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16 Shows Like 'Slow Horses' You Should Watch Next

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It's begin to feel like successful streaming shows are increasingly the exception, rather than the rule, and Slow Horses is something else again: a successful show with a more-than-consistent schedule. With five seasons since 2022, rather than the increasingly common "every few years or when we get to it" scheduling of other streaming shows, it's rather lovely to actually be able to remember the events of the previous series when the new one starts.

If this all sounds like damning with faint praise, it's also a smart, brilliantly entertaining show, with Gary Oldman as the slovenly, flatulent, once-brilliant spy Jackson Lamb now in charge of Slough House, the MI5 office for agents who aren't good enough to trust with important tasks, but who haven't really done anything worth getting fired for. Their very expendability puts them in the line of fire early and often, with ambitious spymaster Diana Taverner (Kristin Scott Thomas) finding the team alternately useful and a liability. The show's been renewed for at least two further seasons—the novel series by Mick Herron on which it's based runs to nine books so far, and so there's potential for even more.

Down Cemetery Road (2025 – )

This is perhaps the most obvious streamalike here, if only because the shows are both Apple TV productions and are both based on Mick Herron novels. This one is more spy-adjacent, however, starring Emma Thompson as hard-living, hard-drinking private investigator Zoë Boehm. She's hired by Ruth Wilson's Sarah Trafford, a married art restorer who nobody takes very seriously (including and especially her husband), even when she becomes invested in the fate of a young girl whose family is killed in a gas explosion (allegedly) down the street. The girl, whose parents were killed, disappears into the system and no one really seems to care until Sarah hires Zoë and her husband to look into it. Turns out both women are in way over their heads, as the missing girl points to a much broader conspiracy. The shows villains are a bit cartoonishly distracting, but Thompson and Wilson are brilliantly paired, and their performances are more than worth the price of admission. Stream Down Cemetery Road on Apple TV+.


The Agency (2024 – )

Michael Fassbender as stars here as "Martian," codename of Brandon Colby, a former undercover CIA agent just returned to London after six years in Sudan. He left behind a lover, Dr. Samia Zahir (Jodie Turner-Smith)—a relationship he wasn't terribly forthcoming about with his handlers. When Sami turns up in London as part of a diplomatic delegation, Martian is forced to choose between his job and his personal life, which becomes more complicated when it appears that she's involved in a broader scheme involving the Sudanese government, MI6, and an undercover agent in Belarus. It's all very twisty-turny in the best tradition of spy shows. Jeffrey Wright plays Martian's boss and mentor, Richard Gere is the CIA London Station Chief, and Downton Abbey's Hugh Bonneville is a shifty senior MI6 operative. Stream The Agency on Paramount+.


The Bureau (2015 – 2020)

In addition to, or instead of, The Agency, you can also catch Le Bureau des Légends, the French original on which it's based (they're similarly addictive, though many will prefer the original on principle). Same general premise: Mathieu Kassovitz stars as Guillaume Debailly, a spy just recently returned from a six year undercover mission in Damascus, Syria. Trying to re-adjust to his life, everything is thrown into turmoil when Nadia (Zineb Triki), the woman with whom he'd had a relationship, turns up in Paris. Stream The Bureau on Paramount+.


The Day of the Jackal (2024 – )

Cinematic in scope, this new adaptation of the Frederick Forsyth novel is buoyed by rather brilliant casting: Eddie Redmayne plays the Jackal, a cold and steely international assassin pursued by MI6 operative Bianca Pullman—she's played by Lashana Lynch, putting her experience as the new 007 in No Time to Die to good use. I'm not sure there's anything here we haven't seen in countless other spy thrillers (including, of course, the 1973 and 1997 film adaptations), but the performances and production values are top-notch, with each episode playing out like a tense mini-movie. Stream The Day of the Jackal on Peacock.


Monsieur Spade (2024)

An original drama from Scott Frank (The Queen's Gambit) and Tom Fontana (Homicide, Oz), Monsieur Spade finds Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade, of The Maltese Falcon fame, living a quiet life in retirement in the South of France. It's all going very well of the rumpled former detective—until six nuns are brutally murdered at a nearby convent, the same convent that's been home to Sam's ward for some time. Naturally, he finds his past has caught up with him, and is forced to surrender his idyllic life in order to help uncover the complex mystery that endangers his (very few) loved ones. Clive Owen is great as the rumpled, emphysemic detective, and the story feels like a fitting sequel to Hammett's novel. Stream Monsieur Spade on Prime Video and AMC+.


