
Where to watch Gunpowder Milkshake: Netflix
Director: Navot Papushado
Cast: Karen Gillan, Lena Headey, Carla Gugino, Chloe Coleman, Michelle Yeoh, Angela Bassett, Paul Giamatti, Ralph Ineson
The Harder They Fall (2021)
Though it suffers at times from Netflix's in-house mandate for too-clean disposable content, this stylish revisionist Western boasts an undeniably stacked and magnetic cast. Jonathan Majors stars as the raffish outlaw on a quest to hunt down those responsible for his requisite personal tragedy. Meanwhile, a characteristically hypnotic Idris Elba is the baddest man in the West, with a gang including the equally formidable likes of Regina King and LaKeith Stanfield.
Luckily, Majors has everyone from the great Delroy Lindo to Stanfield's Atlanta costar Zazie Beetz on his side, as The Harder They Fall presents an Old West populated by many of the greatest Black actors working today. While co-writer/director Jeymes Samuel (aka The Bullitt)'s script centers on the oft-ignored real figures of the Black West, his film is, at its thoroughly entertaining heart, a rip-roaring display of action setpieces and acting excellence. Style over substance? Sure. But The Harder They Fall has style to burn. —Dennis Perkins
Where to watch The Harder They Fall: Netflix
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: Jeymes Samuel
Cast: Jonathan Majors, Idris Elba, Zazie Beetz, Regina King, Delroy Lindo, Lakeith Stanfield, RJ Cyler, Danielle Deadwyler, Edi Gathegi, Deon Cole
Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016)
As he proved conclusively in his foray into the MCU, Taika Waititi is unparalleled at mixing and matching tones. Here, a shaggy adventure tale about a delinquent foster boy and a taciturn New Zealand loner becomes all at once hilarious, wry, and wrenching as the mismatched and reluctant duo find themselves on the run in the wilderness after a series of misfortunes and misunderstandings. The great Sam Neill and Deadpool 2's Julian Dennison make a team for the ages, as the unlikely fugitives dodge cops, social workers, trigger-happy hunters, and the occasional wild boar, all while Waititi parcels out the development of their inevitable, grudging bond with the deftest comic touch.
An adventure in the wild bristling with tensely witty set pieces and anchored by two exceptional performances, the film is unendingly charming without ever crossing into unrealistically rosy territories. — D.P.
Where to watch Hunt for the Wilderpeople: Netflix (last day to watch: September 30)
EW grade: B– (read the review)
Director: Taika Waititi
Cast: Sam Neill, Julian Dennison, Rhys Darby, Rima Te Wiata, Rachel House
Kate (2021)
Imagine if John Wick had a daughter, and you'd evoke someone akin to Kate (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), a raging-bull assassin and A1 sniper operating in Tokyo. When she's injected with acute radiation poisoning caused by Polonium-204, Kate races against the clock, armed with less than 24 hours to unmask her assailant and deliver some lethal payback.
Bursting with candy-colored visuals, sensational stunts, brutal carnage, and Winstead's organic badassery (one that echoes her role as the Huntress in Birds of Prey), Kate delivers as a proper revenge thriller. Per EW's critic, the film "is red-meat storytelling, all broad outlines and crunched bones. But there's a visual wit and visceral energy to it that other recent efforts struggle to find." —J.M.
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: Cedric Nicolas-Troyan
Cast: Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Miku Martineau, Woody Harrelson, Tadanobu Asano, Michiel Huisman, Miyavi, Jun Kunimura
Lou (2022)
Allison Janney knows how to deliver a line, and — thanks to stunt training for her Netflix film, Lou — she also knows how to deliver a punch. Janney stars as the film's titular character, a misandrist landlord who rents a home to a single mother named Hannah (Jurnee Smollett) and her young daughter, Vee. After Vee is kidnapped, Lou agrees to help Hannah bring her back, but saving Vee's future will require Lou to confront her own messy past.
Director Anna Foerster asked a lot of her cast during production, as evidenced by the fact that both Smollett and Janney spend much of the film covered in mud. (Smollett tells EW, "The mud is a character in itself!") As for Janney, she hopes this role will showcase her rarely-seen physical abilities — and maybe land her a role in the next John Wick movie. —I.G.
Director: Anna Foerster
Cast: Allison Janney, Jurnee Smollett, Logan Marshall-Green
The Matrix Resurrections (2021)
Children were born and grew into legal adults in the years since the last Matrix movie was released. But that 18-year gap was well spent; The Matrix Resurrections — directed solely by Lana Wachowski — finds a compelling way to yank the film out of the internet's infancy and into the modern technological era. The stunts are impressive, but it's the romance between Neo and Trinity (Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss) that both revives the franchise and elevates it to heights that Reloaded and Revolutions could only ever dream of.
Neo — who now goes by the name Thomas Anderson — has developed several successful video games based on his distant memories of the Matrix, but his inability to distinguish between dreams and reality has him running to his therapist for help. Well worth a watch, The Matrix Resurrections reminds us why we loved getting red-pilled the first time, or, as our reviewer puts it, "All that's old is Neo again." —I.G.
