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  • The 20 Best TV Shows on Apple TV Right Now

    Down Cemetery Road.
    Photo: Apple TV+

    This article is updated frequently as titles leave and enter Apple TV. *New additions are indicated with an asterisk.

    Apple TV has become known as a home for lavish, expensive miniseries, dramas, and original comedies. It has had massive success with award winners like Ted Lasso, The Morning Show, and Severance, and the streamer’s made some interesting choices along the way, like releasing lots of shows that start with the letter S. It also seems as if it has a new offering every week, trying to catch the attention of the streaming zeitgeist. But it’s getting harder to filter through Apple TV’s massive catalogue to find the best stuff — which is where we come in. These are the best shows currently on Apple TV, a list we’ll update regularly as it releases new programs worth your time.

    Don’t have Apple TV yet?

    Year: 2025
    Length: 1 season, 8 episodes
    Creator: Morwenna Banks

    Mick Herron’s Slow Horses books have already been a hit for Apple TV, so it makes sense to try and adapt another one of the British writers hit novels. In this case, it’s the story of an explosion in a quiet neighborhood that rocks the life of an ordinary woman (Ruth Wilson) and sends her into the spiral of a private investigator (Emma Thompson). It’s imperfect but the leads keep it humming, and a second season is already being planned.

    Year: 2022–present
    Length: 1 season, 8 episodes
    Creator: Christopher Miller

    One of the geniuses behind The LEGO Movie and 21 Jump Street, and a producer on Spider-Man: Into the Spider-verse, Christopher Miller is one of the smartest content creators currently in Hollywood. His hysterical murder mystery is like nothing else on television, taking an Agatha Christie plot and filtering it through some of the funniest voices in comedy. Tiffany Haddish plays a detective investigating a murder that is then seen through the eyes of the people attending the party at which it happened, including characters played by Sam Richardson, Ben Schwartz, Ilana Glazer, Dave Franco, Zoe Chao, and Ike Barinholtz.

    Year: 2022
    Length: 1 season, 6 episodes
    Creator: Dennis Lehane

    Developed by the writer of Shutter Island and Mystic River, Black Bird is the true story of a criminal named Jimmy Keene (Taron Egerton) who was behind bars when he was asked by the authorities to inform on someone significantly worse. Keene was in a facility with a monster named Larry Hall (a chilling Paul Walter Hauser), a killer who the cops suspected of committing multiple murders. They told Keene that he could get an early release if he could get the monster to talk. Chilling and moving, this is a phenomenal miniseries.

    Year: 2019-2021
    Length: 3 seasons, 30 episodes
    Creator: Alena Smith

    When the story of Apple TV+ is written, this show will be one of the founding fathers, a program that debuted back in 2019 and helped define the company’s early brand. Hailee Steinfeld is phenomenal as the title character, who happens to the legendary Emily Dickinson. A coming-of-age variation on a legendary author shouldn’t be this effective, but the writing and performances are sharp and funny through its entire three-season run.

    Year: 2024
    Length: 1 season, 7 episodes
    Creator: Alfonso Cuarón

    The director of Roma and Gravity comes to television with this high-budget thriller based on the hit book by Renée Knight, starring Cate Blanchett, Kevin Kline, and Sacha Baron Cohen. The Blue Jasmine star plays a documentarian whose life is turned upside down when she gets sent a book that’s clearly about her, including secrets she’s tried to bury for years. Shot by two of the best cinematographers alive, Disclaimer is one of the best-looking things on any streaming service, not just Apple. It doesn’t hurt that everyone in it is at the top of their game too.

    Year: 2019–present
    Length: 4 seasons, 40 episodes
    Creators: Ronald D. Moore, Matt Wolpert, Ben Nedivi

    One of the geniuses behind the reboot of Battlestar Galactica collaborated on a very different kind of science fiction, a character-driven drama that imagines life in the United States in an alternate reality in which the Soviet Union landed on the moon before the United States. That’s just the setup for a show that has gone so many unexpected places since, incorporating figures from history like Neil Armstrong, Sally Ride, and even Wernher von Braun into a show that defies expectations. History is going to be very kind to this drama.

    Year: 2023
    Length: 1 season, 7 episodes
    Creators: George Kay, Jim Field Smith

    One of the biggest hits of the year for Apple TV+ owe a debt to old-fashioned thriller series like 24 in its realtime telling of a plane hijacking. Idris Elba steals the show as Sam Nelson, an average (as average as Elba can be) business negotiator who happens to be on a commuter plane that’s hijacked by a crew led by Neil Maskell. Over seven hours, Hijack details both the battle of wills on the plane and the political games played on the ground below.

    Year: 2020–present
    Length: 2 seasons, 16 episodes
    Creators: Lee Eisenberg, Emily V. Gordon, Kumail Nanjiani

    The anthology format is largely reserved for horror storytelling, so it’s nice to see it employed for drama and comedy in this excellent compendium of stories about what it means to be an immigrant in America in the 2020s. The scope of the dramedy is what’s so impressive, telling so many different kinds of stories so one can get a greater appreciation of the tapestry that (in ideal circumstances) makes up this country.

    Year: 2024
    Length: 1 season, 7 episodes
    Creator: Monica Beletsky

    Emmy winner Tobias Menzies does the best acting work of his career as Edwin Stanton, the man who led the hunt for John Wilkes Booth after the murder of President Abraham Lincoln. The team behind Manhunt deftly convey how much this was a turning point for history that still resonates today, a time in which everything Lincoln fought for could have disappeared, and a time when justice was essential. It’s incredibly well-made, a history lesson brought to vivid life.

    Year: 2019–present
    Length: 4 seasons, 40 episodes
    Creator: Jay Carson

    This show was the first sign that Apple was very willing to open its wallet, attracting multiple award winners to one of its launching-day dramas about a morning news show shaken not only by Me Too allegations against one of its anchors but the infighting that goes with this kind of operation in the 2020s. It mostly paid off. The Morning Show hasn’t quite found a big place in the culture, but everyone agrees that Billy Crudup’s Emmy-winning work is phenomenal, and it undeniably helped Apple develop its brand as a home for big names and big budgets.

    Year: 2025
    Length: 1 season, 5 episodes
    Creator: Rebecca Miller

    One of the best American filmmakers of all time finally gets his mini-series in this thoughtful, engaging series of conversations between the director Rebecca Miller and one Mr. Martin Scorsese. The Oscar-winning director details his upbringing, influences, and highs & lows of his incredible career. It’s a must-see for anyone who calls themselves a movie fan.

    Year: 2022–present
    Length: 2 season, 16 episodes
    Creator: Soo Hugh

    This might be the most visually striking show you’re not watching. The masterful Kogonada (After Yang) and Justin Chon (Blue Bayou) direct a generation-spanning epic about a Korean woman (played by Oscar winner Youn Yuh-jung of Minari in the present-day material) who had to fight to start a life during the Japanese occupation of her youth. It’s a moving, unpredictable drama that looks like nothing else on TV.

    Year: 2025-present
    Length: 1 season, 9 episodes
    Creator: Vince Gilligan

    The tagline for one of 2025’s best shows is a beauty: “The most miserable person on Earth must save the world from happiness.” Sure, that’s part of what’s going on in this incredible story of a woman (Rhea Seehorn) who discovers that she’s one of the only people on Earth who hasn’t been impacted by a hive-mind invasion. Everyone around her acts as one, eager to convert her into one of their own. It’s funny, terrifying, and unforgettable.

    Year: 2021–2023
    Length: 2 seasons, 12 episodes
    Creators: Cinco Paul, Ken Daurio

    Keegan-Michael Key and Cecily Strong star in this clever comedy about a couple who travel to a magical land inspired by hit musicals. The first season focused on the era of The Music Man, Carousel, and Brigadoon, but the second has shifted to the ’70s and ’80s to satirize Chicago, Cabaret, Hair, and Sweeney Todd. All in all, it’s a smart, funny show with great musical performances from Broadway legends like Alan Cumming, Kristen Chenoweth, and many more.

    Year: 2019–2023
    Length: 4 seasons, 40 episodes
    Creator: Tony Basgallop

    M. Night Shyamalan produced and sometimes directed the four seasons of this deeply underrated thriller, one of the most stylish and fascinating shows of its era. Lauren Ambrose stars as a Philadelphia reporter who has been treating a baby doll like her actual child. When she hires a nanny to take care of the toy, her husband (Toby Kebbell) is startled when the doll comes to life. And that’s just the beginning of the chaos in a show that looks filmic in ways that most television never bothers to attempt.

    Year: 2022–present
    Length: 2 seasons, 19 episodes
    Creator: Dan Erickson

    One of the most acclaimed new shows of the 2020sSeverance takes a clever concept and runs full speed with it into unexpected places. Adam Scott stars as an employee at a company that uses a revolutionary process that literally divides the work-life dynamic in a new way. What if your work self and home self had different lives, memories, and concerns? Britt LowerPatricia Arquette, and Christopher Walken co-star in this incredibly smart and witty sci-fi drama.

    Year: 2023–present
    Length: 2 seasons, 22 episodes
    Creators: Bill Lawrence, Jason Segel, Brett Goldstein

    Some of the team behind Ted Lasso created a different kind of dramedy for another comedy actor. This time it’s Jason Segel as a therapist who decides to start getting a little too honest with his patients, much to the shock of his colleagues, played by Jessica Williams and Harrison Ford — who is doing some of the best work of his recent career.

