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4 New Prime Video Movies With at Least 90 Percent on Rotten Tomatoes (November 2025)

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4 New Prime Video Movies With at Least 90 Percent on Rotten Tomatoes (November 2025)

Amazon Prime Video just added a fantastic slate of new movies to its platform in November, and we couldn’t be more excited to dig in.

In fact, the new additions boast multiple films that have at least a 90 percent Rotten Tomatoes score. Watch With Us has put together a list of some of those films and why you should check them out.

Our first pick is Annie Hall, an American classic starring the late Diane Keaton. There’s also Good Will Hunting, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck’s Academy Award-winning 1997 drama.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 97 percent

A comedian named Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) looks back on his failed relationship with nightclub singer Annie Hall (Diane Keaton), in this classic romantic comedy that won the Academy Award for Best Picture along with three other awards. Alvy tries to figure out exactly why the relationship didn’t work out, breaking the fourth wall and speaking directly to the film’s audience, as the movie tells the story of Annie and Alvy — how they met, fell in love and struggled to make it work.

Annie Hall has stood the test of time, still frequently cited as one of the best films ever made. Its blend of sharp, intelligent humor, thoughtful character drama and thematic analysis, in addition to timeless lead performances from Allen and Keaton, has made it a truly iconic work within the cinema canon.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 97 percent

Will Hunting (Matt Damon) chooses to work as a janitor at MIT instead of pursuing his mental gifts, until one day he solves an unsolved math equation left on the chalkboard of a classroom. When his gifts are discovered by Professor Gerald Lambeau (Stellan Skarsgård), Lambeau decides to help the misguided man reach his potential. However, Will also deals with aggressive emotional problems, leading him to pursue life-changing therapy with a man named Sean Maguire (Robin Williams).

Damon and co-writer Ben Affleck gained more prominence in Hollywood after their screenplay for Good Will Hunting garnered them an Academy Award — solidifying them as not just capable actors, but talented writers. This well-crafted, feel-good film also features a career-defining performance from Williams.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 96 percent

In small-town Mississippi in the 1960s, a Black police detective named Virgil Tibbs (Sidney Poitier) is accused of murdering a wealthy industrialist. For Tibbs to exonerate himself, he has to team up with the town’s racist police chief, Bill Gillespie (Rod Steiger), to capture the real killer. As the pair searches for the truth, they uncover several shocking secrets that threaten to tear the town apart.

In the Heat of the Night won five Academy Awards back in 1968, including Best Picture, and has endured both as a sharp, thought-provoking narrative as well as top-notch acting showcases for both the late Steiger and Poitier. Director Norman Jewison excels at deploying tension and humor alongside grappling with weighty themes like race relations and abortion.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 93 percent

Ex-cop John “Scottie” Ferguson (James Stewart) suffers from vertigo, an affliction that came about after an incident while in the line of duty generated an intense fear of heights. He is ultimately hired as a private investigator to investigate the wife (Kim Novak) of an old college friend, who believes that she’s been behaving strangely. But everything is not as it seems, and after Scottie witnesses the woman commit suicide, he continues to believe that he sees her.

Vertigo received mixed reviews upon its release, but it’s gone on to be considered by many to be Alfred Hitchcock’s true masterpiece. The film expertly explores themes pertaining to obsession, love, reality and identity, all packaged in a gripping screenplay with beautiful cinematography and a haunting score by Bernard Hermann.