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10 Best Action Movies on Netflix: From Critical Classics to Netflix Originals

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
7 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, The Bests
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Human beings look for motion to quiet the mind, a charge of speed to drown out the static of the day. Action cinema answers that search with rhythm, impact, and the promise that bodies in motion can briefly suspend doubt. Netflix offers abundance across the US, UK, and Canada, which can blur desire, so this ranked guide narrows the field to ten essential action films now streaming. The selections balance critical consensus with strong audience response, and they span espionage, siege thrillers, modern westerns, science fiction, superhero fantasy, action horror, and large scale spectacle. 

Craft matters, so we weigh choreography, camera language, sound design, editing cadence, and how these tools reveal themes of mortality, alienation, identity, and meaning. This list counts down from 10 to 1, moving from crowd pleasing energy to works that fuse technique with philosophical weight. The goal is simple: a clear path through Netflix’s action movie library, a route to the films that ignite pulse and thought in equal measure.

10. Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F (2024)

Why watch: “This legacy sequel brings Eddie Murphy’s fast-talking charisma back to a modern, high-energy action-comedy.” 

Runtime: 117 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “I don’t need a ride. I just need a moment.” 

Dir: Mark Molloy | Cast: Eddie Murphy, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Taylour Paige | Tone: Action comedy/Legacy Sequel | Notable scene: Axel and his daughter, Jane, evade a hit squad in a high-speed chase through the streets of Beverly Hills.

Aging heroes return because memory seeks renewal. Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F understands this impulse and treats it with humor and drive. This 2024 Netflix original brings Axel Foley back to Beverly Hills after his daughter faces real danger, and the trip becomes a reckoning with time, career, and the messy loyalty that keeps friends attached. Eddie Murphy leans into rhythm and timing, a staccato flow that turns a punchline into propulsion. Judge Reinhold and other familiar faces bring warmth without leaning on easy nostalgia, while Joseph Gordon Levitt and Taylour Paige fold into the ensemble with quick chemistry.

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The chases and shootouts keep the frame lively, yet the quiet beats, a hallway exchange, a shared look after a near miss, let the comedy breathe. Style serves character, with bright, clean coverage and crisp cutting that favors clarity. This action-packed comedy lands as a gateway entry on this ranking, a reminder that fun counts when the fun is built with care. Available to stream on Netflix in multiple regions, this legacy sequel delivers nostalgia and adrenaline in equal measure.

9. The Harder They Fall (2021)

Why watch: “A vibrant, stylish, and revisionist Western featuring an all-Black ensemble of historical figures in a grand revenge story.”

Runtime: 139 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “We gotta be the baddest.”

Dir: Jeymes Samuel | Cast: Jonathan Majors, Idris Elba, Regina King | Tone: Neo-Western/Revenge | Notable scene: The spectacular, choreographed shootout between Nat Love’s crew and Rufus Buck’s gang in the town of Redwood.

The western is a mirror for national myth, and this one burns with color and purpose. The Harder They Fall tracks Nat Love as he gathers his crew to strike back at the ruthless Rufus Buck in this 2021 Netflix production. The story is simple, a revenge arc that moves through a heist structure, yet the presentation feels freshly carved. Jonathan Majors and Idris Elba anchor an ensemble that includes Regina King, LaKeith Stanfield, and Zazie Beetz, historical Black figures who take the stage, dignified, flawed, and dangerous.

The cinematography pops with deliberate saturation, frames composed with graphic precision, and the soundtrack speaks in the present tense, which reframes the past without surrendering momentum. Action beats are choreographed with musical timing, gunfire as percussion, silence as rest. The production design sharpens edges rather than chasing grit for its own sake. Style, sound, and character converge in spectacular shootouts and high-noon duels. This Netflix action movie widens who the western can center while still delivering the genre’s core pleasures: a showdown, a team, a stolen breath before the draw. Available on Netflix worldwide.

8. Train to Busan (2016)

Why watch: “A relentlessly intense Korean zombie thriller that uses the claustrophobic setting of a high-speed train to heighten the stakes of a desperate fight for survival.”

Runtime: 118 minutes • MPAA rating: Unrated (often R equivalent for strong violence/horror) • Notable line: “You have to make it to the end.”