    Year: 2023-present
    Length: 2 seasons, ongoing
    Creator: Graham Yost

    The creator of Justified has delivered the best sci-fi show yet for Apple, an adaptation of a series of books called Wool by Hugh Howey. Set in the future in which we’ve destroyed this planet, Silo refers to the large underground bunker that houses around 10k citizens deep underground. Asking questions about history, authority, and power embedded in a murder mystery investigation spearheaded by the phenomenal Rebecca Ferguson, this is one of the best shows of the 2020s. It becomes even more ambitious in season two with the addition of Steve Zahn as the lone survivor of another silo.

    Year: 2022–present
    Length: 5 seasons, 30 episodes
    Creators: Morwenna Banks, Will Smith, Jonny Stockwood, Mark Denton 

    Apple was so confident in what it had with this spy thriller that it ordered four seasons from the jump and had two shot and aired in the same year (2022). A fifth just dropped in September 2025, and some fans probably hope Slow Horses could run forever (they’ll be happy to know that a sixth season has already been filmed and a seventh is on the way too). Gary Oldman is phenomenal as the head of Slough House, a sort of halfway house for British spies who made mistakes in more prominent positions. Of course, they’re usually the ones who save the day.

    Year: 2024
    Length: 1 season, 2 episodes
    Creator: Morgan Neville

    How do you unpack the life of a performer who was creative and unpredictable as Steve Martin? In two distinct halves. Morgan Neville pulls a fun trick with this Apple series that’s really more like two feature-length documentaries. The first uses archival footage to chart Martin’s rise to the top of the stand-up comedy food chain, which he left behind when he was arguably at his most popular. The second is a more intimate piece about Martin’s life since, including his films, art, and writing. It’s a must-see for fans of one of the best to ever do what he does.

    STEVE! (martin): A Documentary in Two Pieces

    Year: 2025
    Length: 1 season, 10 episodes
    Creator: Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, Peter Huyck, Alex Gregory, and Frida Perez

    One of the best shows of 2025 is this sharp dissection of the Hollywood machine and the people who keep it oiled. Co-creator Seth Rogen plays Matt Remick, the new head of a major studio behind imaginary projects like The Kool-Aid Movie! With too many cameos to count, it’s actually a love letter to Hollywood, and a reminder that the people who make blockbusters are often stumbling through their jobs as much as anyone.

    Year: 2020–2023
    Length: 3 seasons, 34 episodes
    Creators: Jason Sudeikis, Bill Lawrence, Brendan Hunt, Joe Kelly

    Shows based on ad campaigns shouldn’t be this successful. And yet here we are with Apple claiming ownership of arguably the biggest streaming comedy ever, a program that has won the Emmy for Best Comedy, Best Actor (Jason Sudeikis), and Best Supporting Actor (Brett Goldstein) two years in a row. Ted Lasso is massive. Every streamer wishes they had it.

    Brian Tallerico

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  • New on Amazon Prime Video: October 2025

    Hedda.
    Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh/MGM/Everett Collection

    Director Nia DaCosta and Tessa Thompson reunite for Hedda, an adaptation of the 19th century play Hedda Gabler. Thompson stars as Hedda, an ambitious woman who throws a party for her academic husband (Tom Bateman) and crosses paths with her ex-lover Eileen Lovborg (Nina Hoss). (Streaming October 29.)

    Noteworthy selections in bold.

    The Capture, season 1
    The Magicians, seasons 1-5
    1984
    17 Again
    A Shot in the Dark
    A View to a Kill
    A Walk Among the Tombstones
    Accepted
    Argo
    Argo: Extended Edition
    Bad Words
    Basic Instinct 2
    Beauty Shop
    Being John Malkovich
    Blazing Saddles
    Bodies Bodies Bodies
    Braveheart
    Bride of Frankenstein
    Bruce Almighty
    Bull Durham
    Candyman (1992)
    Casino Royale
    Cat People
    Crank
    Crank 2: High Voltage
    Creature From The Black Lagoon
    Curious George
    Dead Man Walking
    Death at a Funeral
    Diamonds Are Forever
    Die Another Day
    Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
    Dr. No
    Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas
    Dracula (1931)
    Easy A
    End of Days
    Erin Brockovich
    For Love of the Game
    For Your Eyes Only
    Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994)
    Frankenstein (1931)
    From Russia with Love
    Ghost Story
    GoldenEye
    Goldfinger
    Hair
    Hang ‘Em High
    Holmes And Watson
    Hotel Rwanda
    House of Gucci
    Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
    Indiana Jones And the Last Crusade
    Indiana Jones and the Raiders Of The Lost Ark
    Indiana Jones and The Temple Of Doom
    It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
    Jeepers Creepers
    Jeepers Creepers 2
    Judy
    Knight and Day
    Legends of the Fall
    Licence to Kill
    Live and Let Die
    Lucy
    Max
    Max 2: White House Hero
    Moonraker
    Moonstruck
    No Time To Die
    Octopussy
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
    Overboard
    Pixels
    Play Dirty
    Quantum of Solace
    Quigley Down Under
    Return To Me
    Revenge of the Pink Panther
    Scooby-Doo (2002)
    Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
    Scoot And Kassie’s Christmas Adventure
    Skyfall
    Soul Plane
    Southpaw
    Spartacus
    Spectre
    Summer of Soul (…or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)
    The Big Country
    The Boy
    The Breakfast Club
    The Change-Up
    The Commuter
    The Family Man
    The Greatest Story Ever Told
    The Invisible Man (1933)
    The Living Daylights
    The Man with the Golden Gun
    The Pink Panther (1964)
    The Pink Panther (2006)
    The Pink Panther 2
    The Pink Panther Strikes Again
    The Shack
    The Spy Who Loved Me
    The Terminator
    The World Is Not Enough
    Thelma & Louise
    Thunderball
    Tomorrow Never Dies
    Tremors
    Us
    Vacation Friends
    Vacation Friends 2
    Waterworld
    West Side Story (1961)
    You Only Live Twice

    A Star Brighter Than The Sun

    Sanda

    The Boogeyman

    Ninja vs. Gokudo

    Maintenance Required

    Saquon

    John Candy: I Like Me
    The Ballad of Wallis Island

    Culpa Nuestra
    Dracula Untold

    Hollywood Hustler: Glitz, Glam, Scam
    The Chosen Adventures

    Companion

    Harlan Coben’s Lazarus

    Allen Iv3rson
    Host

    Migration
    The Beast Within

    The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

    Hazbin Hotel, season 2
    Hedda

    Tremembé
    Dime tu nombre
    The Woman In The Yard

    For more coverage of the best movies and TV shows available on Netflix, HBOAmazon PrimeHulu, and Showtime, check out Vulture’s What to Stream Now hub, which is updated throughout the month.

    Savannah Salazar

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  • The 11 Best Movies and TV Shows to Watch This Weekend

    Clockwise from top: The Long Walk, Only Murders in the Building, The Girlfriend, and Spinal Tap II: The End Continues.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Murray Close/Lionsgate, Bleecker Street, Christopher Raphael/Prime, Patrick Harbron/Disney

    Nothing like a new Stephen King adaptation to usher in a turning season. Fall might not have technically started yet, but you can still nestle in a dark air-conditioned theater and pretend to your heart’s content with this week’s plethora of options. Alongside The Long Walk, there’s the reunion of a decades-old fake rock band, a return of a charming singing nun/babysitter, another murder in a New York, and a chance to go back in Pixar’s toy box. (A lot of returns, huh?) Plus, the Emmys!

    A Francis Lawrence movie set in a dystopian America where young people are part of a deadly competition? Sounds right. The Hunger Games director is taking a break from Panem to adapt some Stephen King. In The Long Walk, young men sign up for a walking contest where they must keep a pace of three miles per hour or be killed on the spot, and the contest only ends when there’s one person left. Cooper Hoffman, David Jonsson, and Charlie Plummer star as some of the young boys in this gnarly competition while Mark Hamill is the Major, the menacing officer supervising the walk.

    ➽ How far did The Long Walk make it in our ranking of every Stephen King movie adaptation? Pretty far!

    Forty-one years after This Is Spinal Tap, the fictional English rock band is putting on their final show. Rob Reiner’s mockumentary follows the band (made up of Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer) as they prep for a reunion concert. Reiner also reprises his role as Marty Dibergi, the documentarian filming Spinal Tap. The nostalgia levels go up to 11.

    If this list is the first time you’re hearing about Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba — The Movie: Infinity Castle, chances are you’re probably not going to be headed to the cinema for this one. But the film, an adaptation of the Infinity Castle arc of the manga series, which follows Tanjiro, Nezuko, and the Hashira as they enter the titular castle and battle deadly Upper Rank demons, is already a huge hit. It’s the third-highest grossing film in Japanese history. (The No. 1 highest grosser? The last one, 2020’s Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba — The Movie: Mugen Train.) —James Grebey

    In Jay Duplass’s odd, delightfully rambling film that also serves as a twisted love letter to Baltimore, a down-on-his-luck stand-up comedian and an emergency dentist spend a strangely eventful Christmas Eve together. —Bilge Ebiri

    Attempting any kind of praxis read of The Grand Finale is a fool’s errand. Yet the film moves briskly because it’s the cinematic equivalent of great gowns, beautiful gowns.”

