7 Hit Movies Hollywood Exclusive Official

Tom Cruise is the last movie star, and this film is his love letter to danger. The exclusive selling point here is the "stunt vision" feature. The scene where Cruise drives a motorcycle off a cliff into a base jump was done for real, on the first take.

For fans of the original series, this exclusive version re-contextualizes the entire franchise. It turns a popcorn flick into a tragedy about the loss of innocence. Currently, the only way to see the darker, unrated version is via Hulu's premium add-on or digital purchase. Genre: Kaiju / Historical Drama Exclusive Home: Netflix (International) / Digital Rental

Why it’s a hit: It grossed nearly $1 billion for an R-rated, dialogue-heavy film. The exclusive behind-the-scenes featurettes showing the practical effects are worth the rental fee alone. If you haven't seen the Trinity test in 70mm IMAX, you haven't truly seen the movie. Genre: Action / Neo-Noir Exclusive Home: Starz / Digital Purchase 7 hit movies hollywood exclusive

Forget everything you know about animation. This sequel to Into the Spider-Verse is a event that pushes the boundaries of art. Featuring six different animation styles on screen at once (including Lego, watercolor, and manga), it is a visual feast that loses its magic on low-resolution pirate sites.

Yes, it is a Japanese film, but it won the Academy Award for Visual Effects, beating Hollywood's biggest studios. Why is it on a list? Because Hollywood distributors (namely Toho International) handled its exclusive, limited IMAX release in the West. Tom Cruise is the last movie star, and

This movie is a hit because it cost less than $15 million to make and looks better than $300 million Marvel movies. The exclusive content includes a black-and-white version ( Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color ) which is only available on the physical media release. It proves that "exclusive" doesn't mean expensive marketing; it means passion. The entertainment industry has shifted. Gone are the days when a movie would hit Walmart bargain bins six months after release. Today, the "Hollywood Exclusive" model is about the experience .

Martin Scorsese’s three-and-a-half-hour epic proves that content doesn't have to be disposable. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, this film was a gamble for Apple—paying $200 million for a historical drama. The gamble paid off. For fans of the original series, this exclusive

No one expected a Hunger Games prequel to work without Jennifer Lawrence. Yet, Rachel Zegler and Tom Blyth delivered a slow-burn character study about the rise of President Snow. This is exclusive due to its extended director's cut, which adds 30 minutes of political intrigue missing from the theatrical release.