The best thriller movies on Disney+ UK

Don’t be fooled by that family-friendly, Marvel-filled homepage. Disney+ has a slew of very adult, all-time thriller classics, and here Eliza Janssen has chosen just some of the most essential.

Scroll to find your next thrill, with links to Disney’s streaming platform handily provided.

See also
* Best new movies & series on Disney+
* All new streaming movies & series

A Cure For Wellness (2016)

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Common Disney director Gore Verbinski got back to his icky, sticky roots with this period psychological horror. It’s an original story, despite feeling plenty like a Thomas Mann or Edgar Allen Poe creepfest, about a sterile young executive whose body and mind get messed with at an eerie Swedish wellness retreat. Mia Goth is a perfect spooky waif, fashionably wearing eels like Britney accessorises with a snake.

Alien (1979)

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We can categorise Ridley Scott’s GOAT outer-space terrifier any damn way we want: as horror, sci-fi, thriller and more. Over the years the xenomorph baddie has been ascribed as metaphor for many things (AIDS, vague notions of violence and chaos, the transformative body horror of pregnancy or assault) but you really don’t need to look too deep to be horrified by its iconic scenes. We love Ellen Ripley forever.

Black Swan (2010)

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“I was perfect”: yeah you were, Oscar-winner Natalie Portman, as a high-strung ballerina who goes way too method in her role as Swan Lake’s tragic lead. Being a Darren Aronofsky film, moments of gore and horror can spring out in any mundane scene, resulting in one of the most feel-bad dance movies you’ll ever encounter.

Crimson Tide (1995)

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Super-producer Jerry Bruckheimer had to bring some heat to chilly Cold War thrillers with this bombastic, energetic submarine-set action flick. It’s got serious pedigree canned way below the ocean’s surface, too: Tony Scott directs, an uncredited Tarantino worked on the script, and Denzel Washington stars as a seaman trying to rein in his hot-headed commanding officer Gene Hackman.

Die Hard (1988)

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More an action movie than a thriller, but one that still gets our bells jingling with tension every holiday season. Bruce Willis leapt from the small screen to action megastar-dom as an everyman who’ll stop at nothing to take down the terrorists threatening his estranged wife’s office Christmas party, and Alan Rickman’s stern baddie remains one of the best original villains in screen history.

Enemy of the State (1998)

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Here’s one of the neatest action thrillers of the 90s, made by an 80s supergroup of producer Jerry Bruckheimer and Top Gun director Tony Scott. Will Smith and Gene Hackman have great chemistry as a Hitchcockian wrong man and a powerful NSA communications expert (could be his same character from The Conversation??). But there’s also some wild supporting appearances, with everyone from Jack Black to Regina King.

Face/Off (1997)

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God bless John Woo for his creative control of this bonkers, high-concept action thriller. Nic Cage and John Travolta swap faces, meaning each gets to play both a maniacal terrorist and a grieving government agent willing to do anything to avenge his kid’s death. Of course doves break free to litter the air around the climactic gunfight.

Fight Club (1999)

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A melange of mean, snarky metaphors frenetically come together to mock Gen X emasculation in David Fincher’s most entertaining movie. Brad Pitt and Ed Norton are two sides of the same toxic coin, but tone is king here: the Dust Brothers’ chaotic, adrenaline-pumping soundtrack is the perfect background music for Norton’s sardonic, pissed-off narration. Seems it is ok to talk about Fight Club, on this list at least.

The French Connection (1971)

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It’s wild that a grim, cynical film like this could win Best Picture once upon a time. Gene Hackman is merciless as the unpleasant detective “Popeye” Doyle, doing whatever it takes to hunt down a French heroin smuggler. William Friedkin nails the claustrophobic, doomed feeling of a city on the brink, and the subway stair shootout still hits hard.

Gone Girl (2013)

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Poor Ben Affleck: saddled with a faintly punchable face, and enough dramatic high-profile romances that he’s the perfect casting choice for a dodgy husband caught up in his wife’s disappearance. Based on the literary sensation by Gillian Flynn, who worked on the bitter, brilliant screenplay too, this thriller is the ideal antidote to treacly big-screen romcoms, showing a couple whose resentment and entitlement makes them darkly perfect for one another.

Heat (1995)

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A dogged cop and a career criminal come to respect each other, and best of all they’re played by mob movie alums Al Pacino and Robert De Niro: finally facing off after their characters tragically could never appear together in the Godfather films. Michael Mann’s blood-pumping heist classic has been recently re-acclaimed as one of the genre’s greatest of all time, so it’s about time you watched its steely gray storytelling for yourself to find out why.

JFK (1991)

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“Back, and to the left: back, and to the left…” Oliver Stone’s tin-foil-hat-clad conspiracy thriller is both murky and whole-heartedly jingoistic, ending with a sentimental hope that the next generation of paranoid patriots can get to the truth of President Kennedy’s convoluted assassination. Kevin Costner’s barnstorming court monologue is still astoundingly written and performed.