    (Read Roxana Hadadi’s full review here. In theaters now.)

    Summer’s not over yet, so you still have time to fit in one more sleazy, sexy series. Robin Wright stars as the wealthy and cultured Laura, whose son brings home the girlfriend from hell. Olivia Cooke’s Cherry makes out with Laura’s son in public, lies about her knowledge of art, and seems to be hiding a secret—or is Laura overprotective? The truth is probably somewhere in the middle, but until then, let the women fight. —Roxana Hadadi

    Stop me if you’ve heard this one: Someone dies in the Arconia, and Charles, Oliver, and Mabel can’t help but investigate. This time, the suspects include mobsters and billionaires, which couldn’t be more New York, actually. —R.H.

    ➽ Can Only Murders keep getting away with this formula? Maybe.

    Is it Apple’s big night? Between Severance and The Studio, the company is sure hoping for a great night. At least they’re good shows. Plus, we’ll be seeing mini-reunions of Gilmore Girls, The Good Place, and more with the large crop of presenters at the Emmys. If it’s a good night of television, we’ll send our thanks to Sal Saperstein.

    ➼ The best way to watch? With your best friend, a humble TV antenna. We tested three great ones.

    Do, a deer, Re, a drop of golden sun, Mi, a name I call myself, Fa, a long, long way to run, So, a needle pulling thread, La, a note to follow so, and … There’s a snake in my boot. This weekend, we have two childhood classics out in theaters: The Sound of Music and Toy Story. Both are exciting films to see back on the big screen, so might as well have a double feature.

    “Gladys is an instant entry into the canon of contemporary horror iconography, and for that alone, the character is worthy of commendation. But she’s also so much more than the inevitable drag shows that will immortalize her. Underneath the pounds of lipstick, eye shadow, and wig is a thrillingly committed performance from [Amy] Madigan, a character actor who has seldom gotten the kind of showcase she gets here.”

    Writer Louis Peitzman on the fantastic performance of Madigan in Weapons, now out on VOD. Read more here.

    ➽ Plus, Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland’s Warfare is on HBO Max.

    Want more? Read our recommendations from the weekend of September 5.

    Savannah Salazar

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  • The 20 Best Movies on Netflix for Kids (And Their Parents)

    KPop Demon Hunters.
    Photo: Netflix

    This article is updated frequently as titles leave and enter Netflix. *New additions are indicated with an asterisk.

    Netflix has massive catalogs of TV shows aimed at children, but parsing their library of movies for kids (or, ideally, titles the whole family can enjoy) can be pretty challenging. That’s why we’re here to help. From Netflix Originals like The Sea Beast or Orion and the Dark, to timeless family hits like Matilda or The Lego Movie, these films below offer a little something for everybody on family movie night. We’ve also included a rating alongside each one.

    Year: 2017
    Runtime: 1h 28m
    Director: David Soren
    Rating: PG

    Fox adapted the hit book series by Dav Pilkey into a film that underperformed enough at the box office to make it unlikely we will see another. That’s too bad because David Soren’s family flick is clever and funny. It’s a sweet study of friendship, creativity, and a different kind of heroism. And it features a villain named Professor Poopypants.

    Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie

    Year: 2013
    Runtime: 1h 34m
    Directors: Cody Cameron, Kris Pearn
    Rating: PG

    A rare animated sequel that’s just about as funny as the first film, this 2013 sequel built on the visual wit and sharp characters from the 2009 movie. Bill Hader and Anna Faris lead a stellar voice work as Flint Lockwood are forced to return to Swallow Falls to save the day. It’s inventive and very fun.

    Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2

    Year: 2010
    Runtime: 1h 34m
    Directors: Pierre Coffin, Chris Renaud
    Rating: PG

    Who could have guessed that the tale of an awkward supervillain named Gru (Steve Carell) who has his heart melted by three orphaned girls would launch one of the biggest franchises in the world? Since this film was released, there have been three direct sequels and two Minions movies, along with tons of toys, specials, video games, and even a theme park attraction. It’s Gru’s world.

    Year: 1982
    Runtime: 1h 54m
    Director: Steven Spielberg
    Rating: PG

    Steven Spielberg’s 1982 sci-fi classic has held up masterfully, now speaking to a new generation just as much as it did to their parents and grandparents. Henry Thomas plays Elliott, a boy who becomes friends with an alien who he dubs E.T., who just wants to go home. It’s a beautiful, heartwarming masterpiece.

    E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 1h 38m
    Director: Sergio Pablos
    Rating: PG

    A little movie that could, this animated Christmas adventure was so critically beloved that it competed with giants like Pixar and DreamWorks for the Oscar for Best Animated Feature. It’s a delightful little fable about a postman who ends up stationed so far to the north that he meets a reclusive toymaker there named Klaus. Yes, it’s a Santa Claus origin story. With lovely, old-fashioned style, this is the kind of joyous film that the whole family can watch any time of year.

    Year: 2025
    Runtime: 1h 39m
    Directors: Maggie Kang, Chris Appelhans

    One of the most impressive pop culture phenomena of 2025 has been the unreal success of this Netflix original about a K-pop girl group called Hunter/x that also happens to fight demons between #1 hits. Songs like “Golden” have become huge pop hits outside of the flick, one that people are obsessively rewatching for a reason — it’s fun, relatable, and catchy as hell.

    Year: 2016
    Runtime: 1h 42m
    Director: Travis Knight
    Rating: PG

    Great Laika films drop in and out of the streamers, but this masterpiece has actually been one of the hardest to see. Revisit the story of a young boy on a journey to defeat his evil aunts with the power of his strings, and the partnership of a snow monkey and a beetle. Yeah, it’s crazy, but it’s also gorgeous and deeply moving, one of the best family films of the 2010s.

    Year: 2021
    Runtime: 1h 54m
    Directors: Mike Rianda, Jeff Rowe
    Rating: PG

    Originally planned for a theatrical release by Sony (with the much-worse title Connected), the studio sold this off to Netflix during the pandemic…and probably regretted that decision. One of the most critically and commercially beloved animated films of 2021, this is an incredibly smart and sweet family vacation movie, a comedy that’s as much about a tender relationship between a father and daughter as it is the fact that they end up having to save the world together.

    The Mitchells vs. the Machines

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 1h 39m
    Directors: Nick Bruno, Troy Quane
    Rating: PG

    Based on the comic by ND Stevenson, Nimona is a queer parable about a shape-shifter who refuses to adhere to society’s rules for what she should look like or whom she should present as. When Nimona (Chloë Grace Moretz) meets a knight, Ballister Boldheart (Riz Ahmed), who is falsely accused of killing the queen, the two team up against the repressive regime. Nimona’s action is staged in a stylized blend of 2-D and 3-D animation and crescendos toward a kaiju-size climax. But the way the film foregrounds their friendship is what makes it beautiful. —Eric Vilas-Boas

    Year: 2024
    Runtime: 1h 32m
    Director: Sean Charmatz
    Rating: PG

    The great Charlie Kaufman wrote a kids movie! This new animated Netflix original owes such a debt to Pixar films like Toy Story and Inside Out, but it carves out its own personality too. It’s about a kid (Jacob Tremblay) who’s afraid of just about everything, and how he overcomes his fear one night on a journey with the literal dark (Paul Walter Hauser). The story wraps in on itself in a way that one would expect from Kaufman, but never gets too complicated for the little ones too. Honestly, it’s better at doing the Pixar Thing than most recent Pixar movies.

    Year: 2014
    Runtime: 1h 35m
    Director: Paul King
    Rating: PG

    One of the sweetest family films ever made adapts the classic talking bear to modern London when Paddington (Ben Whishaw) finds his way there from “Darkest Peru,” looking for a new home. He finds one with an average family led by Hugh Bonneville and Sally Hawkins, but crosses paths with a nefarious taxidermist (a wonderful Nicole Kidman) who tries to take him down. This is such a gently funny and likable movie. You kind of have to be a jerk to hate it.

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 1h 56m
    Director: Guillermo del Toro
    Rating: PG

    The Oscar-winning director took his visionary skills to stop-motion animation with this instant classic, a retelling of the beloved fairy tale about the wooden boy who longed to be real. With spectacular voice work, this version reimagines Pinocchio during the period before World War II, allowing him to explore his themes of innocence and violence again. It’s a deeply personal, beautiful film.

    Year: 2012
    Runtime: 1h 37m
    Director: Peter Ramsey
    Rating: PG

    Based on the book series The Guardians of Childhood, this imperfect but fun film was the directorial debut of the man who would go on to helm one of the best animated features ever made in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Chris Pine, Alec Baldwin, Jude Law, Isla Fisher, and Hugh Jackman lead a high-powered voice cast in the story of how imaginary children’s characters like The Tooth Fairy and Easter Bunny have to save the world.

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 1h 55m
    Director: Chris Williams
    Rating: PG

    One of 2022’s most surprising hits for Netflix has been this film from one of the creators of Bolt and Big Hero 6. It’s a blend of a lot of things that have been done before with echoes of How to Train Your Dragon, Moana, and Pirates of the Caribbean (with a little Kaiju too) but this is a detailed adventure film that really plays to everyone in the family.