Killing Eve (2018 – 2022)

Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer star as the two halves that form one of television's great cat-and-mouse narratives, with Oh as Eve Polastri, a bored MI5 analyst who becomes obsessed with hunting down the brutal and notorious assassin known only as Villanelle. It starts as a professional compulsion before it becomes personal: Eve and Villanelle begin toying with each other, and it soon becomes clear that the fascination goes both ways. Stream Killing Eve on Prime Video, Paramount+, Britbox, Tubi, and Netflix.


The Night Manager (2016 – )

Coming, as it does, from John le Carré, the wellspring of many modern spy sagas, it's probably no surprise that The Night Manager (from a 1993 novel) was successful—though it certainly doesn't hurt to have a cast lead by Tom Hiddleston, Hugh Laurie, and Olivia Colman. Hiddleston is Jonathan Pine, working the night shift at a luxury hotel in Switzerland when he encounters an unexpected guest: arms dealer Richard Roper (Laurie). Former Army veteran Pine had previous dealings with Roper in Cairo, and the reluctant night manager is persuaded by Foreign Office head Angela Burr (Colman) to infiltrate the criminal's organization. A long-gestating second season is coming in 2026, to be followed by a third. Stream The Night Manager on Prime Video.


Deadloch (2023 – )

Slow Horses isn't a send-up of the spy genre, precisely, but it does enjoy taking the piss. The more overtly funny Deadloch is both an excellent crime procedural and an effective satire of the genre; the Australian import does about as well as setting up its central mystery as Broadchurch and its many (many) imitators. Kate Box stars as Dulcie Collins, fastidious senior sergeant of the police force in the fictional town of the title. When a body turns up dead on the beach, Dulcie is joined by Madeleine Sami's Eddie Redcliffe, a crude and generally obnoxious detective brought in to help solve the case. Unraveling the web of secrets and mysteries in the tiny Tasmanian town is appropriately addictive, with the added bonus of cop thriller tropes getting mercilessly mocked all the way. Stream Deadloch on Prime Video.


The Capture (2019 – )

There are several imports on this list; Peacock is just too new to have a large stable of homegrown shows, but they’ve managed a handful of impressive acquisitions. In this British series, a young, ambitious detective with the London police department is tasked with the investigation of a soldier who’d only recently been exonerated for a war crime, but who seems to have turned around and assaulted and then kidnapped his lawyer (sorry, his barrister). There’s plenty of police procedural drama and international intrigue, but the show has a slightly different target: it’s looking at the dangers of our reliance on CCTV surveillance, and on the dangers of a widespread assumption that cameras don’t lie. London is one of the most heavily surveilled cities in the world, so there’s a particularly British point of view here, but the issues will be recognizable to anyone who’s spent time in any major city. A third season is on the way. Stream The Capture on Peacock.


Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2024 – )

One-upping the Brad Pitt/Angelina Jolie movie on which it's based, Mr. & Mrs. Smith stars Donald Glover and Maya Erskine as a couple of spies tasked to pose as a married couple while coordinating (and sometimes competing against one another) on missions. Smartly, each episode takes on a standalone mission in a different location, while complicating the relationship between the two and gradually upping the stakes until the season finale, which sees them pitted against each other. The show has been renewed for season two, but it's been delayed, and it's unclear if Glover and Erskine will be returning, or if we'll be getting a new Mr. & Mrs. Stream Mr. & Mrs. Smith on Prime Video.


Archer (2009 – 2023)

H. Jon Benjamin, lovable schlub of Bob's Burgers, leads this show as Bob Belcher's polar opposite: a handsome spy who's also a deeply narcissistic womanizer with an endless capacity for alcohol. This is a full-on comedy, dealing with the exploits of a New York–based freelance intelligence agency led by Jessica Walter's hard-drinking Malory Archer—but it's such a smart send-up of James Bond-style shenanigans that it works as a spy series, as well, and sometimes the team's missions aren't all that much more silly than the plots of more overtly serious spy movies and shows. Addictive and irreverent, the show includes one of TV animation's best-ever voice casts, including Aisha Tyler, Amber Nash, and Judy Greer as the sociopathic heiress Cheryl Tunt. Stream Archer on Hulu and Tubi.


The Equalizer (2021 – 2025)

The Queen Latifah-led Equalizer reboots the 1980s series (and sidesteps the Denzel Washington movies) by spinning the premise in a slightly different direction: Latifah plays single mom Robyn McCall, an impossibly skilled former CIA operative who puts her talents to work for those in need. It splits the difference between crime and spy drama, with episodes involving close-to-home crime and others dealing with international espionage. While the original's vibe was more about the cops being handcuffed by things like "rules" and "giving perps their basic human dignity," this one is more about those who've been failed by systems that don't care about them—and who might benefit from the help of a woman who can beat just about anyone's ass. It's very satisfying watching Robyn and company spy and/or punch their way out of sticky situations to help the oppressed. Stream The Equalizer on Paramount+ and Tubi.