Dir: Yeon Sang-ho | Cast: Gong Yoo, Jung Yu-mi, Ma Dong-seok | Tone: Action horror/Disaster thriller | Notable scene: The survivors band together to fight through multiple zombie-filled carriages, using their wits and sheer physical force.

Mortality sits one seat away on this train. Train to Busan confines its apocalypse to a high speed KTX line, which turns steel corridors into moral corridors in this 2016 Korean action thriller. A father escorts his daughter, and every decision becomes a measure of care versus fear. The film treats its infected as tidal force rather than puzzle, so strategy grows from space, doors, timing, and sacrifice.

Close quarters combat pushes bodies into brutal negotiation, elbows, shields, makeshift weapons, while the camera glides with lucid intent. The choreography reads cleanly because geography is sacred here, each carriage a stage with its own rules. Tension accrues through repetition and variation, a station break that fails, a temporary refuge that curdles. The emotional current never slips, anchored to the evolving bond between parent and child and the community that forms under pressure.

Terrifying momentum meets tenderness, and this action horror masterpiece earns its tears without pleading for them. Action reveals character, character reframes action, and the destination feels inevitable, like tracks that were always set. Available to stream on Netflix in the US, UK, and Canada, Train to Busan stands as one of the genre’s finest achievements.

7. Da 5 Bloods (2020)

Why watch: “Spike Lee’s powerful and kinetic war drama about Black Vietnam veterans returning to the jungle to retrieve both a cache of gold and the ghost of their past.”

Runtime: 154 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “We fought in an immoral war that was started by white men, for white men.”

Dir: Spike Lee | Cast: Delroy Lindo, Clarke Peters, Chadwick Boseman | Tone: War drama/Heist/Political | Notable scene: Paul’s emotional, unscripted soliloquy to the camera in the jungle after his final betrayal and reckoning.

War lingers in the bloodstream, and Da 5 Bloods traces that residue through memory and return in this 2020 Netflix original from director Spike Lee. Four Black veterans, played by Delroy Lindo, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis, and Isiah Whitlock Jr., travel back to Vietnam to recover their squad leader’s remains and a buried cache, which turns the jungle into a site of grief, loyalty, and unfinished history.

Lee layers time through aspect ratio shifts and archival textures, a formal choice that keeps the past present. Action erupts with purpose, ambushes that comment on intervention and the cost stamped on bodies and land. The film speaks about race without euphemism, how service asked everything and offered little in return, how inheritance includes trauma and pride. Performances carry jagged edges, with anger that cracks into vulnerability at unexpected angles.

Set pieces resist spectacle for its own sake, leaning into messy kinetics and sudden stillness. This gritty military drama treats survival as an argument with time, an unfinished conversation that the characters can no longer delay. Available globally as a Netflix production, Da 5 Bloods delivers action-packed warfare sequences while interrogating history and sacrifice.

6. The Killer (2023)

Why watch: “David Fincher directs this cold, procedural neo-noir about a professional assassin whose procedural routine collapses after a single, pivotal mistake.”

Runtime: 118 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “Stick to the plan. Trust no one. Never yield an advantage.”

Dir: David Fincher | Cast: Michael Fassbender, Arliss Howard, Charles Parnell | Tone: Psychological thriller/Neo-noir | Notable scene: The brutal, sustained, close-quarters fight in the Florida home, where the assassin’s self-proclaimed control gives way to primal desperation.

Precision poses as control. The Killer opens that pose and lets us watch the seams in this 2023 Netflix thriller from director David Fincher. Fincher engineers procedure with monastic focus, shots that measure distance, sound that counts heartbeats, edits that feel like breath control. Michael Fassbender plays a nameless professional assassin who repeats mantras about patience and detachment, yet the plot, a job gone wrong, exposes the limits of doctrine.

The revenge path reads like a ledger, names to cross off, locations to infiltrate, yet the film’s engine sits in the friction between rule and impulse. Every fight plays like a proof, each entry and exit a theorem, and then a variable misbehaves. The Paris sequence hums with surveillance calm, the Florida home invasion erupts in near animal ferocity, and the final meeting tightens into a quiet negotiation with self.

Neo noir atmosphere lingers over sterile interiors and cold night streets, yet the film keeps language spare and means of violence plausible. Thought guides movement, movement reveals the lie of total control, and the ending settles into uneasy awareness rather than triumph. This psychological assassin thriller is available to stream on Netflix in multiple territories, offering a cerebral take on the hitman genre.

