10 Best Movies on Xumo Play (Available for Free)

Updated February 22, 2025 • Staff
Originally only offered through their smart TVs, Xumo has made the jump to streaming through its free, ad-supported television and video on-demand service Xumo Play. The joint venture of Charter Communications and Comcast has made it entirely possible for casual streamers to watch both great channels and great movies for free through the site. Along with their original content and exclusive streams, Xumo Play has a number of masterpieces hidden in their library that viewers might be surprised to find, such as Melancholia, Lady Bird, and Bad Genius. So for viewers curious about Xumo, or for viewers that want to watch quality films at no cost, here are the top 50 titles on Xumo Play that you can watch for free.
Read also:
10.

Ong-Bak (2003)

Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior is, at first glance, an action-only movie that hopes to emulate something like Bruce Lee in Thailand. The Muay Thai choreography is memorable, the chase scenes are iconic, and the plot is scant in order to fit more fight scenes in it. However, the film feels electric precisely because it strikes at the fear of how local culture is erased, snatched, and forgotten for a more urban and globalized city lifestyle. With Tony Jaa’s amazing physicality, and the film introducing him and the art of Muay Thai to international audiences, Ong-Bak literally knocks out that fear, proving that local culture can survive, and maybe even thrive, on the world stage.

Our staff rating: 7.1/10
Genre: Action, Adventure, Crime, Thriller
Actor: Boonsri Yindee, Chatthapong Phantana-Angkul, Cheathavuth Watcharakhun, Choomporn Theppitak, Chupong Changprung, Dan Chupong, David Ismalone, Don Ferguson, Erik Markus Schuetz, Panna Rittikrai, Patrarin Punyanutatam, Petchtai Wongkamlao, Pumwaree Yodkamol, Rungrawee Barijindakul, Suchao Pongwilai, Sukanya Kongkawong, Tony Jaa, Udom Songsaeng, Wannakit Sirioput
Director: Prachya Pinkaew
Rating: R
Go to Xumoplay
9.

The Proposition (2005)

The Western had its heyday in the 60s, but the decades have proven that there’s still stories from the deserts that we haven’t heard yet, and gems that twist the genre on its head. The Proposition is a unique Western, being from the East, in Australia where the Brits have started to form colonies. As the British Empire builds society, and the police start to enforce the King’s justice, writer Nick Cave and director John Hillcoat crafts a bloody tale, where promises between men are betrayed for the State, where vengeance can only be met through brutality, and where the line between civility and savagery is drawn and moved by the will of an angry majority. The Proposition is quite violent, but it’s performed well, scored by a moody, moving soundtrack, and it surprisingly contemplates Australia’s bloody past.

Our staff rating: 7.3/10
Genre: Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama, Thriller, Western
Actor: Bogdan Koca, Boris Brkic, Bryan Probets, Danny Huston, David Gulpilil, David Vallon, David Wenham, Emily Watson, Gary Waddell, Guy Pearce, Iain Gardiner, Jeremy Madrona, John Hurt, Leah Purcell, Mick Roughan, Noah Taylor, Oliver Ackland, Ralph Cotterill, Ray Winstone, Richard Wilson, Robert Morgan, Tom Budge, Tom E. Lewis
Director: John Hillcoat
Rating: R
Go to Xumoplay
8.

Triangle (2009)

A woman joins some acquaintances on a sailing trip only to get caught in a storm. They are rescued by a seemingly empty cruise ship and struggle to make sense of the mysteries that unfold. Definitely one of those "The less you know the better" type of films. If you like well-written creepy thrillers with a nice amount of gore, you will most likely enjoy this.

Our staff rating: 7.4/10
Genre: Horror, Mystery
Actor: Bryan Probets, Emma Lung, Henry Nixon, Jack Taylor, Joshua McIvor, Liam Hemsworth, Melissa George, Michael Dorman, Rachael Carpani
Director: Christopher Smith
Rating: R
Go to Xumoplay
7.