The Little Drummer Girl (2018)

Park Chan-wook (Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy) directs this series, based on the John le Carré novel, and brings an undeniably sexy period style. Florence Pugh is Charlie, a young actress recruited by Mossad spymaster Martin Kurtz (Michael Shannon) to infiltrate a group of Palestinian terrorists, even as she's being manipulated by an Israeli intelligence officer played by Alexander Skarsgård. Crucially, and as in the book that preceded it, the show offers nuanced characters on multiple sides of the conflict, raising serious questions about who the real villains are. Stream The Little Drummer Girl on AMC+ or buy it from Prime Video.


The Americans (2013 – 2018)

Set during the Cold War 1980s, and created by former CIA officer Joe Weisberg, Americans follows Soviet KGB intelligence agents Elizabeth (Keri Russell) and Philip Jennings (Matthew Rhys), living lives as an American couple in the DC metro area—and raising their American-born children. The critically acclaimed (also popular!) show makes much of its period setting and a central conflict that places two spies in the heart of suburban America, even as they're tasked with undermining the Reagan-era government under which their children will grow up. Stream The Americans on Disney+ and Hulu.


Homeland (2011 – 2020)

The focus shifts a bit after Homeland's first few seasons, the series begins with CIA case officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) coming to suspect that that decorated Marine Corps scout sniper Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), recently rescued from an al-Qaeda compound, has been turned and is planning a terrorist attack on the United States. Having been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, her superiors don't give Mathison's suspicions much credence, kicking off a cat-and-mouse/is-he-or-isn't he? game between the two. Both leads won Emmys for their performances, and the series took the Outstanding Drama prize in its first year. Stream Homeland on Hulu and Netflix.


Man on the Inside (2024 – )

Not a spy drama (at all), but a funny, and often very moving, comedy from the creator of The Good Place. Still: Undercover antics abound, so I'm going to say it counts as a bit of spy-adjacent counter-programming. Based very, very loosely on a true story, the show stars Ted Danson as Charles Nieuwendyk, a recent widower and retired professor who's started settling into a life of...not much, when, on a whim, he takes a temp job with a detective agency. They're investigating some missing jewelry at a local retirement home, and the dorky, awkward Charles makes for the perfect undercover resident, even as the job evokes memories of his late wife's Alzheimer's diagnosis. Ted Danson is in great form here, as is a supporting cast that, in the second season, includes real-life wife Mary Steenburgen. Stream Man on the Inside on Netflix.

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12 Shows Like 'Percy Jackson and the Olympians' You Should Watch Next

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Though the film series petered out after only a couple of movies, Rick Riordan's middle-grade Camp Half-Blood have been revived as a mega-popular Disney+ streaming series. The breathing room offered by a series format seems to have been the key to unlocking their potential as an adaptation, allowing for a more fully realized exploration of this atypical (at least on our side of Mount Olympus) coming-of-age story.

In its first season, the show found a good balance between fantasy action and teen drama while also having a ton of fun poking at the conventions of ancient myth. Season two is just out, and more is on the way, but it's likely to be a bit of a wait. In the meantime, here are 12 more shows that offer a similar mix of coming-of-age angst, action, and myths and legends.


Once Upon a Time (2011 – 2018)

Doing for fairy tales what Percy Jackson does for Greek mythology, this long-running prime time drama stars Jennifer Morrison as Emma Swan, a struggling bail bond agent who travels to the Maine town of Storybrooke (subtle!) to reconnect with the son who she gave up for adoption. In the process, she discovers that she’s the daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming, given up to protect her from the machinations of Regina (Lana Parrilla), the evil queen who is also responsible for the curse that dropped an endless number of fairy tale characters into this small town to live dreary normal lives without any memories of their past adventures (at least at first). Stream Once Upon a Time on Disney+ and Hulu.


His Dark Materials (2019 – 2022)

The tone is very different, but there are thematic and plot similarities aplenty in this appropriately dark fantasy, adapted from the beloved YA series by Philip Pullman and set in an alternate world in which human souls exist outside the body in the form of animal companions called daemons. Lyra Belacqua (Dafne Keen) is an orphaned girl living at Jordan College, Oxford who finds herself involved in a murder plot that brings her into the orbit of the powerful Magisterium, the world's overarching and oppressive religious authority—caught between her mother (Ruth Wilson), a powerful figure in the Magisterium, and her extremist heretic father (James McAvoy). From her steampunk-ish world, Lyra and her daemon Pan travel across a multiverse that includes our very own Earth. Stream His Dark Materials on HBO Max.


