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
Joaquin Phoenix stars in You Were Never Really Here, a 2017 psychological thriller directed by Lynne Ramsay. In the film, Phoenix plays Joe, a veteran with a traumatic past who now rescues missing and abducted girls for a living. When he’s hired to find Nina Votto (Ekaterina Samsonov), a senator’s abducted daughter, things turn particularly violent, and Joe gets caught up in a high-stakes battle with authorities who are intent on covering up the trafficking ring that he infiltrated. The movie received several accolades (particularly for Phoenix’s performance and Ramsay’s directing) and was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Outstanding British Film.
“Ramsay returns with a scuzzy, stripped-back thriller focused on the man, rather than the mission.” —Jordan Farley, Total Film