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What’s on Paramount+? The 10 best movies right now

Paramount+, the streaming video service formerly known as CBS All Access, is owned by the entertainment giant ViacomCBS. Paramount+ targets cord-cutters (and cord-nevers) with a mixture of television shows and motion pictures. This story focuses on the 10 best films currently available on the service. You can read our full review of Paramount+ at this link.

Paramount+ costs $5.99 a month ($59.99 if paid annually) for an ad-supported plan, or $9.99 a month ($99.99 annually) for an ad-free plan.

This will change in June. A new $5-per-month ad-supported price plan will be introduced, but it will not include access to CBS live TV. Viewers who are already grandfathered in can keep the $6 plan or change to the $5 plan. New users will not be able to choose the live-TV option, and if a user switches from the $6 plan to the $5 plan, there’s no switching back.

Tune in next week for a look at the 10 best TV shows available on Paramount+.

Top 10 movies now available on Paramount+

A.I. Artificial Intelligence

paramountplus aiartificialintelligence jma Warner Bros.

Gigolo Joe (Jude Law) takes young robot David (Haley Joel Osment) on a quest to become “real” in A.I. Artificial Intelligence.

Steven Spielberg’s filmed version of a long-dreamed-of Stanley Kubrick project is truly dazzling, and absolutely heartbreaking, as it deals with love offered and then withdrawn. A long coda sometimes confuses viewers, but the passage of time has revealed this as one of Spielberg’s most accomplished works.

Chinatown

Paramount

Roman Polanski’s Chinatown, starring Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunnaway, is not only one of the best movies available on Paramount+, it’s one of the best movies ever made.

One of the greatest American films ever made, this masterpiece is a pristine detective story, intricately designed and performed, but it’s also the story of America itself. Jack Nicholson is Jake Gittes, with Faye Dunaway as Evelyn Mulwray, and John Huston as Noah Cross. Roman Polanski directed.

Clue

Paramount

Clue was broadly panned when it came to theaters, but it has evolved into a much-loved cult classic with the passage of time.

Critically destroyed upon its release for its use of three alternate endings, this absurd comedy has become a much-loved, much-quoted cult classic. The key to its humor is its buttoned-up characters in a glorious mansion acting absolutely bonkers. It features an all-star cast, but Madeline Kahn steals the show.

The Elephant Man

Paramount

The Elephant Man, directed by David Lynch, earned Oscar nominations in the Best Picture and Best Director categories.

David Lynch’s second feature earned Oscar nominations for Best Picture and Best Director, telling the story of the severely deformed John Merrick (John Hurt, in heavy makeup). Shot in stark black-and-white and using Lynch’s typical unsettling sound design, the movie nonetheless touches deeply.

Galaxy Quest

DreamWorks

Alan Rickman steals the show in the sci-fi comdey Galaxy Quest, which also starred Tim Allen and Sigourney Weaver.

Released in 1999 to little fanfare, this sci-fi comedy about the cast of a Star Trek-like show that finds themselves in a real sci-fi adventure, has also become a cult classic for its loving, skewering behind-the-scenes look at sci-fi storytelling, fans, and perceptions. Tim Allen and Sigourney Weaver star, but Alan Rickman steals the show.

The Godfather

Paramount

Marlon Brando won an Oscar for his portrayal of the powerful Don Vito Corleone in The Godfather.

Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974) are both regularly ranked among the best 50 films ever made, and they stand the test of time. Also available is Coppola’s newly re-edited The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone, which ends the epic story’s cycle more satisfyingly.

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

CBS/Paramount

Dr. Miles J. Bennell (Kevin McCarthy) tries to keep invading pod creatures from taking over his body in the original Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

The first of four movies based on Jack Finney’s novel, Don Siegel’s black-and-white widescreen chiller took advantage of fear of Communism and wove it into this story of alien pods who take over the bodies of their victims when they sleep. It’s both deeply philosophical and terrifying on a primal level.

Raiders of the Lost Ark

Paramount Pictures

Archeologist and adventurer Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) seeks a golden treasure in Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Spielberg’s Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), starring Harrison Ford as archeologist/adventurer Indiana Jones set a high bar for adrenaline-fueled, swashbuckling summer entertainment, and even though its three sequels, from 1984, 1989, and 2008, don’t quite measure up, they’re still solidly above average.

Sunset Boulevard

Paramount+

Aging silent movie star Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson) dreams of making a comeback with a young screenwriter in Sunset Boulevard.

Billy Wilder’s dark, ingenious story of old Hollywood takes a scowling look at the way things used to be and the way things are in 1950 and finds both wretched. It’s bitter fruit, but it’s also hugely entertaining, constantly surprising, mysterious, and even funny. With William Holden, Gloria Swanson, and Erich Von Stroheim.

The Truman Show

Paramount+

Truman Burbank (Jim Carrey) is the unwitting star of his own 24-hour-a-day TV show in The Truman Show.

Jim Carrey gives a tremendous performance as Truman Burbank, who, unbeknownst to him, has been filmed every second of his life for the longest-running reality TV show in history. The brilliant movie does everything conceivable with this incredible concept and comes away both hilarious and moving. Ed Harris is the movie’s secret weapon as show director Christof.

More great movies on Paramount+

You’ll find most of the other Godfather films (including Francis Ford Coppola’s recent, new-and-improved The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone, but not the original theatrical cut of The Godfather Part III), the other Indiana Jones films, the first three Mission: Impossible films, the original The Nutty Professor, Roman Holiday, Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief, and a handful of other Steven Spielberg films (most notably Minority Report, and The Adventures of Tintin).

But there are many glaring absences, perhaps due to streaming rights. In addition to the more recent three Mission: Impossible movies, there’s also no Rosemary’s Baby, A Quiet Place, Ghost, Beverly Hills Cop, The Untouchables, Forrest Gump, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, 48 Hrs., The Hunt for Red October, Three Days of the Condor, Top Gun, etc.

Only three of the 13 Star Trek films are currently available: Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (the one with the whales), Star Trek: First Contact (one of the best), and Star Trek: Nemesis (the final Next Generation movie, and a dud). And if you’re a cinema history buff, get ready for disappointment; there are only a dozen films from before 1960.

 

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