Fate: The Winx Saga (2021 – 2022)

An update to the Winx Club Nickelodeon animated series from back in the day, this show follows five fairies attending a prestigious boarding school for magical types. Not entirely unlike Percy Jackson, our lead fire fairy Bloom soon discovers that her parentage is more alien (literally) than she'd ever known. After a slow start, the show builds into an impressive coming-of-age story, and a rare fantasy series genuinely geared to its teenage target audience. It was cancelled after two seasons, but if you find yourself hooked, a series of graphic novels continues the story. Stream Fate: The Winx Saga on Netflix.


Blood of Zeus (2020 – 2025)

If "unacknowledged love children of gods" is your thing, well, Greek mythology has you covered. Set in an ancient Greek of myth, this adult-oriented animated series introduces Heron, an original character who nevertheless fits firmly in the tradition; here, he's a young miner, illegitimate and thus scorned by his fellow villagers. When demons attack, Heron discovers he's the secret son of Zeus, and that he'll need to help lead humanity defeat flesh-eating creatures born from the blood of fallen titans. Intimately plotted and with an increasingly epic scope, the show blends Greek myth with anime style to tell an addictive original story. Stream Blood of Zeus on Netflix.


Moving (2023 – )

The South Korean import became Disney/Hulu's most-watched K-drama, and did solid business globally (even if the English-language title doesn't suggest major thrills). As the series opens, we meet Kim Bong-seok (Lee Jung-ha), literally weighted down by his mom (as in: she gives him weights to fill his pockets) as he's heading off to school; we soon learn that it's because he can't quite control his ability to fly, and is prone to floating off unexpectedly. Athlete Jang Hui-soo (Go Youn-jung) heals instantly from injuries, while class president Lee Gang-hoon (Kim Do-hoon) is fast and incredibly strong. As it turns out, all of these kids' parents were bred and trained as part of a black ops program from which they've escaped, passing along their abilities to their kids—who have to stifle their powers, lest they draw the attention of spies hunting them down. Stream Moving on Disney+ and Hulu.


Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (2018 – 2020)

No Greek mythology here (well, we do get a gorgon or two), but Sabrina is also the story of a young woman coming to terms with her destiny at a special school for people with unique powers while having (dark) adventures. Rather than the daughter of a god, Sabrina is a literal child of Lucifer. Sabrina Spellman (Kiernan Shipka) is an old-school witch in a household that’s not at all unlike the Addams family: two witchy aunts (played by Miranda Otto and Lucy Davis) alongside her warlock cousin (Chance Perdomo) and her loyal familiar, Salem the cat, all of them living their witchy lives just out of view of the local normies. At the outset, Sabrina's forced to choose between signing her name in Satan’s book and becoming a full-fledged witch, or staying in high school with her human friends. Instead, she refuses to choose. Cannibalism, human sacrifice, and blood rituals result, as Sabrina is called upon to save her family, and the world, from dark forces. Stream Chilling Adventures of Sabrina on Netflix.


The Owl House (2020 – 2023)

In this animated series, teenager Luz Noceda (Sarah-Nicole Robles) finds herself trapped in the Demon Realm and there befriends a nonconformist witch Eda Clawthorne (Wendie Malick), who undertakes to teach the non-magical Luz everything she can about magic. Luz is determined to become a full-fledged witch despite her complete lack of prior experience, which is entirely refreshing given the volume of narratives about kids who just kinda discover that they're super-powered nepo babies. Busting open the doors for LGBTQ+ representation on the Disney Channel, this show is chock full of queer characters, and it remained both creatively offbeat and adorable throughout its now completed run. Stream The Own House on Disney+.


Legacies (2018 – 2022)

A (sorta) standalone spin-off from the rather extensive Vampire Diaries universe, Legacies follows Hope Mikaelson (Danielle Rose Russell), an orphan descended from bloodlines that include vampires, witches, and werewolves—meaning the Salvatore School for the Young and Gifted suits her perfectly. Supernatural beings of all sorts attend, and it serves as a secret haven and training ground for those with powers. It's a place where they can learn to control and/or conceal their abilities—sort of a cross between Wednesday's Nevermore Academy and Camp Half-Blood. The drama is a little more YA to Percy's middle-grade, and naturally, teen angst and romance abound. Stream Legacies on Netflix.


Spellbound (2023 – 2024)

Fifteen-year-old American Cece Parker Jones travels to Paris to join the prestigious dance school, only to discover that she's an actual witch from a family with a history of magic. She struggles to balance dance, magic, and her desire to be a normal teenager while dealing with the Mystics, natural enemies to Cece's type of witch. It's a solidly entertaining blend of teen drama, magical duels, and uniquely, ballet. (it's a standalone successor to the time travel-focused Find Me in Paris, which is also on Hulu). Stream Spellbound on Hulu.


