The 20 Best Amazon Original Films, Ranked
In 2015, Amazon Studios—the film and TV production company owned by Amazon—co-produced its first movie: the Spike Lee musical dramedy Chi-Raq. Since then, the e-commerce giant has poured billions of dollars into its original content, including feature-length films, TV programs, documentaries, and more. In fact, last year alone, Amazon invested $13 billion into its video and music content offerings, up from $11 billion in the previous year.
As it stands today, Amazon has produced more than 100 original films, ranging from horror movies to comedies to biographies and beyond. The company also has several more movies slated for release this summer, including Anything’s Possible and Samaritan. Its movies have won Academy Awards, BAFTA Awards, Critics’ Choice Awards, Golden Globes, and more, with Amazon being the first streaming service to produce a Best Picture nominee at the Oscars.
If you’re thinking about diving into Amazon’s deep catalog of original films, you’ve come to the right place. Below, Metacritic has created a list of the company’s top movies, which includes both Amazon Studios-distributed theatrical releases as well as Prime Video exclusives.
On the list, you’ll find everything from family dramas to historical pieces to plays. You’ll also notice several appearances from acclaimed filmmaker Steve McQueen, whose Small Axe anthology takes up four slots on the list. We've chosen to include them here because critics evaluated the individual installments as their own films (even though Small Axe competed in the limited series category at the Emmys).
Here, Metacritic lists the 20 best-reviewed Amazon original films, ranked by Metascore. Documentaries and films with fewer than 7 reviews from professional critics are excluded.
All photos courtesy Amazon Studios
Based on Martha Batalha’s 2016 novel, Invisible Life follows sisters Eurídice (Carol Duarte) and Guida Gusmão (Júlia Stockler), who live with their strict parents in 1950s Rio de Janeiro. Eventually, the young women are driven apart by their cruel father and forced to begin their adult lives without one another. But even as they mature and pursue their own dreams, the sisters fight to reconnect and reestablish the strong bond that they once had. Directed by Karim Aïnouz, Invisible Life was Brazil’s official nomination for the Best International Feature Film category at the Oscars in 2020.
“The film is so alive, so joyous and raucous at times, that the empathy you feel for these characters is all the more poignant and the catharsis is well earned.” —Josh Kupecki, The Austin Chronicle