Watch Tim Robbins Movies and TV Shows in Australia

If you're looking to stream shows or movies starring Tim Robbins in Australia then here is the definitive list. We show you which streaming providers currently have each of Tim Robbins's most popular movies and shows available in their catalogue. List updated in November 2024.

List of the Best Movies and Shows Starring Tim Robbins In Order of Popularity

  1. The Shawshank Redemption
  2. Mystic River
  3. The Brink
  4. Dark Waters
  5. Jacob's Ladder
  6. The Player
  7. Revenge of the Electric Car
  8. Bull Durham
  9. The Lucky Ones
  10. A Perfect Day
  11. Here and Now
  12. Nothing to Lose
  13. Catch a Fire
  14. Cinema Verite
  15. Thanks for Sharing
  16. I.Q.
  17. Code 46
  18. Erik the Viking
  19. Antitrust
  20. Mission to Mars
  21. Cadillac Man
  22. Noise
  23. Howard the Duck
  24. Human Nature

Stream the top 24 Movies and Shows starring Tim Robbins

1. The Shawshank Redemption

Rated: R

9.3/10

Framed in the 1940s for the double murder of his wife and her lover, upstanding banker Andy Dufresne begins a new life at the Shawshank prison, where he puts his accounting skills to work for an amoral warden. During his long stretch in prison, Dufresne comes to be admired by the other inmates -- including an older prisoner named Red -- for his integrity and unquenchable sense of hope.

2. Mystic River

Rated: R

7.9/10

The lives of three men who were childhood friends are shattered when one of them has a family tragedy.

3. The Brink

Seasons: 1

Rated: TV-MA

7.7/10

Three top U.S. government and military officials scramble to prevent World War 3 from happening amidst the chaos of a geopolitical crisis.

4. Dark Waters

Rated: PG-13

7.6/10

A tenacious attorney uncovers a dark secret that connects a growing number of unexplained deaths to one of the world's largest corporations. In the process, he risks everything — his future, his family, and his own life — to expose the truth.

5. Jacob's Ladder

Rated: R

7.5/10

After returning home from the Vietnam War, veteran Jacob Singer struggles to maintain his sanity. Plagued by hallucinations and flashbacks, Singer rapidly falls apart as the world and people around him morph and twist into disturbing images. His girlfriend, Jezzie, and ex-wife, Sarah, try to help, but to little avail. Even Singer's chiropractor friend, Louis, fails to reach him as he descends into madness.

6. The Player

Rated: R

7.5/10

A Hollywood studio executive is being sent death threats by a writer whose script he rejected - but which one?

7. Revenge of the Electric Car

Rated: PG-13

7.1/10

A sequel to 2006's Who Killed the Electric Car?, director Chris Paine once again looks at electric vehicles. Where in the last film electric cars were dismissed as uneconomical and unreliable, and were under multiple attacks from government, the auto industry, and from energy companies who didn't want them to succeed, this film chronicles, in the light of new changes in technology, the world economy, and the auto industry itself, the race - from both major car companies like Ford and Nissan, and from new rising upstarts like Tesla - to bring a practical consumer EV to market.

8. Bull Durham

Rated: R

7.1/10

Veteran catcher Crash Davis is brought to the minor league Durham Bulls to help their up and coming pitching prospect, "Nuke" Laloosh. Their relationship gets off to a rocky start and is further complicated when baseball groupie Annie Savoy sets her sights on the two men.

9. The Lucky Ones

Rated: R

6.9/10

The story revolves around three soldiers — Colee, T.K. and Cheaver — who return from the Iraq War after suffering injuries and learn that life has moved on without them. They end up on an unexpected road trip across the U.S.

10. A Perfect Day

Rated: R

6.8/10

Somewhere in the Balkans, 1995. A team of aid workers must solve an apparently simple problem in an almost completely pacified territory that has been devastated by a cruel war, but some of the local inhabitants, the retreating combatants, the UN forces, many cows and an absurd bureaucracy will not cease to put obstacles in their way.