American Born Chinese (2023)

Based on the seminal, semi-autobiographical 2006 graphic novel from Gene Luen Yang, this adaptation introduces Jin Wang (Ben Wang), a nerdy and rather ordinary son of Taiwanese immigrants. He befriends confident, generally loud and proud exchange student Wei-Chen (Jimmy Liu), who's embarrassing and inspiring in equal measure. It's soon revealed that Wei-Chen is no ordinary kid, but rather the son of legendary Chinese figure the Monkey King, and he's on Earth looking for the ordinary teenager he believes can help him stop an uprising against Heaven. Ke Huy Quan co-stars as the former child star of a deeply stereotypical '80s sitcom, and Michelle Yeoh appears as goddess of compassion Guanyin. It's disappointing that this only lasted one season, but it tells a fairly complete story nonetheless. Stream American Born Chinese on Disney+.


Lockwood & Co. (2023)

In an alternate modern Britain, ghosts are an everyday sight, which is not to say they aren't a nuisance—their touch is deadly. Technological progress has largely ground to a halt, while ghost-hunting agencies are common and, since adults lose the ability to sense ghosts directly, kids and teens are the ones on the front lines. Ruby Stokes (Bridgerton) plays Lucy Carlyle, an extremely sensitive listener who was cast aside when she was unfairly blamed for several deaths at her first job. With nowhere else to go, she joins up with the shady, unregulated Lockwood & Co., a two-orphan operation working outside the law. It's a solidly spooky teen drama with a fair bit of action and a beating heart, in and among all of the dead people. Stream Lockwood & Co. on Netflix.


Troy: Fall of a City (2018)

This one's definitely not for the young ones, but if you're a grown-up-type person looking for a bit more on Greek mythology, you could do worse than this BBC take on The Iliad (and other Trojan War narratives). Adapting events in and around Homer's work, we begin with the judgment of Paris (Louis Hunter), who's asked by Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite to award an apple to the one he favors most; the goddesses here appear as human-esque characters, marking a change from older takes that saw giants watching from Olympus, and more recent adaptations that do away with gods altogether. We then meet Helen (Bella Dayne), a Spartan citizen in a loveless marriage, before following the action to Troy. The show has a lush, bronze-age aesthetic and displays an impressive fidelity to its varied source material. Stream Troy: Fall of a City on Prime Video and Netflix.

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13 Shows Like 'The Boys' You Should Watch Next

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Based on the (really rather excellent) comic book series from Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson, Prime Video's satirical superhero romp The Boys picks up the genre deconstructionist torch passed by Alan Moore's Watchmen. The tone is less philosophical but even more cynical, suggesting that power doesn't just corrupt—it makes people absolute dicks.

It's set in a world where people with superpowers work for a powerful multinational corporation, with plenty of money and a powerful PR machine behind them to clean up their messes and excesses, and keep them in the public's good graces. When the girlfriend of Hughie Campbell (Jack Quaid) is gruesomely killed by an indifferent superhero, he's recruited by the titular group, which is determined to keep the "supes" in line by absolutely any means necessary. The show's rude and crude veneer masks a disturbing truth: If superpowered people really existed, this is probably how they would act.

While you wait for the premiere of the show's fifth and final season next year (and prepare for the forthcoming prequel Vought Rising), you can check out the spin-off Gen V, the animated miniseries Diabolical—and these 12 other shows that might scratch the same itch.

Creature Commandos (2024 – )

The old DCEU ("old" as in 2023) was definitely not shy about being edgy—consider that the plot of cinema's first Batman/Superman team-up turned on a urine explosion—but the new, James Gunn-lead iteration is willing to go harder. This animated show sees Amanda Waller (Viola Davis, reprising the role) assembling a black-ops team to protect a foreign nation from the Amazonian sorceress Circe. Waller can't be trusted with actual humans, so her team is made up entirely of literal monsters: The Bride (Indira Varma), Doctor Phosphorus (Alan Tudyk), Eric Frankenstein (David Harbour), and aquatic mutant Nina Mazursky (Zoë Chao), alongside Nazi-obsessed G.I. Robot and the rodent-like Weasel (both Sean Gunn). The cartoon is extremely violent with a dark sense of humor, but Gunn also brings an impressive amount of heart. Stream Creature Commandos on HBO Max.