The Bear (1988)

If you enjoy wondering aloud to yourself how filmmakers were able to make a movie at all, 1988's almost wordless tale of two bears trying to survive the Canadian mountains was somehow shot with real, expressive bear "actors," despite the film being a work of fiction. A cross between a stunningly photographed nature documentary and a brutal folktale, The Bear gets right to the uncompromising conditions out in the wild, where human beings are portrayed as just as savage—and just as merciful—as the beasts they hunt. Clever editing and Jean-Jacques Annaud's directorial vision hide all the seams in the movie's magic tricks, allowing us to fall in love quickly with these majestic bears and the all-too-human emotions they seem to be expressing.

Our staff rating: 7.6/10
Genre: Adventure, Drama, Family
Actor: André Lacombe, Bart The Bear, Jack Wallace, Tchéky Karyo, Youk the Bear
Director: Jean-Jacques Annaud
Go to Xumoplay
6.

The Point (1971)

Making a video for a concept album isn’t particularly new, but you’d be hard pressed to find a feature as whimsical as Harry Nilsson’s The Point. Framed as a fable a father tells his son, The Point takes Nilsson’s psychedelic soundtrack to score a pun-filled fairytale with a seemingly on-the-nose moral, but the combination proves to be charming, as Oblio’s journey unfolds in children’s storybook scrawling and watercolor fills, and expands past the obvious message about acceptance into interesting, if a bit rambling, forays about meaning, power, and community. The Point! is quite obvious, but the film reaches it through surprisingly simple genius.

Our staff rating: 7.7/10
Genre: Adventure, Animation, Family, Fantasy
Actor: Alan Thicke, Bill Martin, Buddy Foster, Dustin Hoffman, Joan Gerber, Lennie Weinrib, Paul Frees, Ringo Starr
Director: Fred Wolf
Rating: NR
Go to Xumoplay
5.

Nymphomaniac: Vol. I (2013)

Danish writer-director Lars von Trier concludes his so-called Depression trilogy with the two parts of Nymphomaniac, an elaborate retelling of the life of a young woman (played by Stacy Martin and then, by Charlotte Gainsbourg) lived from one libidinous pleasure to another. The film's elaborate subplots have a life of their own and flashbacks often take center stage in Joe's auto-narration. Nymphomaniac I introduces the audience to adolescence and early adulthood, through disappointments, adultery, death drive, and extreme ambivalence. Joe's process of self-actualization seems contested and inspiring at the same time, and Gainsbourg is really given the screen time to shine; even more so than in Trier's previous psycho-social drama, Antichrist. Typically for the rich treasury of cultural references, Bach, Edgar Allan Poe, and Fibonacci play crucial parts in reconstructing the symbolic planes in Joe's story. Oh, and Part One opens with Rammstein's "Führe mich", which in itself is an perfectly valid reason to give it a go.

Our staff rating: 8.3/10
Genre: Drama
Actor: Ananya Berg, Anders Hove, Andreas Grötzinger, Charlie Hawkins, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Christian Slater, Christoph Jöde, Christoph Schechinger, Clayton Nemrow, Connie Nielsen, Cyron Melville, David Halina, George Dawson, Hugo Speer, James Northcote, Jamie Bell, Jeff Burrell, Jens Albinus, Jesper Christensen, Jesse Inman, Johannes Kienast, Jonas Baeck, Maja Arsovic, Markus Tomczyk, Mia Goth, Michael Pas, Nicolas Bro, Peter Gilbert Cotton, Saskia Reeves, Shia LaBeouf, Simon Böer, Sofie Kasten, Sophie Kennedy Clark, Stacy Martin, Stellan Skarsgård, Tomas Spencer, Uma Thurman, Willem Dafoe
Director: Lars von Trier
Rating: Not Rated, NR
Go to Xumoplay

Ready to cut the cord? Here are the 14 live TV streaming services that offer a free trial.

More lists

That's all from us for the 10 Best Movies on Xumo Play (Available for Free)! For more, subscribe to the newsletter. It's ad-free, spam-free, and algorithm-free. You get two e-mails every week with the best of Netflix and Amazon Prime, and nothing else.