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5. The Matrix (1999)

Why watch: “A sci-fi landmark that blends martial arts, revolutionary visual effects, and philosophical inquiry to ask, ‘What is real?'”

Runtime: 136 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “There is no spoon.”

Dir: Lana and Lilly Wachowski | Cast: Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss | Tone: Cyberpunk/Science Fiction | Notable scene: Neo, now awakened to the potential of the Matrix, dodges bullets in iconic “bullet-time” slow motion.

What is real, and who decides. The Matrix turns that question into a kinetic philosophy primer in this 1999 sci-fi action landmark now streaming on Netflix. Humanity sleeps inside a simulation, and a hacker, Neo, learns to read the code that governs bodies and limits. Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, and Carrie Anne Moss anchor a trio that moves like a dialectic: belief, doubt, transformation.

The film’s technique redefined action grammar. Bullet time for elastic perception, Hong Kong inspired wirework for vertical grace, virtual camera moves that let thought and motion share the same beat. Green tinted frames, trench coats, mirrored surfaces, each detail builds a language of control and rupture. Choreography works with editing rather than hiding behind it, so hits land and choices register.

The subway fight feels like a duel of worldviews, the lobby raid like a manifesto about freedom achieved through skill. Science fiction here is not escape, it is inquiry with bruises. The legacy remains in how later films cut, in how video games render time, and in how audiences think about waking up from the script that tells them who they are. Available on Netflix in select regions, The Matrix delivers action-packed sequences that changed cinema forever.

4. The Old Guard (2020)

Why watch: “Charlize Theron leads a centuries-old team of immortal mercenaries in a grounded, emotionally resonant supernatural action thriller.”

Runtime: 125 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “We are not soldiers. We are a resource.”

Dir: Gina Prince-Bythewood | Cast: Charlize Theron, KiKi Layne, Matthias Schoenaerts | Tone: Supernatural action/Military thriller | Notable scene: Nile and Andy’s devastating, first-contact fight aboard the military cargo plane, testing the limits of Nile’s sudden immortality.

Immortality sounds like victory until centuries weigh down the soul. The Old Guard follows Andy, played by Charlize Theron, who leads a covert team of undying mercenaries in this 2020 Netflix original. Their existence becomes exposed, and the group fights to protect a fragile secrecy while confronting the ethics of intervention. KiKi Layne co-stars as Nile, a Marine who discovers she shares their gift.

The combat carries heft, practical strikes and bone deep fatigue, with choreography that favors continuity of motion over flashy punctuation. Fantasy enters through recovery and memory, wounds that close, dreams that connect strangers across continents, yet the visual approach remains grounded. Faces tell the story, particularly in quiet conversations that ask what a life means when endings hide.

Theron delivers fierce leadership through experience rather than posture, and the ensemble treats tenderness as a real tactic. Set pieces remain legible, framed to honor spatial rules so viewers can think through the fights with the characters. Slick sword fights and brutal hand-to-hand combat define this supernatural action thriller. Available globally on Netflix, The Old Guard suggests that power without purpose corrodes, and that chosen family can bear the weight that time refuses to lift.

3. Extraction (2020)

Why watch: “A visceral, raw mercenary film with a legendary, sustained ‘one-shot’ sequence of relentless, city-spanning action.”

Runtime: 116 minutes • MPAA rating: R • Notable line: “You drown not by falling into the river, but by staying submerged in it.”

Dir: Sam Hargrave | Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Rudhraksh Jaiswal, Randeep Hooda | Tone: Gritty action thriller/Survival | Notable scene: The 12-minute, continuous-take sequence that begins with a car chase and moves into a building fight and rooftop chase.

Bodies move through Dhaka’s streets like current, and Extraction rides that current with nerve in this 2020 Netflix action movie. Chris Hemsworth plays Tyler Rake, a battle-hardened mercenary hired to pull a kidnapped boy from a war between crime syndicates. Director Sam Hargrave brings a stunt coordinator’s eye, which means action designed from the inside out: contact, recoil, dust, and fatigue.

The film’s calling card is an extended one shot sequence that bends across rooftops, cars, stairwells, and alleys, stitched with invisible seams yet carried by relentless momentum. The technique does more than impress the craft minded viewer, it anchors empathy by refusing to cut away from risk. The color and sound of the city become partners in suspense, crowds that compress space, engines that drown out whispered plans.