Slow Horses (2022 – )

Go with me on this one. Based on the Mick Herron books, this series does for spies what The Boys does for superheroes. Headed by Gary Oldman's rude, farty Jackson Lamb, Slough House is a dumping ground for has-been (or never-were) MI5 agents, who either can't be trusted with important missions or, in Lamb's case, have pissed off far too many people. They're not super-spies, mostly being only mediocre at their jobs, but their expendability frequently puts them in the line of fire, and their general scrappiness and disregard for the rules has saved them more than once. Kristin Scott Thomas is Lamb's foil, a politically savvy spymaster in the main office. It's probably my favorite Apple TV+ show, and it earns extra points for coming out on a consistent schedule; it has been renewed through a seventh season. Stream Slow Horses on Apple TV+.


Doom Patrol (2019 – 2023)

Here's an uncharacteristically bold and indescribably freaky entry in the superhero canon, including characters like the non-binary Danny the Street (a literal street), paranormal investigators the Sex Men, Imaginary Jesus, and orgasm-generating body builder Flex Mentallo. But all the weirdness is grounded in excellent, frequently emotional character work from the entire cast, including Brendan Fraser, Matt Bomer, April Bowlby, Diane Guerrero, Joivan Wade, Michelle Gomez, and Timothy Dalton, all playing characters processing copious amounts of trauma and guilt while becoming something like superheroes in spite of themselves. It’s very queer and very sex-positive, making it a standout among the usually chaste, straight world of superheroes on TV. Stream Doom Patrol on HBO Max.


Deadloch (2023 – )

The cleverly titled Deadloch flips classic crime drama tropes on their heads. It's also an excellent mystery/crime procedural that simultaneously works as a genre send-up—not superhero stories, but dour "murder shows" like Broadchurch and its many imitators. The Australian import stars Kate Box stars as Dulcie Collins, the fastidious senior sergeant of the police force in the fictional town of the title. When a body turns up on the beach, Dulcie is joined by Madeleine Sami's Eddie Redcliffe, a crude, obnoxious detective brought in to help solve the case. The web of secrets and mysteries in the tiny Tasmanian town makes for an addictive narrative, with the added bonus that it's all frequently a hoot. Stream Deadloch on Prime Video.


Legends of Tomorrow (2016 – 2022)

After a rough first season spent trying to find its footing while shoehorning in characters from other CW shows, Legends quickly evolved by taking its core premise seriously. Assembled by a rogue time traveller, the Legends were initially brought together because, while they all had useful powers, none of their lives were destined to have an appreciable impact and, thus they could be pulled from their timelines with impunity. With that in mind, the show developed a sense of humor about its crew of time-traveling losers, and an even bigger heart. Caity Lotz leads the team as former assassin Sara Lance alongside her wife, future-clone Ava Sharpe (Jes Macallan); they're joined by a romance-novel-wiring pyromaniac, a stoner from an alternate timeline, British occult detective John Constantine, and a rotating crew of unlikely heroes. Stream Legends of Tomorrow on Netflix.


Watchmen (2019)

A standalone sequel to the groundbreaking Alan Moore, Dave Gibbons, and John Higgins graphic novel from the '80s, this series plays in the sandbox of that book (arguably the wellspring of all modern superhero deconstruction). In an alternate Tulsa, Oklahoma, in a world where super-powered vigilantes exist and have been outlawed, the series starts, dramatically, with a depiction of the real-life massacre and destruction of Tulsa's Black Wall Street by white residents in 1921. Regina King plays Angela Abar, a modern cop whose grandparents were killed during those attacks, an event that echoes throughout the series, which focuses on the fallout from the plot of the original comic, and the conspiracies that grew out of it. Stream Watchmen on HBO Max or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Riverdale (2017 – 2023)

Veering from superhero action to teen serial but keeping the thread of comic book deconstruction, Riverdale offers up a wild take on the once entirely wholesome Archie comics universe. The show veers wildly between genres, starting out by blending a coming-of-age story with a sexy whodunnit. The dour, elderly Miss Grundy of the comics is having an affair with Archie in the series opener, leading into a bloody murder mystery. Before long, we're folding in supernatural horror and alternate universes, made all the weirder by the way the show continues to take itself absolutely seriously in the face of absolutely bonkers plot twists. Steam Riverdale on Netflix or buy episodes from Prime Video.


Talamasca: The Secret Order (2025 – )

Who watches the watchers? That's the question central to The Boys (and its spiritual antecedent, Watchmen), and it's taken up by this surprisingly fun and zippy supernatural spy show. The third series in what AMC is calling its Immortal Universe of shows based on the works of Anne Rice, this one stars Nicholas Denton as Guy Anatole, a new recruit to the title organization of supernatural spies. William Fichtner plays a vampire making a play for control of the organization, and Downton Abbey's Elizabeth McGovern brings us yet another delightfully confusing accent as the leader of the Talamasca's New York motherhouse. Throughout the first season, we, like Guy, are entirely in the dark as to whether the Talamasca are the goodies or the baddies—but maybe there's no clear answer to that question. Stream Talamasca on AMC+.