    Year: 2016
    Runtime: 1h 26m
    Directors: Chris Renaud, Yarrow Cheney
    Rating: PG

    It may not be as big as the little yellow guys, but this is an essential building block in the history of Illumination. A pre-cancellation Louis C.K. voices a spoiled house pet whose life is turned upside down when a new dog joins the family, voiced exuberantly by Eric Stonestreet. Their conflict spills into the streets and brings in an ensemble of fun vocal performances, especially Kevin Hart and Jenny Slate.

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 1h 27m
    Directors: Richard Phelan, Will Becher
    Rating: G

    Shaun the Sheep is an international treasure. The silent comedy star leads one of the most consistently hilarious franchises of all time in his own TV episodes and feature films. This one is a brilliant Netflix original from Aardman Animations about how everyone’s favorite ovine helps a stranded alien return to his own kind.

    A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon

    Year: 2001
    Runtime: 1h 30m
    Directors: Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson

    How culturally seismic was this skewering of fairy tales? It was announced in 2020 that it would be inducted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. That’s how big. It’s the first non-Disney film to get that recognition. As for the movie itself, it’s held up remarkably well, a modern classic with great voice work and clever writing.

    Year: 2016
    Runtime: 1h 48m
    Director: Garth Jennings
    Rating: PG

    A charming little jukebox musical, Sing stars Matthew McConaughey as a koala who needs to put on a show to save his theater. It’s a simple but charming film with great tunes sung by an excellent voice cast, especially a movie-stealing Taron Egerton.

    Year: 2025
    Runtime: 1h 22m
    Directors: Nick Park, Merlin Crossingham
    Rating: PG

    It’s been 21 years since a proper Wallace & Gromit movie but it turns out that the cheese-loving inventor and his trusty sidekick are as funny and clever as ever. This excellent family comedy sees Wallace invent a robot gnome (named Norbot) to help Gromit with duties around the house, but the villainous Feathers McGraw hacks the android and chaos ensues. There’s something extra-wonderful about a stop-motion film, one that requires so much hands-on work, being one of our best anti-AI movies.

    Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl

    Year: 2024
    Runtime: 1h 41m
    Director: Chris Sanders
    Rating: PG

    This award-winning adaptation of the novel of the same name by Peter Brown is a gift to viewers of all ages. A blend of Monet and Miyazaki, it stars Lupita Nyong’o as Roz, a service robot who ends up mothering a goose named Brightbill (Kit Connor). It’s a beautiful, moving piece of family filmmaking.

    Year: 2020
    Runtime: 1h 32m
    Director: Kris Pearn
    Rating: PG

    Remember when Tim Burton made weird, slightly disturbing kids movies? This truly inventive 2020 comedy feels inspired by those flicks as four kids decide that they’re going to replace their apathetic parents with ones that actually care. Based on the book of the same name by Lois Lowry, this flick includes voice work by Will Forte, Maya Rudolph, Terry Crews, and Ricky Gervais, and it’s probably the best family movie on Netflix that you probably haven’t seen.

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  • New on Paramount+: September 2025

    The Wedding Banquet.
    Photo: Bleecker Street Media

    Don’t have Paramount+ yet?

    For his remake of Ang Lee’s 1993 romantic comedy, director Andrew Ahn put an even queerer spin on The Wedding Banquet. Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Han Gi-chan, and Bowen Yang star as a two couples living together. Tran and Gladstone’s Angela and Lee are trying to have a child while Gi-chan’s Min is being asked by his grandmother (Youn Yuh-jung) to return home to Korea, which would mean leaving his boyfriend (Yang) behind. What comes next is a grand marriage scheme of mixed couplings to try and get Min a green-card and Lee and Angela more money for another round of IVF. (Streaming September 8.)

    Noteworthy selections in bold.

    Winter Spring Summer Fall, streaming premiere
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence
    Addams Family Values
    Afflicted 
    Along Came A Spider
    Angel Heart
    Approaching The Unknown
    April Fool’s Day
    Area 51
    Arrival
    Asylum
    Below
    Beneath
    Blade 
    Blade II 
    Blade: Trinity
    Body Cam
    Brick Mansions
    Burke & Hare
    Cesar Chavez
    Cloverfield
    Cursed
    Daybreakers
    Disturbia
    Dracula III: Legacy
    Face/Off
    Fatal Attraction
    Frida
    Friday the 13th
    Friday the 13th Part II 
    Friday the 13th Part III
    Friday the 13th Park IV: The Final Chapter
    Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning 
    Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives 
    Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood 
    Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan
    From Dusk Till Dawn
    From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money
    From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman’s Daughter
    Galaxy Quest 
    Gattaca
    Geostorm
    Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters
    How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days 
    I Know What You Did Last Summer 
    Jacob’s Ladder
    John Carpenter’s Escape from L.A. 
    Kiss the Girls 
    La Bamba
    Labor Day
    Life
    Like Water for Chocolate 
    Loosies
    Margaux
    Mommie Dearest
    Murder On The Orient Express
    National Lampoon’s Animal House
    Nick of Time
    Nobody’s Fool
    O (Othello) 
    Overlord 
    Patriot Games 
    Perfume: The Story of a Murderer
    Phantoms
    Piñero
    Quinceañera 
    Road to Perdition
    Safe
    Scary Movie
    Scary Movie 2
    Scary Movie 3
    Scream 4
    Seven Psychopaths
    Sleepy Hollow
    Small Soldiers
    Spell
    Spontaneous
    Student Bodies
    Super 8 
    Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
    Sweet Dreams
    Teaching Mrs. Tingle
    The Addams Family
    The Commuter
    The Crow
    The Crow: City of Angels
    The Crow: Wicked Prayer
    The Devil Inside
    The Faculty
    The Gift
    The Grifters
    The Haunting
    The Hunter
    The Island
    The Last Exorcism Part II 
    The Longest Yard
    The Loved Ones
    The Mechanic
    The Monster Squad
    The Night Clerk
    The Parallax View
    The Reckoning
    The Relic
    The Ring
    The Stepford Wives
    The Sum of All Fears
    The Terminal
    The Uninvited 
    The Woman in Black
    To Catch a Thief
    Twisted
    Universal Soldier
    Up in Smoke
    Vampire in Brooklyn
    Venom
    Vertical Limit 
    Virtuosity 
    Wes Craven Presents: Dracula 2000
    Wes Craven Presents: They
    Witness
    World War Z

    Wolves

    NCIS: Tony & Ziva, series premiere

    Old Henry
    Superhero Movie

    2025 Video Music Awards

    The Wedding Banquet, streaming premiere

    Thirst Trap: The Fame. The Fantasy. The Fallout., documentary premiere

    The Tiny Chef Show, season 3
    Personal Shopper

    The Reunion, season 1

    Primetime Emmy Awards

    Air Disasters, season 22
    The Adventures of Paddington, season 3

    Tulsa King, season 3 premiere
    A GRAMMY Salute to Earth, Wind & Fire Live: The 21st Night of September, special

    Bodyguard of Lies, documentary premiere

    Survivor, season 49

    The Amazing Race, season 38

    60 Minutes, season 58
    48 Hours, season 38


    See All



    Savannah Salazar

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  • The 30 Best Movies on Paramount+ Right Now

    The 30 Best Movies on Paramount+ Right Now

    Amores Perros.
    Photo: Lionsgate

    This post will be updated frequently as movies enter and leave the service. *New titles are indicated with an asterisk.

    In 2021, CBS All Access rebranded with the name Paramount+, reflecting the history of the legendary film and TV company with that nifty little mathematical sign that all the streaming companies seem to love these days. The name Paramount brings a deep catalogue of feature films, and the streaming service also includes titles from the Miramax and MGM libraries. They have also added a more robust original selection than at launch to complement the service’s classics like Gladiator, the Mission: Impossible series and Grease.

    For now, Paramount+ can’t compare to the depth of a catalogue like Max’s or the award-winning original works at other streamers, but it has a solid library with at least 30 films you should see.

    Year: 2001
    Runtime: 2h 34m
    Director: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu

    Alejandro González Iñárritu would go on to win two directing Oscars but he first earned worldwide acclaim with this time-jumping thriller starring Gael Garcia Bernal. At the end of a wave of violent triptychs inspired by Pulp Fiction, Amores Perros somehow still felt fresh and new thanks to its director’s daring storytelling style and skill with actors.

    Year: 2016
    Runtime: 1h 56m
    Director: Denis Villeneuve

    The beloved French director’s best film remains his adaptation of “Story of Your Life” by Ted Chiang, a tale of alien invasion that’s really more about the people on Earth than the interplanetary visitors. Amy Adams gives one of the best performances of her career as a linguist tasked with communicating with the aliens.

    Year: 2004
    Runtime: 2h 50m
    Director: Martin Scorsese

    Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Howard Hughes in Martin Scorsese’s incredibly detailed and lavish period piece about one of the most infamous eccentric millionaires of all time. It feels like every other month produces a bit of social outrage about Scorsese’s place in movie history or his comments on Marvel movies. Ignore that noise and just watch one of his works that doesn’t get nearly enough praise, anchored by one of DiCaprio’s best performances and some of the most impressive aerial cinematography of all time.

    Year: 2007
    Runtime: 1h 56m
    Director: Sidney Lumet

    The masterful director of 12 Angry Men, Dog Day Afternoon, and so many more American classics ended his career with a banger in this intense thriller featuring performances from Ethan Hawke, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Marisa Tomei, and Albert Finney that stand among their best. A chronological puzzle of a film that would impress Chris Nolan with its structure, Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead is one of the best films of the 2000s.

    Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead

    Year: 1984
    Runtime: 1h 45m
    Director: Martin Brest

    It’s hard to explain to people too young to experience it how big a star Eddie Murphy was in 1984 when his Axel Foley ruled the world. Murphy’s wit and charm were put to perfect use in Beverly Hills Cop that produced two inferior sequels, and both happen to also be on Paramount Plus.

    Year: 1997
    Runtime: 2h 35m
    Director: P.T. Anderson

    Paul Thomas Anderson is widely recognized as one of the best living American filmmakers now, but that wasn’t the case before the release of this masterpiece about life in the Los Angeles porn scene. Mark Wahlberg has never (and likely never will be) better than he is here, anchoring an ensemble that includes equally great work from Julianne Moore and Burt Reynolds.

    Year: 1974
    Runtime: 2h 10m
    Director: Roman Polanski

    Forget it Jake, it’s Chinatown. One of the best movies of the ‘70s, this Best Picture nominee (and Best Screenplay winner) tells the story of Jake Gittes, played unforgettably by Jack Nicholson, as he investigates an adulterer and finds something much more insidious under the surface of Los Angeles. It’s a must-see, as important as almost any film from its era.

    Year: 1995
    Runtime: 1h 37m
    Director: Amy Heckerling

    You can keep all those stuffy Jane Austen adaptations—one of the best remains Amy Heckerling’s updating of the 1815 classic Emma to mid-‘90s L.A. Is this the most ‘90s movie ever? From its fashion to its references to its beloved characters, Clueless is certainly one of the most iconic, a movie that made a small impact when it was released but feels like it grows even more popular with each generation that discovers it.

    Year: 2004
    Runtime: 1h 59m
    Director: Michael Mann

    Tom Cruise gives one of his most fascinating performances as Vincent, the passenger to Jamie Foxx’s L.A. cab driver on a very fateful night. It turns out that Vincent is hitman and he needs Foxx’s character to drive him on a killing spree in this tense, gorgeously-shot thriller from the masterful craftsman Michael Mann.

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 2h 19m
    Director: J.D. Dillard

    The proximity to another little movie about pilots called Top Gun: Maverick likely hurt the bottom line of this excellent, old-fashioned drama based on a true story. The excellent Jonathan Majors plays Jesse Brown, the first Black aviator in Navy history, and Maverick star Glen Powell plays his co-pilot and friend Tom Hudner. Both young future stars are excellent in a film that viewers can now find at home.

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 2h 32m
    Director: Mike Flanagan

    Almost four decades after Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, Mike Flanagan (The Haunting of Hill House) adapted the sequel by Stephen King with what felt like mixed results. However, in just the few years since this movie came out, it feels like the cult following has grown. It’s a stylish drama that kind of falls apart in the final act, but has enough good stuff before that to recommend a look.

    Year: 1997
    Runtime: 2h 18m
    Director: John Woo

    There are rumors that a remake of this John Woo classic is on the horizon, so you owe it to yourself to go back and see the very high standard that project will have to meet. Face/Off is one of the best action movies of the ‘90s, a wonderfully staged blockbuster by one of the genre’s best filmmakers. And John Travolta and Nicolas Cage were near the peaks of their screen charismas as an FBI agent and terrorist who end up, well, switching faces. It’s a blast.

    Year: 2020
    Runtime: 1h 38m
    Director: Jiayan “Jenny” Shi

    Jiayan Shi directed and produced this heartbreaking documentary about the disappearance and death of Yingying Zhang in 2017. Shi has unique access to the story in that she knew Yingying, and so her film has an incredible you-are-there quality as Shi captures the investigation and grief that would emerge from this horrific crime. Paramount+ deserves credit for bringing smaller projects like this to their subscribers, ones that other major streamers might ignore.

    Year: 2000
    Runtime: 2h 34m
    Director: Ridley Scott

    One of the most popular films of its era, this action epic stars Russell Crowe as the legendary Maximus, a warrior whose family is murdered by the vicious Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix). Forced into slavery, Maximus has to rise the gladiator arenas to get his vengeance. The film made a fortune on its way to winning the Oscar for Best Picture.

    Year: 1972
    Runtime: 2h 55m
    Director: Francis Ford Coppola

    Maybe you’ve heard of it? In all seriousness, there’s a very cool opportunity right now to watch the entire Godfather trilogy on Paramount+, including the superior recent cut of the third film. You could then slide from some of the best filmmaking of all time into the streaming service’s original series The Offer, about the making of Coppola’s masterpiece.

    Year: 2014
    Runtime: 2h 49m
    Director: Christopher Nolan

    No one else makes movies like Christopher Nolan, a man who took his superhero success and used it to get gigantic budgets to bring his wildest dreams to the big screen. Who else could make this sprawling, emotional, complicated film about an astronaut (Matthew McConaughey) searching for a new home for humanity? It’s divisive among some Nolan fans for its deep emotions, but those who love it really love it.

    Year: 2015
    Runtime: 1h 40m
    Director: David Robert Mitchell

    Maika Monroe stars in this indie horror breakthrough hit as a young woman who discovers that her recent sexual activity has cursed her with a supernatural force that will chase her until she passes it along to someone else. Stylish and striking, this felt like nothing else on the American horror market in 2014, really ushering in the era of what is now called “elevated horror.” Whatever you call it, It Follows is still an unforgettable genre flick.

    Year: 2002
    Runtime: 1h 25m
    Director: Jeff Tremaine

    Jackass Forever helped 2022 start with a bang. Now you can go back and watch the whole series exclusively on Paramount+ right now! (Even the “alternate” ones like Jackass 3.5). Go back to the heyday of Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, and the rest of the dangerous idiots. These movies are often derided as being dumb but they’re a glorious, infectious kind of dumb that wants nothing more than to make you laugh.

    Year: 1996
    Runtime: 2h 18m
    Director: Cameron Crowe

    One of Cameron Crowe’s best films became something of a punchline with its heavily quoted lines (“Show me the money,” “You had me at hello,” everything that cute kid says) but it’s actually a character-driven romantic comedy that has held up incredibly well in the quarter-century since its release. Tom Cruise plays the title character, a sports agent who is pushed into starting his own agency while he falls in love with a single mother, played by Renee Zellweger. It’s sweet, smart, and funny.

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 1h 52m
    Director: Aaron Nee, Adam Nee

    With echoes of beloved rom-coms like African Queen and Romancing the Stone, this film truly felt like an anomaly in 2022, and yet it turned into a pretty big hit at the theater. It’s already on streaming services, and it’s a great choice if you’re looking for some escapism tonight. Travel to the middle of nowhere with a romance novel writer (Sandra Bullock) and the cover model (Channing Tatum) who tries to save the day.

    Year: 2002
    Runtime: 2h 25m
    Director: Steven Spielberg

    One of Steven Spielberg’s best modern movies is this adaptation of a Philip K. Dick story about a future in which crime can be predicted before it happens. Tom Cruise stars as a man who is convicted of a crime he has no intent of committing in a fantastic vision of a future in which the systems designed to stop crime have been corrupted. It’s timely and probably always will be.

    Year: 1996-present
    Runtime: Varies
    Director: Various

    The whole series is finally here! For some reason, parts 1 to 3 and parts 4 to 6 have alternated residence on a lot of streaming services, but Paramount+ currently hosts the entire thing from De Palma’s first movie to Fallout. While we wait for Mission: Impossible 7, revisit the whole arc of the saga of Ethan Hunt to date.

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 1h 45m
    Director: Celine Song

    A current Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay nominee, this phenomenal film isn’t on any of the other streamers. It stars the excellent Greta Lee and Teo Yoo as a couple who were close as children but reunite years later after she immigrated to the United States. It’s as much a story of what people leave behind when they change their entire lives as it is a traditional story of unrequited love. It’s beautiful and unforgettable.

    Year: 2008
    Runtime: 1h 52m
    Director: David Gordon Green

    Seth Rogen gives one of his best performances as Dale Denton, an average guy who just wants to get high. He visits his dealer (played perfectly by James Franco) on the wrong night as the pair cross paths with hitmen and a police officer on the wrong side of the law. This is an incredibly funny movie, and you don’t need to be high to love it.

    Year: 2018
    Runtime: 1h 30m
    Director: John Krasinski

    Who could have possibly guessed that Jim from The Office would be behind one of the most successful horror films of the ‘10s? You’ve probably already seen this story of a world in which silence is the only way to survive, but it’s worth another look to marvel at its tight, taut filmmaking and a stellar performance from Emily Blunt. Plus, Paramount+ recently added the sequel, so: double feature time!

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 1h 24m
    Director: Rose Glass

    Rose Glass’s terrifying horror film is one of the best movies of 2021 and it’s already on Paramount+. Reminiscent of psychological nightmares of the ‘70s like Repulsion and Rosemary’s Baby, this is the tale of a hospice nurse named Maud (a fearless performance from Morfydd Clark) who becomes obsessed with saving the soul of one of her patients (Jennifer Ehle). It’s unforgettable.