Character stays simple by design: a man trying to earn a reason to keep moving, a boy learning to read courage in the face of chaos. Violence has consequence, and the bruised silence after a fight says as much as the gunfire. This visceral thriller set a new bar for Netflix action films with its gritty, intense sequences and adrenaline-charged momentum. Available to stream on Netflix worldwide, Extraction delivers heart-stopping action that feels immediate and earned.

2. RRR (2022)

Why watch: “An epic, maximalist Indian action spectacle that fuses counter-history and mythology in a roaring tale of brotherhood and anti-colonial resistance.”

Runtime: 187 minutes • MPAA rating: Not Rated (often equivalent to PG-13/R for violence) • Notable line: “A good education is the most powerful weapon in the world.”

Dir: S.S. Rajamouli | Cast: N.T. Rama Rao Jr., Ram Charan, Alia Bhatt | Tone: Epic action/Historical fantasy/Musical | Notable scene: The iconic “Naatu Naatu” dance sequence, a dazzling expression of defiant camaraderie between the two protagonists.

Two men meet as myth, then learn each other as brothers in purpose. RRR imagines the paths of revolutionaries Komaram Bheem and Alluri Sitarama Raju in a roaring counter history of resistance to the British Raj in this 2022 epic from director S.S. Rajamouli. Available on Netflix in its Hindi version, this Telugu action spectacle stars N.T. Rama Rao Jr. and Ram Charan as freedom fighters whose fictional friendship becomes the heart of three hours of maximalist cinema.

The film moves through musical numbers, intricate set pieces, and stylized VFX that treat physics as emotional notation. Animals stampede as emblems, ropes and motorcycles become ballet partners, and choreography writes friendship in the air. A waterfall fight early in the film involves hundreds of extras, wild animals, and physics-defying stunts. Songs carry narrative weight, lifting crowds while clarifying inner conflict.

Performance charisma powers the engine, with the leads trading smiles, blows, and silent vows. The story embraces scale, yet finds room for intimate gestures, a hand steadying another before the leap. This action-packed epic became a global phenomenon, breaking box office records and earning widespread critical acclaim. Available to stream on Netflix, RRR proved that action cinema speaks multiple dialects, and that spectacle can carry moral seriousness when friendship becomes the creed that holds under fire.

1. Godzilla Minus One (2023)

Why watch: “An Academy Award-winning, profoundly human drama that grounds the terror of a classic monster in the personal guilt and national grief of postwar Japan.”

Runtime: 125 minutes • MPAA rating: PG-13 • Notable line: “I finally see it! I finally have the will to live!”

Dir: Takashi Yamazaki | Cast: Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada | Tone: Action drama/Kaiju/Postwar redemption | Notable scene: Godzilla’s devastating initial rampage through the Ginza district, climaxing with the first use of his atomic breath on the city.

Destruction alone does not explain fear. Fear comes from loss already carried, and Godzilla Minus One understands this truth in this 2023 Japanese action drama now streaming on Netflix. Postwar Japan struggles to rebuild, and a failed kamikaze pilot searches for redemption while a monster presses toward the shore. The film binds national grief to personal shame, then lets action and strategy reveal how communities mend through risk.

Miniatures and digital enhancements join with tactile sound to create impact that feels hand made and immediate. The Academy Award for Best Visual Effects in 2024 marks the craft achievement, yet the honor lands because technique serves feeling. Battles at sea, evacuations through ruined streets, provisional weapons tested under impossible pressure, each sequence rises from character choice.

The camera favors clarity, horizon lines held long enough to read danger, then punches in at the moment where courage starts to shake. The final movement reaches for grace without erasing guilt, a fragile peace that respects the dead and the living. This Netflix action movie crowns the ranking because it finds meaning inside spectacle and offers a path through fear that does not deny its cost. Available on Netflix in select regions, Godzilla Minus One stands as the definitive champion, blending spectacular action sequences with profound emotional resonance.

Tags: ActionAction comedyAction dramaAction fictionAction-ThrillerBeverly Hills Cop: Axel F (2024)Da 5 Bloods (2020)Extraction (2020)FeaturedGodzilla Minus One (2023)ListsNetflixRRR (2022)The Harder They Fall (2021)The Killer (2023)The Matrix (1999)The Old Guard (2020)Top PickTrain to Busan (2016)
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