Hit-Monkey (2021 – 2024)

A breath of fresh air among Marvel's million+ hours of TV and movie content, the animated Hit-Monkey eschews pat morality in favor of, well, monkey violence. Named only Monkey (Fred Tatasciore), the lead character is a particularly aggressive macaque forced from his tribe and mentored by Bryce (Jason Sudeikis), a dead assassin who has returned to the world as a helpful ghost. It's all impressively animated, and Ally Maki, Olivia Munn, George Takei, Leslie Jones, and Cristin Milioti are among the talented voice cast. Stream Hit-Monkey.


Murderbot (2025 – )

One of the smartest new shows of the year is also a dark comedy based on the Hugo-Award winning book series by Martha Wells. Alexander Skarsgård is the title's hilariously deadpan robot, a private "security construct" who's managed to hack its way through its own programming and gain free will—which it mostly wants to use to watch its favorite streaming shows. It can't just run off for fear of drawing attention, but the self-named Murderbot (it's being ironic, kinda) is content to do the bare minimum when it's assigned to a team of inexperienced and naive hippie researchers who don't see the need for a killer security robot—at least, not until they're enmeshed in a complicated capitalist plot in which they're all just cogs. Stream Murderbot on Apple TV+.


Harley Quinn (2019– )

Kaley Cuoco voices erstwhile Joker sidekick Harley Quinn in this very adult cartoon series starring the anti-hero who made her debut in Batman: The Animated Series way back in the day. Don’t expect traditional superheroics, nor the epic narrative swings of The Boys—this one's mostly a zany comedy that delivers solid queer representation alongside moments of personal growth for our (anti)heroine in the wake of her big breakup with Mister J. Stream Harley Quinn.


Peacemaker (2022 – 2025)

Peacemaker spins out of James Gunn's snarky 2021 entry The Suicide Squad, bridging the gap between the old DC movie universe with the current one. John Cena's title character, having survived the events of that film, is once again recruited by the United States government to join a team trying to stop mysterious butterfly creatures from taking over their human hosts. It's got the movie's bloody comic tone, but adds just enough dimension (and emotion) to the jingoistic superhero's story that it's easy to root for him, even as his self-awareness remains...limited. Stream Peacemaker.


Legion (2017 – 2019)

Though vaguely an X-Men spinoff, this show from Noah Hawley (Fargo, Alien: Earth) stands entirely on its own, and winds up feeling like nothing else on TV. Dan Stevens plays David Haller, diagnosed with schizophrenia and possessed of tremendous psychic abilities. In one of the many psychiatric hospitals to which he's been committed, he meets first the freewheeling Lenny (Aubrey Plaza) and then Syd (Rachel Keller), who can trade bodies with anyone she touches. Veering in and out of trippy astral planes and deeply damaged psyches, David soon comes to realize that he's not crazy—and also that he's probably not the hero of the story, even as he's caught between the authorities who'd like to use him for his power, and the Shadow King who's been haunting his mind since childhood. Stream Legion on Hulu.

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25 of the Best Hulu Original Series You Should Be Watching

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There’s a good chance you’re already familiar with Hulu’s buzziest shows— Only Murders in the Building, The Bear, and The Handmaid’s Tale among them. Those are all good shows—great, even!—but there are others that are just as good, and some that are even better.

Like Netflix and Max, Hulu has been developing its own original (and co-produced) shows since 2012, building a library that goes well beyond repackaged shows from the broadcast networks.

Chad Powers (2025 – )

One minute, Russ Holliday (series star and co-creator Glen Powell) is the biggest name in collegiate football, with a future that couldn't be brighter. The next? He's fumbled a touchdown and later shoved a fan into a cancer patient using a wheelchair. Not great! Eight years later, he's looking for a comeback and so, shades of Mrs. Doubtfire, he reinvents himself via prosthetics and a wig as the title's Chad Powers, a charmingly naive athlete who signs on to the football team at a tiny Georgia college (and who looks a little like Owen Wilson for some reason). It's a goofy premise, but Powell's performance sells it, and the show becomes more engaging as Russ/Chad is forced to ask himself whether this new persona is a con, or the person he'd like to be. Stream Chad Powers.