    Year: 1996
    Runtime: 1h 51m
    Director: Wes Craven

    The Ghostface killer came back in January 2022 with the release of Scream, the fifth film in this franchise and the first since the death of Wes Craven, and the fun continued with another sequel in 2023 (although the troubles around the production of the seventh film have been, well, notable). Paramount+ is the best place for a marathon with the original trilogy and the fifth and sixth films (but, bizarrely, not Scream 4.) The first movie is still a flat-out genre masterpiece.

    Year: 2010
    Runtime: 2h
    Director: David Fincher

    One of the best movies of the 2010s has returned to Paramount after a brief hiatus to remind people how wildly far ahead of its time this movie was when it was released. With a razor-sharp screenplay by Aaron Sorkin and some of the best direction of David Fincher’s career, this is a flawless movie, one that resonates even more now in the era of constant internet than it did thirteen years ago.

    Year: 1986
    Runtime: 1h 53m
    Director: Jonathan Demme

    Jonathan Demme was a master of tonal balancing, finding a way to perfectly blend the comedy and the dread in this story of an average man caught up in a criminal’s web. Charlie (Jeff Daniels) is a milquetoast banker who goes on a wild ride with a girl named Lulu (Melanie Griffith), but everything changes when Lulu’s ex (an unforgettable Ray Liotta) enters the picture.

    Year: 2007
    Runtime: 2h 38m
    Director: Paul Thomas Anderson

    One of the best films of the ‘00s, Paul Thomas Anderson’s adaptation of Upton Sinclair’s Oil! won Daniel Day-Lewis his second Oscar as the unforgettable Daniel Plainview. As detailed and epic as great fiction, Anderson’s movie is one of the most acclaimed of its era, a film in which it’s hard to find a single flaw. Even if you think you’ve seen it enough, watch it again. You’ll find a new reason to admire it.

    Year: 1997
    Runtime: 3h 14m
    Director: James Cameron

    More than just a blockbuster, this Best Picture winner was a legitimate cultural phenomenon, staying at the top of the box office charts for months. There was a point when it felt like not only had everyone seen the story of Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Rose (Kate Winslet), but most people had seen it twice. History has kind of reduced this epic to its quotable scenes and earworm theme song, but it’s a better movie than you remember, a great example of James Cameron’s truly robust filmmaking style.

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 2h 10m
    Director: Joseph Kosinski

    It’s the movie that saved movies last year! The truth is that Paramount wanted to drop this long-awaited sequel on a streamer during the pandemic, but Tom Cruise knew it was the kind of thing that should be appreciated in a theater. He bet on himself and the result is arguably the biggest hit of his career, a movie that made a fortune and seems primed to win Oscars in a couple months.

    Year: 2000
    Runtime: 1h 36m
    Director: Sofia Coppola

    Sofia Coppola made her directorial debut with this adaptation of Jeffrey Eugenides’s beloved novel about a group of sisters who captivated the entire neighborhood in which they lived. Kirsten Dunst anchors a dreamy, captivating movie about the myth of perfection that exists in the world of picket fences in middle America. It’s got a great Air soundtrack too.

    Year: 2013
    Runtime: 3h
    Director: Martin Scorsese

    Leonardo DiCaprio should have won the Oscar for his amazing performance as Jordan Belfort, the financial criminal that rocked Wall Street and shocked audiences in one of Scorsese’s best late films. Arguments over whether or not this film glorifies a “bad guy” have become prominent—and could only really be made by people who haven’t actually watched it. Most of all, it’s a shockingly robust film, filmed with more energy in a few minutes than most flicks have in their entire runtime.

    Year: 2007
    Runtime: 2h 37m
    Director: David Fincher

    David Fincher’s masterpiece is more about the impact of crime than crime itself. The fact that he made a sprawling epic about an unsolved murder is daring enough, but what’s most remarkable is how much this movie becomes less and less about figuring out the identity of the Zodiac Killer and more about the impact of obsession. It’s one of the best films of the ‘00s.

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    Brian Tallerico

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  • The 15 Best Movies and TV Shows to Watch This Weekend

    The 15 Best Movies and TV Shows to Watch This Weekend

    Clockwise from top: Pachinko, City of God: The Fight Rages On, The Crow, and Blink Twice.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Apple TV+, Everett Collection (Amazon MGM Studios, Lionsgate), Max

    Blink twice and maybe this weekend will go by quickly. Even the movie theaters are itching for next week’s four-day weekend, judging by this one’s meager offerings. But at least your at-home watch list is popping off. AMC sent Netflix some deliciously dark offerings, Oz Perkins’s horror Longlegs has hit digital, and The Crow is ripe for a rewatch. You might as well stay in and away from the sun this weekend. It would be so goth of you.

    Creator Soo Hugh’s adaptation of Min Jin Lee’s novel returns for its sophomore season. This installment dives back into its four generations of a Korean family’s questions of identity, especially as part of its narrative is set in Japan during World War II. —Roxana Hadadi

    Who’s winning, who’s losing — who cares?

    Zoë Kravitz’s directorial debut, originally titled Pussy Island, follows a young woman (Naomi Ackie) who gets invited to a tech billionaire’s (Channing Tatum) private island. It seems like a dream come true, but if movies have taught us anything, it’s that following rich people to isolated islands or homes is a terrible idea.

    The 2002 hit film City of God was a nerve-tingling glimpse into the organized crime of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas. Now, a new creative team picks up the mantle in this six-episode series, bringing photographer Rocket (and actor Alexandre Rodrigues) back with a press badge and another drug war to cover. —R.H.

    “The film may insist that Eric and Shelly’s is a grand romance of soul mates, but what it actually gives us is a burnout-detention boyfriend/rebellious-cheerleader girlfriend dynamic that doesn’t feel like it would last a long weekend.”

    In theaters now; read our full review.

    Well, he finally did it. John Woo finally released that American remake of The Killer that’s been in the works almost since the first one premiered back in 1989. Woo’s original, starring Chow Yun-fat and Danny Lee, was one of the key films that introduced Hong Kong genre cinema to western cinephiles. While this new Killer doesn’t have the insane grandeur of the old one, Woo does still know how to be creative with his action scenes, even when he’s just playing the hits. —Bilge Ebiri

    Tombstone may be the definitive portrayal of the gunfight at the O.K. Corral (though the classic western that carries that name is also fantastic), but that hasn’t stopped everyone from Kevin Costner to Alex Cox from retelling the story of Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and the Clanton gang known as the Cowboys. This latest entry is a TV mini starring Ed Harris, Edward Franklin, and Tim Fellingham. —Eric Vilas-Boas

    A handful of AMC shows have flown onto Netflix’s library for a while, including one of their best. Anne Rice’s Interview With the Vampire’s small-screen adaptation run by Rolin Jones is sexy, terrifying, dramatic, and fantastic television. The Netflix deal will hopefully give the show a chance to get the eyeballs it deserves. (Unfortunately, the brilliant second season isn’t streaming on Netflix, but hey, it’s on AMC+.)

    And Longlegs, the “It” horror of the summer, and Inside Out 2, the “It” film of the summer, are now both on digital. Also check out Stress Positions on Hulu and Kevin Costner’s Horizon: An American Saga on Max.

    The goth cinema canon.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Columbia Pictures, Dimension Films, Goldwyn Pictures, Miramax, Sony Pictures, Trimark Pictures

    With the Crows and Vampires on our mind, we took a goth day this week. Here are three titles that helped define goth cinema.

    Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust“An action-goth masterpiece.”

    Crimson Peak Guillermo del Toro’s “misunderstood beauty.”

    Gargoyles — Specifically, “The Mirror.”

    Photo: Roxana Hadadi/Vulture

    It’s hard to imagine The Crow led by anyone other than Brandon Lee. (You can read more of Roxana Hadadi’s piece here on the matter.) That doesn’t mean the latest iteration of The Crow isn’t necessarily worth watching, but if it made you want to see the 1994 film, you have until the end of the month to check it out on Prime Video.

    Want more? Read our recommendations from the weekend of August 16.

    Savannah Salazar

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  • New on Peacock: August 2024

    New on Peacock: August 2024

    The Fall Guy.
    Photo: Universal Studios

    Don’t have Peacock yet?

    The Fall Guy didn’t have the time to get audiences to completely fall in love with it in theaters, but nowadays, it’s extremely likely for people to give it a new life on streaming. Coming to Peacock, along with an extended cut, I have a feeling this stunt spectacular film will be a perfect candidate for movie nights to come. Ryan Gosling stars as a semi-retired stuntman pulled back into the fold to work on his ex-girlfriend’s (Emily Blunt) first big director gig without her knowledge, and there’s also a mystery plot bubbling under the surface. With romance, action, and laughs, it’s quite a crowdpleaser. (Streaming August 30.)

    Noteworthy selections in bold.

