Skip to main content

3 underrated (HBO) Max movies you should watch this weekend (July 12-14)

A man sits with his wife and daughter in Patriot Games.
Paramount Pictures

It’s the middle of July, and chances are, you’ve probably seen some, if not all, of the latest summer blockbusters like Inside Out 2, A Quiet Place: Day One, and Despicable Me 4. Even if you haven’t, you’re probably seeking something to watch this weekend, but you don’t need to go to the movie theater to watch something good.

Streaming has plenty of great movies, and HBO’s streaming platform, Max, has the best that Hollywood has to offer. Max’s impressive library of titles includes these three movie gems, all of which are underrated in one way or another. They also feature legendary movie stars like Harrison Ford, Samuel L. Jackson, and Elizabeth Taylor, and are guaranteed to give you a few hours of quality entertainment.

Recommended Videos

Patriot Games (1992)

A man kneels next to a car in Patriot Games.
Paramount

Many movie buffs believe action movies peaked in the 1980s with such films as 48 Hrs., To Live and Die in L.A., and any Sylvester Stallone or Arnold Schwarzenegger movie. Some believe the 2000s were the golden era for the genre, with directors Michael Bay, Tony Scott, and McG all pumping out one hit after another. Personally, I love action movies from the 1990s because most of them tried to marry spectacle with substance.

The best of these Clinton-era movies is Patriot Games,  Phillip Noyce’s excellent adaptation of Tom Clancy’s book featuring Jack Ryan. In this entry, Harrison Ford takes overthe role from The Hunt for Red October‘s Alec Baldwin in a story that pits Ryan against a radical faction of the IRA. In particular, he earns the ire of Sean Miller (Game of Thrones star Sean Bean), whose brother was killed by Ryan in a botched attempt to assassinate members of the Royal Family. Now, Miller will do anything to get revenge, including targeting Ryan’s surgeon wife (Anne Archer) and precocious preteen daughter (Thora Birch).

Patriot Games moves at a steady pace, but it never shortchanges characterization in favor of cheap action sequences. Everything feels fully earned, including a climactic showdown at Ryan’s seaside house that satisfactorily ups the tension. Ford is in his prime here, and the supporting cast, which includes Oscar-nominated actors James Earl Jones, Samuel L. Jackson, and Richard Harris, is top-notch.

Patriot Games is streaming on Max.

The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988)

A man lies on top of an old woman in The Naked Gun.
Paramount Pictures

Sometimes, you just need to laugh at jokes so stupid that they’re brilliant. And Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! has plenty of them. When Lieutenant Frank Drebin first meets the beautiful Jane Spencer as she’s on a ladder, he can’t help but exclaim, “Nice beaver!” As she descends carrying a taxidermized beaver, she cheerfully replies, “Thanks! I just had it stuffed.”

That’s the kind of humor you get from the Naked Gun movies, which all seem both dirty and innocent at the same time. The first one is the best as Drebin uncovers a plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II at a rowdy L.A. Angels baseball game. If you’re not won over by the time the Queen does the wave and someone shouts “Enrico Palazzo!,” well, you might just have to check your pulse to see if you’re still alive.

The Naked Gun is streaming on Max.

Cleopatra (1963)

A woman and a child are greeted by a crowd in Cleopatra.
20th Century Fox

Got four hours to spare? That’s how long 1963’s Cleopatra runs, and if I’m being honest, it’s about an hour too long. Still, this movie, which almost destroyed a major Hollywood studio and helped create a scandal-driven celebrity culture that still thrives today, is worth watching. The sheer weight of its spectacle is something modern blockbusters, from Troy to this year’s Gladiator II, still strive to replicate.

Elizabeth Taylor stars as the titular Egyptian queen, who must navigate a strategic union with Rome, and in particular Julius Caesar (Rex Harrison), and her burgeoning romantic feelings for Marc Anthony (Richard Burton) with her own desires to conquer and rule. Skulking around the in the shadows is Octavian (Roddy McDowell), who waits for the right moment to make his move.

Cleopatra suffers from stilted dialogue and at times lethargic pacing, but Harrison is great as the noble, doomed Caesar, and Taylor, clad in various gold attire or sometimes in almost nothing at all, is so lush and earthy, you’ll believe men would die for her touch. Massively popular in 1963, Cleopatra is looked down upon today, but it’s still a treat for the senses.

Cleopatra is streaming on Max.

Jason Struss
Section Editor, Entertainment
Jason Struss joined Digital Trends in 2022 and has never lived to regret it. He is the current Section Editor of the…
3 great Max crime dramas you should watch in March 2025
Josh Hartnett stands covered in red light in Trap.

Few streaming services have a deeper library of good to great movies than Max. Unfortunately, Max also has one of the worst interfaces of any streaming service, which means that actually finding those movies can be hard.
Among the genres where Max excels, though, are crime movies. These movies run the gamut from detective stories to tense thrillers. Regardless of what they're about, many are worth your time. We've pulled together three crime dramas worth checking out this month.
We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Inherent Vice (2014)
Inherent Vice - Official Trailer [HD]

Adapting a Thomas Pynchon novel may seem like an impossible task, but Paul Thomas Anderson did exactly that with Inherent Vice, and successfully. Telling the story of Doc Sportello, a private detective working in 1970s Los Angeles who finds himself thrust into a conspiracy when his ex-girlfriend disappears, Inherent Vice is intentionally difficult to trace.

Read more
3 great Hulu movies you need to stream this weekend (March 7- 9)
Margot Robbie and Diego Calva in Babylon.

Hulu may drop most of its top movies for the month on the 1st, but it does offer a selection of fresh films every week even if the streamer doesn't always do a good job of promoting these new additions. Case in point: Babylon is coming to Hulu on March 8, and the streamer hasn't even added a page for the movie yet. Regardless, this overlooked gem is one of our picks for the three great Hulu movies that you need to stream this weekend.

Our remaining two picks include a very strong drama that's closing in on its 20th anniversary, as well as a comedy that fell under the radar despite its callbacks to an earlier era that make it even funnier.

Read more
3 great free movies to stream this weekend (March 7-9)
Simon Rex stands in a donut in Red Rocket.

Welcome back, Bong Joon Ho. It's been six years since Parasite, the spectacular thriller that became the first non-English-language film to win the Oscar for Best Picture. This weekend, Bong returns with his latest film, Mickey 17. The sci-fi comedy follows a disposable employee (Robert Pattinson) who returns as a clone after repeatedly dying on a colonization mission.
Mickey 17 is already generating positive reviews, which isn't surprising because of the talent behind the camera. In honor of Bong's return, one of the free movies to stream this weekend comes from his early filmography. The other two selections are dedicated to an Oscar-winning filmmaker and an acting legend who recently passed away.
We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Memories of a Murder (2003)

With all due respect to Barking Dogs Never Bite, Bong's second feature, Memories of a Murder, is the one that put him on the map. Based on a real-life South Korean serial killer, Memories of a Murder follows Park Doo-man (Song Kang-ho) and Seo Tae-yoon (Kim Sang-kyung), two detectives assigned to investigate a string of rapes and murders.
The two detectives possess different styles — Park is the aggressive investigator, while Seo relies more on scientific analysis. Essentially, the movie presents an old-school versus new-school approach to policing. The ruthlessness and brutality weigh heavily on both investigators, as it tests their ethics and values. Instead of an open-and-shut whodunit, Bong explores morality and human fallibility, resulting in one of the best murder mysteries of all time. 
Stream Memories of a Murder for free on Tubi.
Red Rocket (2021)
RED ROCKET Trailer (2021) Simon Rex, Drama Movie

Read more