L.A. Confidential (1997)

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Curtis Hanson’s deceptively gorgeous neo-noir doesn’t just perfectly capture Old Hollywood: it’s a distinctly 90s affair, with some burgeoning huge stars (including a trio of Aussies, with Crowe + Pearce + a young Simon Baker) and themes of sex, corruption, and the lie of fame and glamour. Even as the cop saga gets gritty and morally gray, the glowing cinematography lulls you into a false sense of safety.

Man On Fire (2004)

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One of the first movies to feature sinewy, dark compositions from Trent Reznor as music consultant, Tony Scott’s tale of an alcoholic former CIA agent protecting Dakota Fanning got some heat upon release for the protagonist’s merciless vigilantism. But that just makes its themes of self-destructive manhood and duty more fiery, resulting in a brutal thriller studded with stars like Mickey Rourke and Christopher Walken.

The Night House (2021)

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I’d honestly watch Rebecca Hall reading a phone book aloud, but she has plenty of chilling material to work with in David Bruckner’s nocturnal thriller. Hall plays a widow who uncovers her late husband’s bizarre secret architecture project and relationships with women who look strikingly similar to her. The jump scares are inventive and shocking, and you deeply root for the grieving protagonist too.

Nightmare Alley (2021)

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Roll up, roll up! Cinema’s carnival maestro Guillermo del Toro gets to homage all of his favourite bleak 1940s noir titles in this misanthropic novel adaptation. Bradley Cooper is surprisingly nasty as a circus shyster who’ll do anything for a vague grab at power and status, but he meets his match in a sinister therapist played by Cate Blanchett.

One Hour Photo (2002)

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An unlikely horror/villain performance from Robin Williams that’s hard to forget when you switch back to his goofy, amiable roles. Music video freak Mark Romanek directs this tale of obsession, with Williams as a lonely photo kiosk worker who becomes fixated on a seemingly idyllic local family. “I just took pictures”, he claims to the cops, once his dark plan for the family plays out in unnerving and surreal scenes.

Phone Booth (2002)

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Sometimes all you need is a single location, a game performer, and a villain’s growly voice over the phone. Colin Farrell stars as a pretty bad person who we still somehow feel a lot of sympathy for, once the guy on the other end of his phone booth call promises to snipe him should he dare to hang up. Typically flamboyant director Joel Schumacher mostly reigns in his usual theatrics for a sparse and exciting yarn.

Ready or Not (2019)

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Weddings are a pretty bad time to learn about your new spouse’s nutty family traditions. For fledgling scream queen Samara Weaving, the honeymoon begins with a deadly game of hide and seek, including Andie MacDowell and Adam Brody as some of her murderous in-laws. The thrills end on an explosive note: why eat the rich when you can explode them instead?

The Sixth Sense (1999)

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M. Night Shyamalan’s breakout film is most fondly remembered for its brain-wringing twist, but that really does the precise direction and heartfelt storytelling a disservice. Death and the grace it can bring are wonderfully conveyed, with Haley Joel Osment giving one of the all-time great child acting performances as a delicate boy suffering as a conduit between the living and the dead.

Speed (1994)

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No action hit of the 90s made as much use of a ticking time-bomb set-up as Jan de Bont’s Speed, introducing us to Sandy Bullock and making a clean-cut Keanu even more of a star. Dennis Hopper is the sneering madman watching his bus plan go boom, and the ever-escalating thrills play out with nerve-shredding precision.

Stoker (2013)

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Not Park Chan-wook’s greatest movie, but a worthwhile psychological trip all the same. A pair of Aussies, Mia Wasikowska and Nicole Kidman, play a dysfunctional mother and daughter whose lives of cold malaise are shattered by the arrival of their late patriarch’s brother. It’s all very Hitchcockian, with a stylised, verbose script and some ingenious match-cut transitions.

Summer of Sam (1999)

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Spike Lee’s energetic period piece takes the unusual approach of showing the culture and atmosphere surrounding a tumultuous string of New York murders, rather than closely chronicling the killer himself. The movie ends up feeling much more like a suspenseful mob story, starring a philandering John Leguizamo and Adrien Brody as a punk— he actually got his nose broken while filming a brutal fight scene.

Taken (2008)

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Liam Neeson has a very particular set of skills, namely revitalising his career in mid-life to only play gritty avenger dads. When his daughter is kidnapped whilst on a European vacation, retired CIA agent Brian hops on a flight and cracks skulls together to get the answers he needs. Luc Besson and Pierre Morel know just how to shoot a violent urban odyssey, and Neeson gives some neat John McClane energy.

Trance (2013)

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The McGuffin at the centre of Danny Boyle’s psychological thriller is a lost Goya artwork, but don’t expect any stuffy art theory lessons. Instead, James McAvoy stars as a hapless heist participant put completely through the ringer when he fails his accomplices. A tricky hypnotherapist played by Rosario Dawson is key to recovering the painting, but she may have some selfish designs of her own.

Titles are added and removed from his page to reflect changes to the Disney+ catalogue. Reviews no longer available on this page can be found here.