Where to watch The Matrix: Resurrections: Netflix
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: Lana Wachowski
Cast: Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Neil Patrick Harris, Jonathan Groff
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)
When Mr. & Mrs. Smith premiered in 2005, it was preceded by its reputation. Five months earlier, Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston announced their separation after seven years of marriage that was allegedly initiated after Pitt met and fell in love with his co-star, Angelina Jolie, during production on this flick. The celebrity buzz was more than enough to coax audiences into theaters, and once they got there, they were greeted by a film that was half action movie, half therapy session.
The story follows an unhappy couple (Pitt and Jolie), both of whom are undercover as assassins working for competing companies — and both of whom have received an assignment to kill the other. Screenwriter Simon Kinberg was inspired by the five-step process employed in couples counseling, a template he used to help ground the Smiths' otherwise exceptional lives into something far more relatable. Thanks to the explosive chemistry between Pitt and Jolie (and the powerful weaponry utilized by their characters in their race to outmaneuver death), Mr. & Mrs. Smith is the very definition of an old-school summer blockbuster. —I.G.
Where to watch Mr. & Mrs. Smith: Netflix
EW grade: N/A (read the review)
Director: Doug Liman
Cast: Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie, Adam Brody, Kerry Washington
Okja (2018)
Two years before Bong Joon Ho wowed the world with Parasite, the South Korean director partnered with Netflix to make Okja. A pig-centered movie that leans decidedly more toward Animal Farm than Babe, the movie follows Mija, a South Korean teen who bonds with Okja, the "super pig" she's helped raise — only to have Okja taken from her after he is crowned the winner of an agrochemical company's competition for best pig. With Okja headed for the slaughterhouse, Mija travels from South Korea to New York City on a mission to save her friend and to help expose the inhumane practices of the Mirando Corporation and its leader, Lucy Mirando (Tilda Swinton).
A mixture of science, fantasy, action, and adventure, Okja is one of those movies you have to see to believe. As EW's critic writes, Okja is "the antithesis of cookie-cutter, made-by-committee filmmaking. Prepare to be amazed, grossed out, provoked, punchdrunk, and tickled." —I.G.
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: Bong Joon Ho
Cast: Tilda Swinton, Paul Dano, Ahn Seo-hyun, Byun Hee-bong, Steven Yeun, Lily Collins, Yoon Je-moon, Shirley Henderson, Daniel Henshall, Devon Bostick, Choi Woo-shik, Giancarlo Esposito, Jake Gyllenhaal
The Old Guard (2020)
Immortality comes with a price, as seen in The Old Guard. Andy (Charlize Theron) is part of a group of centuries-old warriors who have been gifted the power to heal from any wound. Unable to die, this team utilizes their talents by working as mercenaries for various mortal employers. Are they heroes or villains? It depends on what century they're living in. But when one particular mission exposes their extraordinary abilities, the group must band together to avoid capture by Big Pharma, who hopes to study, replicate, and monetize their gifts.
Aided by the group's newest member, a U.S. Marine (Kiki Layne), Andy and her team fight for their freedom in this action-packed film based on an acclaimed series of graphic novels. Theron is in peak fighting form, even as her character begins to slow after centuries of regenerating. And while character backstory and world-building take a backseat to stunt sequences, you can rest easy in the knowledge that a sequel is already in the works. —I.G.
Where to watch The Old Guard: Netflix
EW grade: B– (read the review)
Director: Gina Prince-Bythewood
Cast: Charlize Theron, KiKi Layne, Marwan Kenzari, Luca Marinelli, Harry Melling, Veronica Ngo, Matthias Schoenaerts, Chiwetel Ejiofor
Outlaw King (2018)
Set in early 14th-century Scotland during the Scottish Wars of Independence (also known as Braveheart times), Scottish King Robert the Bruce (Chris Pine) finds himself leading a rebellion against the English King Edward I, an act which causes him to be labeled an outlaw. Based on an untold true story, Outlaw King follows Robert and those loyal to him as they embark on a guerilla mission to retake the lands stolen from them by the English, even as the English brutally murder their families. Filmed, as an EW critic writes, "in the natural light of candles, torches, and overcast skies," Outlaw King is a movie that manages to find the beauty amongst the battle scenes. —I.G.
Where to watch Outlaw King: Netflix
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: David Mackenzie
Cast: Chris Pine, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Florence Pugh
Project Power (2020)
If there was a pill that could give you five minutes of pure power, would you take it? Such is the premise behind Project Power, a science fiction action film produced by Netflix. In a good example of strange bedfellows, Project Power follows a trio consisting of a police officer (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), a soldier (Jamie Foxx), and a drug dealer (Dominique Fishback as seen in The Deuce), as they work together to halt distribution on a new kind of drug that has recently hit the streets of New Orleans.
If you're looking for an action thriller that moves fast, Project Power, an EW critic writes, "makes it easy to suspend your disbelief and your imaginary degree in biochemistry, and just let it ride." —I.G.