11. Here and Now

Seasons: 1

Rated: TV-MA

6.8/10

A provocative and darkly comic meditation on the disparate forces polarizing present-day American culture, as experienced by the members of a progressive multi-ethnic family — a philosophy professor and his wife, their adopted children from Vietnam, Liberia and Colombia and their sole biological child — and a contemporary Muslim family, headed by a psychiatrist who is treating one of their children.

12. Nothing to Lose

Rated: R

6.7/10

Advertising executive Nick Beame learns that his wife is sleeping with his employer. In a state of despair, he encounters a bumbling thief whose attempted carjacking goes awry when Nick takes him on an involuntary joyride. Soon the betrayed businessman and the incompetent crook strike up a partnership and develop a robbery-revenge scheme. But it turns out that some other criminals in the area don't appreciate the competition.

13. Catch a Fire

Rated: PG-13

6.7/10

The true story of anti-apartheid activists in South Africa, and particularly the life of Patrick Chamusso, a timid foreman at Secunda CTL, the largest synthetic fuel plant in the world. Patrick is wrongly accused, imprisoned and tortured for an attempt to bomb the plant, with the injustice transforming the apolitical worker into a radicalised insurgent, who then carries out his own successful sabotage mission.

14. Cinema Verite

Rated: TV-14

6.5/10

In 1973, the Loud family became a television sensation of a new kind. It was long before a metal rock star showed his eccentric family on the small screen and decades before housewives had screaming matches with each other on camera in public. CINEMA VERITE tells the behind-the-scenes story of the groundbreaking documentary "An American Family," which chronicled the lives of the Louds in the early 1970s and catapulted the Santa Barbara family to notoriety while creating a new television genre: the reality TV series.

15. Thanks for Sharing

Rated: R

6.4/10

A romantic comedy that brings together three disparate characters who are learning to face a challenging and often confusing world as they struggle together against a common demon—sex addiction.

16. I.Q.

Rated: PG

6.2/10

Albert Einstein helps a young man who's in love with Einstein's niece to catch her attention by pretending temporarily to be a great physicist.

17. Code 46

Rated: R

6.1/10

In a dystopian future, insurance fraud investigator William Gold arrives in Shanghai to investigate a forgery ring for "papelles", futuristic passports that record people's identities and genetics. Gold falls for Maria Gonzalez, the woman in charge of the forgeries. After a passionate affair, Gold returns home, having named a coworker as the culprit. But when one of Gonzalez's customers is found dead, Gold is sent back to Shanghai to complete the investigation.

18. Erik the Viking

Rated: PG-13

6.1/10

Erik the Viking gathers warriors from his village and sets out on a dangerous journey to Valhalla, to ask the gods to end the Age of Ragnorok and allow his people to see sunlight again. A Pythonesque satire of Viking life.

19. Antitrust

Rated: PG-13

6.1/10

A computer programmer's dream job at a hot Portland-based firm turns nightmarish when he discovers his boss has a secret and ruthless means of dispatching anti-trust problems.

20. Mission to Mars

Rated: PG

5.7/10

When contact is lost with the crew of the first Mars expedition, a rescue mission is launched to discover their fate.

21. Cadillac Man

Rated: R

5.7/10

Joe's a car salesman with a problem—he has two days to sell 12 cars or he loses his job. This would be a difficult task at the best of times but Joe has to contend with his girlfriends (he's two-timing), a missing teenage daughter and an ex-wife.

22. Noise

Rated: Not Rated

5.7/10

Footage from 2005’s Festival Art Rock in Saint-Brieuc, France, featuring Metric, Sonic Youth, Jeanne Balibar, and other acts.

23. Howard the Duck

Rated: PG

4.7/10

A scientific experiment unknowingly brings extraterrestrial life forms to the Earth through a laser beam. First is the cigar smoking drake Howard from the duck's planet. A few kids try to keep him from the greedy scientists and help him back to his planet. But then a much less friendly being arrives through the beam...

24. Human Nature

Rated: R

/10

A philosophical burlesque, Human Nature follows the ups and downs of an obsessive scientist, a female naturalist, and the man they discover, born and raised in the wild. As scientist Nathan trains the wild man, Puff, in the ways of the world - starting with table manners - Nathan's lover Lila fights to preserve the man's simian past, which represents a freedom enviable to most.