Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Features

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

3 underrated Amazon Prime Video movies you should watch this weekend (August 22-24)

Including a French classic from the 1960s

Add as a preferred source on Google
Weekend Watchlist: Prime Video A man and woman walk through a field in American Fiction.
Orion Pictures
Weekend Watchlist Promotional Image
This story is part of Weekend Watchlist, a series that showcases hidden gems and underrated films tucked away in your favorite streaming libraries.

Any time you open Amazon Prime Video, you’re probably looking for a good way to spend a few hours. You might notice that Prime Video has some excellent options but also has a tendency to promote the same content continuously.

If you’re looking for new movies or titles that you would never have guessed were worth your time, we’ve got you covered. These are three underrated movies that you should check out this weekend.

Recommended Videos

We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, and the best movies on Amazon Prime Video.

American Fiction (2023)

A satire that somehow manages to also be deeply moving, American Fiction is based on the 2001 novel Erasure and tells the story of a Black author who doesn’t want to be pigeon-holed into writing Black fiction. When he jokingly pitches a cartoonishly stereotypical novel, he finds himself engaging with a new audience, even as he deals with a crumbling situation in his home life.

Jeffrey Wright rarely gets opportunities to shine the way he does here, and he’s supported by one of the best performances of Sterling K. Brown’s career. Incisive, funny, and sentimental, American Fiction deserved more hype than it received.

You can watch American Fiction on Amazon Prime Video.

A Most Violent Year (2014)

A throwback, low-key thriller featuring a pair of exceptional actors, A Most Violent Year is set in New York City in 1981 and stars Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain as a married couple trying to protect their family business. 1981 was one of the most violent years on record in New York, and the movie is explicitly set at a time when corruption and crime were rampant.

The movie is hugely stylish and a reminder that Isaac and Chastain are two of the best actors working today, even if neither of them gets the material they deserve on a regular basis.

You can watch A Most Violent Year on Amazon Prime Video.

Le Samourai (1967)

One of the most influential films of the French New Wave, Le Samouraï is remarkable in that it is a story about a hit man told with a remarkable degree of sparseness. Starring Alain Renais, the film follows an assassin with an elaborate set of rituals who conducts a hit and then realizes that he was spotted.

As his life unravels around him, he’s forced to go on the run and avoid capture from both the police and the men who hired him. Although Le Samourai has its moments of violence, the most remarkable thing about the movie is all the ways it avoids the thrills you might expect from this type of movie. Instead, it’s just a little bit more mundane than you might expect.

You can watch Le Samourai on Amazon Prime Video.

Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer at Digital Trends, where he covers Movies and TV. He frequently writes streaming…
Targeted by scammers, adult content creators are getting hacked government sites removed
OnlyFans creators are fighting piracy and exposing hacked government sites
A dark mystery hand typing on a laptop computer at night.

Adult creators routinely battle scammers and pirates stealing their pictures, videos, and sometimes even identities. Now, that exhausting cleanup job is producing an unexpected side effect that involves cleaning up government websites.

Scammers have been compromising trusted .gov and .edu domains and stuffing them with pages advertising supposedly leaked OnlyFans content. This has even lead to hacked government and university websites are disappearing from Google Search. The pages frequently contain no stolen material at all. Instead, they use popular creators’ names to lure people toward dating scams or other kinds of suspicious advertisement and malicious downloads.

Read more
Your Netflix homepage is about to look a lot more like YouTube
The streaming giant has signed deals with Condé Nast, Hearst, Penske Media, and more to bring publisher content to its platform.
netflix on tv

Netflix has spent years trying to become more than a place to watch movies and TV shows. After experimenting with everything from interactive games to live sports, it's now borrowing a page from YouTube's playbook to give you another reason to stay.

Vogue, Variety, and BuzzFeed head to Netflix

Read more
I found a free universal TV remote app for iOS and Android that doesn’t spam ads
AnyRemote turns your phone into a TV remote without forcing a login or subscriptions
AnyRemote Universal remote app on iPhone 17 Pro Max

I have been looking for a universal TV remote app that just works without being annoying. Most of the ones I tried had some kind of catch. Some asked me to create an account before I could even connect to a TV. Some showed annoying un-skippable ads before a simple action. A few locked basic controls like volume behind a paywall, while others simply did not work as advertised.

In that search, I recently came across AnyRemote, a free universal TV remote app available on both iOS and Android. It turns your phone into a remote for your TV or streaming device without forcing a login or making you pay for the core buttons.

Read more