Where to watch Project Power: Netflix
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: Henry Joost, Ariel Schulman
Cast: Jamie Foxx, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Dominique Fishback, Rodrigo Santoro, Colson Baker, Allen Maldonado, Amy Landecker, Courtney B. Vance
RRR (2022)
Though 2022 saw the triumph of Everything Everywhere All at Once, there existed another film that was also a pageant of absurd, maximalist thrill that left MCU blushing in its wake. Part buddy-comedy, part action-thriller, part historical drama, part musical, S. Rajamouli's Telugu-language blockbuster set in the 1920s — which won the Oscar for Original Song ("Naatu Naatu"), making history as the first song from an Indian feature film to win in that category — is a semi-historical story centered around the unlikely camaraderie between two Indian revolutionaries, Komaram Bheem (N.T. Rama Rao Jr.) and Alluri Sitarama Raju (Ram Charan), who band together against British imperialism.
An explosion of electrifying spectacles, RRR successfully melds over-the-top action sequences — from battling tigers to swinging motorcycles — campy dance numbers, and emotional story lines into one cohesive theatrical experience. —J.M.
Director: S. Rajamouli
Cast: N.T. Rama Rao Jr., Ram Charan, Ajay Devgn, Alia Bhatt, Shriya Saran, Samuthirakani, Ray Stevenson, Alison Doody, Olivia Morris
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
The creative and financial apex of what’s become an entire universe of film and television titles, Terminator 2: Judgment Day was the first expansion of the story told in 1984’s The Terminator. This version reinvents Arnold Schwarzenegger from T-800, cyborg killer from the future, to T-800, father figure good guy to teenage John Connor (Edward Furlong), son of Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), who would grow up to lead the human resistance against sentient rogue intelligence Skynet and its world-conquering army of murderous machines.
The storyline isn’t the only thing that expands here. T2 director James Cameron takes action filmmaking to incredible new heights with sequences that hurl massive semi-trucks through cement retention walls, smash helicopters into government laboratories, and intensify the firepower at every turn. This time around, the T-800 is tasked with protecting the Connors from a more advanced Terminator dubbed T-1000 (Robert Patrick), which is constructed from liquid metal and is utterly, totally relentless. —Johnny Loftus
Where to watch Terminator 2: Judgment Day: Netflix (last day to watch: September 30)
EW grade: B+ (read the review)
Director: James Cameron
Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Robert Patrick, Edward Furlong
Triple Frontier (2018)
Why rob a bank when you can put your life on the line stealing money from the cartel? In Triple Frontier, the J.C. Chandor-directed and Netflix produced action/adventure movie, a group of former special-ops soldiers come to the realization that they have not been properly compensated for their years spent in military service, and decide to get what's theirs by robbing a drug lord. Chandor brings out the big guns to play his team of military men, enlisting an ensemble composed of Ben Affleck, Oscar Isaac, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund, and Pedro Pascal.
A good, old-fashioned male bonding film with a lot of money on the line, EW's Chris Nashawaty writes, "There may be no honor among thieves, but Triple Frontier certainly makes watching them pretty entertaining." —I.G.
Where to watch Triple Frontier: Netflix
EW grade: B (read the review)
Director: J.C. Chandor
Cast: Ben Affleck, Oscar Isaac, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund, Pedro Pascal
Unbroken (2014)
Angelina Jolie loves a war story, but her second foray into feature directing represents a return to classic World War II cinema, and is far more patriotic than one would expect given her brand. The film in question, Unbroken, is adapted from the 2010 nonfiction book by Laura Hillenbrand about World War II hero Louis Zamperini. A former Olympian who ran track before enlisting in the Air Force, Zamperini was captured as a Japanese POW and his journey through captivity is as tumultuous as one might expect.
A film EW’s critic describes as “moving, admirable, and occasionally exhilarating,” Unbroken sometimes seems almost old-fashioned in its presentation and subject matter, but Zamperini’s story of heroism remains triumphant, and Jolie doesn’t shy away from its most abusive and abhorrent moments. Jack O'Connell is, as EW’s critic says, “totally hypnotic” in the role of Zamperini, and Miyavi, a Japanese rock star turned actor for the film, plays opposite him as the film’s antagonist, Sgt. Mutsuhiro "the Bird" Watanabe. —I.G.
Where to watch Unbroken: Netflix
EW grade: B– (read the review)
Director: Angelina Jolie
Cast: Jack O'Connell, Domhnall Gleeson, Miyavi, Garrett Hedlund, Finn Wittrock
World War Z (2013)
When you take away a zombie’s one weakness — its tendency toward slow-motion movement — you get World War Z, a film in which the villains don’t so much stagger as swarm. Brad Pitt stars as Gerry Lane, a former UN Investigator with the skills and connections necessary to save his wife and two young daughters — but only if he agrees to identify the origin of the outbreak and help humanity survive a planet-wide zombie apocalypse.
EW says the film may be “the most entertaining and accomplished zombie thriller since George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead,” and if that’s not incentive enough, you get to see Pitt in a role that has him exemplifying “feral grace under pressure.” Run — don’t walk — to your nearest screen to check it out. —I.G.
Where to watch World War Z: Netflix
EW grade: A– (read the review)
Director: Marc Forster
Cast: Brad Pitt, Mireille Enos, James Badge Dale, Matthew Fox