    50 First Dates
    American Girl
    The Back-up Plan
    Battleship
    Bee Movie
    Beethoven (1992)
    Beethoven’s 2nd
    The Best Man
    The Best Man Holiday
    Blair Witch
    The Blair Witch Project
    Blue Valentine
    The Book of Eli
    Book of Shadows: The Blair Witch 2
    The Boss
    Buffy the Vampire Slayer
    Bulletproof
    The Cases of Mystery Lane
    Casino
    Clueless
    Couples Retreat
    Dear Evan Hansen
    Do the Right Thing
    Doom
    Exodus: Gods and Kings
    F9: The Fast Saga
    Faster
    Field of Dreams
    The Fighter
    For the Colored Girls
    For the Love of the Game
    The Great Outdoors
    The Heat
    The Help
    Hesher
    The Hulk
    Hustle & Flow
    Johnson Family Vacation
    Just Go With It
    K-9
    Karen Kingsbury’s the Bridge
    Karen Kingsbury’s the Bridge Part 2
    Kindergarten Cop
    King Richard
    Knocked Up
    Little Fockers
    Love at the Thanksgiving Day Parade
    Lucy
    Madea’s Big Happy Family
    Madea’s Witness Protection
    Major Payne
    Man Up
    MatchMaker Mysteries: A Fatal Romance
    MatchMaker Mysteries: A Killer Engagement
    MatchMaker Mysteries: The Art of the Kill
    Mean Girls
    Meet the Fockers
    Meet the Parents
    A Midnight Kiss
    Moneyball (2011)
    Moonrise Kingdom
    My Best Friend’s Girl
    Napa Ever After
    Old
    The Other Guys
    Over the Hedge
    The Proposal (2009)
    Push
    Puss in Boots
    R.I.P.D.
    Rally Road Racers
    Ride Along
    Royal New Year’s Eve
    Safe
    Self/Less
    Sense and Sensibility
    Shazam!
    Shrek
    Space Jam
    Then Came You
    Think Like a Man
    Think Like a Man Too
    This is 40
    To Her, With Love
    Unthinkably Good Things
    Waterworld
    The Wedding Veil
    The Wedding Veil Expectations
    The Wedding Veil Inspiration
    The Wedding Veil Journey
    The Wedding Veil Legacy
    The Wedding Veil Unveiled
    Wild Oats
    Zodiac

    Jazz Ramsey: A K-9 Mystery

    Junebug

    Deadly Waters With Captain Lee, season 1 — all episodes

    Mr. Throwback, season 1 — all episodes (Peacock Original)

    The Bikeriders (Peacock Exclusive)
    Renfield

    Marry Me
    My Dreams of You

    2 Fast 2 Furious
    Fast & Furious
    Fast & Furious 6
    The Fast and The Furious
    The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift
    Fast Five
    The Fast of the Furious
    Furious 7

    Abused by Mom: The Ruby Franke Scandal

    Bel-Air, season 3 premiere (Peacock Original)

    Polite Society

    A Costa Rican Wedding

    Love Island USA, season 6 reunion (Peacock Original)
    Homicide: Life on the Street, 7 seasons
    Homicide: The Movie

    Face to Face with Scott Peterson, premiere — all episodes (Peacock Original)

    The 365

    The Killer (Peacock Original)

    Engaged to be Murdered

    The Magic of Lemon Drops

    The Anonymous, season 1 premiere
    Days of Our Lives, season 60 premiere

    Girl on the Milk Carton, premiere

    Opening Ceremony for the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games

    Toby Keith: American Icon
    Here Comes The Irish (Peacock Original)
    Gary (Peacock Original)

    Book Club: Next Chapter
    The Fall Guy (Peacock Exclusive)
    The Fall Guy: The Extended Cut (Peacock Exclusive)

    All recommendations are made independently by our editors. If you subscribe to a service through our links, Vulture may earn an affiliate commission.

    Savannah Salazar

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  • The 30 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now

    The 30 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now

    Hit Man.
    Photo: Courtesy of Netflix

    This post is updated regularly as movies leave and enter Netflix. *New additions are indicated with an asterisk.

    With hundreds of films from around the world on the streaming giant that changed the game, how does one even know what to watch when they fire up their Netflix? Start here! We’ve gone through the many films available on the platform and pared down the selection to 30 must-see titles, including acclaimed dramas, action films, comedies, horror flicks, and even stuff for the whole family, with Netflix Originals peppered in throughout, alongside its licensed films. No algorithm nonsense here: Our picks represent the personal favorites of seasoned movie critics, and they’re updated every week and month to include or remove films that join or depart from the streaming service. This list represents the best of Netflix’s movie offerings, and it starts with a new rotating critic’s pick of the week.

    Year: 2024
    Runtime: 1h 55m
    Director: Richard Linklater

    Future superstar Glen Powell co-wrote and stars in this comedic gem that reminds one that movies can still be made for adults. With echoes of noir and the kind of sexy romantic dramedies that don’t get made much anymore, this is the story of an undercover cop named Gary (Powell) who talks a desperate young woman (Adria Arjona) out of having her husband murdered, setting in motion an unpredictable, funny, riveting series of events. This is one of the best films of 2024.

    Dark Waters.
    Photo: Mary Cybulski/Focus Features

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 2h 7m
    Director: Todd Haynes

    Dark Waters will make you angry. Mark Ruffalo stars in this true story from director Todd Haynes, known for more formally ambitious stuff but able to nail the old-fashioned outrage needed for this one. Based on a New York Times article, the movie details an investigation into the DuPont corporation’s poisoning of a small town with chemicals in the drinking water. Ruffalo is great, and so are Anne Hathaway, Tim Robbins, and especially the great Bill Camp.

    Devil in a Blue Dress.
    Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

    Year: 1995
    Runtime: 1h 41m
    Director: Carl Franklin

    Carl Franklin wrote and directed one of the most underrated Denzel Washington performances of all time in this 1995 adaptation of the novel of the same name by Walter Mosley. Washington plays Easy Rawlins, a World War II vet in 1948 who gets drawn into a mystery that classic noir filmmakers would have adored. Charming and riveting, the only crime here is that there wasn’t a whole franchise of films with Washington playing Easy.

    Glengarry Glen Ross.
    Photo: New Line Cinema

    Year: 1992
    Runtime: 1h 40m
    Director: James Foley

    For a long time, it felt like David Mamet’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1984 masterpiece was unfilmable, but Foley, working with the playwright as screenwriter, figured it out, assembling one of the best ensembles of the ‘90s to do so. Alec Baldwin notoriously steals his one scene, but the entire cast here is a stunner, especially Al Pacino (who was Oscar-nominated), Alan Arkin, and Jack Lemmon.

    Inside Man.
    Photo: Moviestore/Shutterstock

    Year: 2006
    Runtime: 2h 8m
    Director: Spike Lee

    Yes, Spike Lee once made a great action movie. The director of Do the Right Thing and Da 5 Bloods put his spin on the heist film with this great 2006 Denzel Washington vehicle. The regular collaborator plays an NYPD hostage negotiator, called in when a bank heist goes down on Wall Street. Tight and effective, this is just further evidence that Spike Lee can nail any kind of movie he chooses to make. This might be Lee’s most underrated movie. It hums.

    The Killer.
    Photo: Netflix

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 1h 59m
    Director: David Fincher

    Michael Fassbender gives his best performance in years as an icy hired assassin who struggles to hold things together when a job goes horribly wrong. It’s a movie about a self-proclaimed perfectionist who is constantly defying his own voiceover, a great film that’s alternately hysterical and thrilling. One of the best of 2023.

    The Killing Fields.
    Photo: Warner Bros./Everett Collection

    Year: 1984
    Runtime: 2h 21m
    Director: Roland Joffé

    The story of the Khmer Rouge and the genocidal atrocities in Cambodia in the ‘70s is detailed in the Oscar-winning The Killing Fields, a movie that’s sometimes hard to watch but worth the effort, especially as violence around the world has become such a vital talking point in 2024. Sam Waterston and Haing S. Ngor (who won an Oscar) star as journalists investigating the war crimes of the Khmer Rouge in this bleak but important film.

    May December.
    Photo: Rocket Science

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 1h 57m
    Director: Todd Haynes

    Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman star in the latest from Carol and Far from Heaven director Todd Haynes, a stunning character study of an actress who discovers that some people are impossible to figure out. Portman plays a star who tries to get under the skin of Moore’s character, a woman who raped a child when she was a teacher, and later married that young man. Charles Melton is phenomenal as the now-grown victim, stuck in perpetual adolescence.

    Moneyball.
    Photo: Columbia Pictures

    Year: 2011
    Runtime: 2h 13m
    Director: Bennett Miller

    One of the best baseball movies ever made was adapted from the 2003 book by Michael Lewis, which recounts the management of the 2002 season of the Oakland Athletics, and how they changed the way the game is run by bringing analytics into the mix. Brad Pitt gives one of his best performances as general manager Billy Beane, a man who knew he would have to find a new way to evaluate talent if the A’s were going to compete. This is a rich, smart, riveting movie that’s extra-interesting given what the Oakland franchise is going through in 2024.

    The Nest.
    Photo: IFC Films

    Year: 2020
    Runtime: 1h 47m
    Director: Sean Durkin

    A victim of the pandemic, this was one of the best films of 2020. Carrie Coon and Jude Law star as a married couple with two kids who move from New York City to London in the 1980s and watch as the divides in their union start to widen. A great character study amplified by Durkin’s sharp visual language, this is a fantastic domestic drama, and the best movie on this list that you probably haven’t seen.

    The Power of the Dog.
    Photo: KIRSTY GRIFFIN/NETFLIX

    Year: 2021
    Runtime: 2h 6m
    Director: Jane Campion

    The film that finally won an Oscar for Jane Campion for directing is one of the most acclaimed in the history of the streaming giant. Campion helmed this adaptation of the novel of the same name by Thomas Savage, the story of a vicious landowner (Benedict Cumberbatch) who torments the new wife (Kirsten Dunst) of his brother (Jesse Plemons). A drama that plays like a thriller, this gorgeously rendered period piece unpacks themes of toxic masculinity and manipulation in a way that makes it impossible to turn away.

    Traffic.
    Photo: USA Films/Everett Collection

    Year: 2000
    Runtime: 2h 27m
    Director: Steven Soderbergh

    Steven Soderbergh and Benicio del Toro won Oscars for an epic examination of the illegal drug trade at the turn of the century. One of the incredible craftsman’s best films, Traffic tackles no less than the entire structure of drugs in North America, intertwining stories of users, politicians, traffickers, and lawmen. Some of the movie feels a little dated, but the sheer force of the filmmaking will always be timeless.

    Wild Things.
    Photo: Columbia Pictures/Archive Photos/Getty Images

    Year: 1998
    Runtime: 1h 48m
    Director: John McNaughton

    A classic of the B-movie sleazy thriller era, this is actually a deeply underrated movie, a flick that works from old-fashioned noir and even Greek tragedy to tell the tale of two teenagers (Neve Campbell, Denise Richard) who get caught up in a scheme with a slimy teacher played perfectly by Matt Dillon. It’s remembered most for its sex factor, but this is a clever flick, a movie that plays with class and privilege in fascinating ways.

    1917.
    Photo: Universal Pictures

    Year: 2019
    Runtime: 1h 59m
    Director: Sam Mendes

    This Oscar winner doesn’t land on streaming services very often, so take this chance while you can. Sam Mendes directs a visceral recounting of a personal story told to him by his grandfather about his time in World War I, allowing the harrowing journey of a British soldier (George MacKay) to unfold in one unforgettable, unbroken shot.

    Baby Driver.
    Photo: Wilson Webb/IMDB

    Year: 2017
    Runtime: 1h 53m
    Director: Edgar Wright

    It’s a little harder to watch this movie now given the allegations against some of its cast members, but it’s still a remarkably well-made piece of action filmmaking, the kinetically unforgettable story of a getaway driver who knows all the best tunes. Ansel Elgort, Jamie Foxx, and Lily James may be the stars of this movie, but it’s Wright’s showmanship that really steals the spotlight.

    Everything Everywhere All at Once.
    Photo: A24

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 2h 19m
    Directors: The Daniels

    After a brief stint on Amazon Prime, this is the first Netflix drop for the 2023 Best Picture winner, a movie that defies categorization as it tells a story of alternate realities and butt plugs. A film that debuted at SXSW, this daring piece of work built an audience through 2022 until it won multiple Oscars, including Best Picture and Director. It’s like nothing else. Anywhere.

    Everything Everywhere All at Once

    Godzilla Minus One.
    Photo: Toho International

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 2h 5m
    Director: Takashi Yamazaki

    Netflix stunned people when they stealthily dropped this worldwide hit on their service on June 1st, making a movie that wasn’t even on VOD finally available at home. The winner of the Oscar for Best Visual Effects, Godzilla Minus One is a masterful blend of action and social commentary, considered by many to be among the best in this generations-spanning franchise.

    Kill Bill.
    Photo: Miramax/Everett Collection

    Year: 2003
    Runtime: 1h 50m
    Director: Quentin Tarantino

    We will still have to wait for the long-promised full cut of the two Kill Bill films into one epic movie (and the long-rumored third volume of this tale), but that shouldn’t stop you from revisiting two of Quentin Tarantino’s best films — both volumes are on Netflix now. In a catalog that includes a lot of great performances (and a few Oscar winners), one of QT’s best is Uma Thurman as The Bride, a legendary action character seeking vengeance on the man who betrayed her.

    The Matrix.
    Photo: Courtesy of the studio

    Year: 1999
    Runtime: 2h 16m
    Director: The Wachowskis

    Neo and the gang returned to HBO Max in late 2021 with The Matrix Resurrections, and the response was predictably divisive. You know what’s not divisive? The fact that the first movie still absolutely rules. The story of an average guy who learns that nothing is what it seems has influenced so much pop culture in the over-two decades since this movie was released. You can see Neo everywhere. (And you can watch the entire original trilogy on Netflix now.)

    Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
    Photo: 20th Century Fox

    Year: 2005
    Runtime: 2h
    Director: Doug Liman

    The fun new reboot series may be over on Prime, but Netflix has the one that started it all. The movie that gave the world Brangelina. Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt star as a seemingly ordinary suburban couple who discover that they both have secret identities as competing assassins. When they get assignments to kill each other, all Hell breaks loose.

    Photo: Tartan Films

    Year: 2003
    Runtime: 2h
    Director: Park Chan-wook

    It’s hard to explain to people how this movie moved through the film-loving world before Film Twitter was a thing. Recently restored for its 20th anniversary, Oldboy has now been dropped on Netflix again, and it’s lost none of its searing power. It’s the tale of a man who is kidnapped, and its genius is that it’s not a whodunit as much as a whydunit, forcing viewers and protagonists to wonder about a truly grisly motive until the final unforgettable act.

    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.
    Photo: Sony Pictures Animation

    Year: 2023
    Runtime: 2h 20m
    Director: Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson

    What a gift to Netflix subscribers for this to already be on the service, mere weeks after playing in theaters and landing on Blu-ray. This is how you do a big-budget blockbuster sequel, developing the themes of the first movie and setting up the stake for what now appears will be one of the best trilogies in superhero history. Packed with so much detail and creativity, it’s a film Netflix subscribers will want to watch over and over again. Do so while you still can.

    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    Knocked Up.
    Photo: Universal/Everett Collection

    Year: 2007
    Runtime: 2h 9m
    Director: Judd Apatow

    The movie’s gender politics seem shakier than when it came out, but Judd Apatow’s biggest hit still works because of the intelligence of its screenplay and commitment of its cast, especially Seth Rogen and Katherine Heigl. The story of a man forced to grow up when his one-night stand gets pregnant errs a bit too much on the side of the male view, but one can’t deny the pure laughs-per-minute ratio. It’s fun to contrast this with the more recent Long Shot to see how much Rogen has changed (and how much he really hasn’t).

    Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
    Photo: EMI Films/Cinema 5 Distributing

    Year: 1975
    Runtime: 1h 29m
    Director: Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones

    During a hiatus between the third and fourth seasons of Monty Python’s Family Circus, the gang of mega-talented comedians decided to make movie history. Inspired by the King Arthur legend, Holy Grail is a timeless comedy, the rare kind of film that will still be making people laugh hundreds of years from now. And while the Monty Python boys were already famous, this film took them to another level, cementing their place in movie history.

    Monty Python and the Holy Grail

    Pineapple Express.
    Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

    Year: 2008
    Runtime: 1h 52m
    Director: David Gordon Green

    Seth Rogen gives one of his best performances as Dale Denton, an average guy who just wants to get high. He visits his dealer (played perfectly by James Franco) on the wrong night as the pair cross paths with hitmen and a police officer on the wrong side of the law. This is an incredibly funny movie, and you don’t need to be high to love it.

    The Babadook.
    Photo: Causeway Films

    Year: 2014
    Runtime: 1h 33m
    Director: Jennifer Kent

    One of the best horror films of the 2010s has not been widely available for streaming subscribers so take the chance to watch it again while it’s on Netflix. Jennifer Kent’s directorial debut centers on a mother (Essie Davis) who struggles to raise her problem child alone after the death of her husband. Oh, and there’s also a real monster in the boy’s room.

    Gerald’s Game.
    Photo: Netflix

    Year: 2017
    Runtime: 1h 43m
    Director: Mike Flanagan

    Before he helmed The Haunting of Hill House, Mike Flanagan co-wrote and directed one of the best Netflix Original horror films in this adaptation of Stephen King’s 1992 novel of the same name. Carla Gugino is phenomenal as a woman who gets handcuffed to her bed by her toxic husband…and then he has a heart attack. As she tries to figure out how she will survive, she accesses the trauma of her past.

    Shrek.
    Photo: DreamWorks Pictures

    Year: 2001
    Runtime: 1h 30m
    Director: Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson

    It’s hard to believe that it’s almost been a quarter-century since the flatulent green ogre in the swamp changed family filmmaking. Think that’s an exaggeration? The referential, pop-culture playground of modern animation really starts with this massive hit, a movie that spawned three sequels and spin-offs. It’s held up well, largely thanks to a playful script and great voice work from Mike Myers and Eddie Murphy.

    Pinocchio.
    Photo: Netflix

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 1h 56m
    Director: Guillermo del Toro, Mark Gustafson

    The Oscar-winning director took his visionary skills to stop-motion animation with this instant classic, a retelling of the beloved fairy tale about the wooden boy who longed to be real. With spectacular voice work, this version reimagines Pinocchio during the period before World War II, allowing del Toro to explore his themes of innocence and violence again. It’s a deeply personal, beautiful film.

    Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio

    Wendell & Wild.
    Photo: Netflix

    Year: 2022
    Runtime: 1h 46m
    Director: Henry Selick

    The director of A Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline finally returned this year with this clever and twisted tale co-written by Oscar winner Jordan Peele. The comedian also co-stars as one of the title characters, the literal demons for a girl who blames herself for the death of her parents. Selick is a master of stop-motion animation and this project allows him to stretch his visual prowess in new, gross ways. It’s a new Halloween classic (that can be watched any time, of course!)

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    Brian Tallerico

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