Alien: Earth (2025 – , renewed for a second season)

Noah Hawley's new spin on the Alien universe (it's technically a prequel, but who can keep track?) is primed to explore some of the key themes of the series (greed, hubris, and the general shittiness of capitalism) without feeling entirely beholden to what came before. Sydney Chandler plays Wendy, a dying girl whose consciousness is transferred into a synthetic human body as part of an experiment conducted by the mega-corporation Prodigy. When a space vessel from a competing company crashes on Earth under mysterious circumstances, she and others like her are sent to help out and snoop around. This is an Alien story, so a ship is pretty much only ever going to crash if there's a xenomorph involved, but that's only one of the many nasty secrets the so-called "Lost Boys" uncover. Stream Alien: Earth.


All's Fair (2025 – , renewed for a second season)

Ryan Murphy's new divorce-centric legal drama: worst show of the year? Of all time? The reviews of the show, and of lead Kim Kardashian's performance, have been absolutely savage, and a bit of an anti-All's Fair arms race seems to have developed among critics as to who can go the hardest: The Telegraph's Ed Power said it's "a crime against television," The Guardian's Lucy Mangan said of it: "I did not know it was still possible to make television this bad." AND YET! The show's debut was Hulu's best in three yers, and viewers have continued streaming—probably for the camp value. Good, bad, or gloriously bad, it's one of the year's most talked-about shows. Niecy Nash-Betts, Teyana Taylor, Sarah Paulson, Judith Light, and Glenn Close join Kim in the shenanigans. Stream All's Fair.


Cat's Eye (2025  – )

Sisters Hitomi, Rui, and Ai run the title's Cat’s Eye Café, a cute little neighborhood coffee house. By night, though? They're world-class art thieves: Hitomi is an incredible athlete, Rui a master strategist, and Ai, the youngest sister, builds the gadgets. There are plenty of complications, of course, but the biggest involves Detective Toshio: he's hot on the heels of the art thieves, but also Hitomi's boyfriend. Whoops! This is a stylish and energetic update to the very popular '80s manga and anime series, but no Cat's Eye background is required. Stream Cat's Eye.


Reasonable Doubt (2022 – )

Emayatzy Corinealdi (Middle of Nowhere, The Invitation) stars here as Jax Stewart, a former public defender now working at a high-powered LA firm. By turns she's a self-righteous do-gooder and deeply messy—she's not always the most likable character, and she often feels more strongly about her cases than about her actual clients. For all the show's juicy, soapy charms (it was created by Scandal writer Raamla Mohamed), that occasional indifference feels real. One of the show's major throughlines, particularly in the first season, involves Jax's separation from her husband and the reappearance in her life of a former client (Michael Ealy) who's just recently been released from prison, and with whom she still has heat. Stream Reasonable Doubt.


Paradise (2025 – , renewed for a second season)

Paradise reunites This is Us creator Dan Fogelman with one of that ensemble's stars, Sterling K. Brown, for something quite different. This high-concept science-fiction series looks more like a political thriller at the outset: We're in, apparently, an affluent suburban town in which everything looks fairly tidy—it's the home of Brown's Xavier Collins, a widower and Secret Service agent to a President who, we learn, was murdered (much of the show happens in flashback). Before the first episode is over, we learn that Collins is a suspect in the murder—and also that this quiet suburb is something far weirder. James Marsden plays the President, and he's received good reviews for the role alongside Brown. Fogelman and co. bring an emotional intensity and range to a concept that gets pretty wild. Stream Paradise.


The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox (2025)

In 2007, 19-year-old Amanda Knox arrived in Perugia, Italy, only to find herself arrested and accused of the murder of her roommate, Meredith Kercher, weeks later. The prosecution did a remarkable job at smearing Knox's name in the Italian press, such that she was was eventually convicted of murder despite an almost total lack of evidence, and the fact that the actual killer had already been tried and convicted. Grace Van Patten is pretty great in the lead, and the series does a phenomenal job of dramatizing the various missteps and fabrications that lead to a conviction. A bit of fascinating behind-the-scenes with this one: while the family of Meredith Kercher did not participate, Knox herself executive produces alongside Monica Lewinsky, another person who knows what it is to be tried in the media. Stream The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox.


Deli Boys (2025 – , renewed for a second season)

Pakistani-American journalist and producer Abdullah Saeed had been best known for his investigative reporting and Vice documentaries, many of them dealing with the impacts of cannabis laws. The experience lends a unique perspective to this comedy series that follows two brothers—hardworking Mir (Asif Ali) and hard partying Raj (Saagar Shaikh)—following the death of their wealthy father. In quick succession they learn that the bulk of their family's money comes not from the public-facing chain of delis, but from the illegal drug operation running behind the scenes. It's fast-paced and frequently very fun, feeling like nothing else on TV right now. Stream Deli Boys.


Mid-Century Modern (2025)

Hyped (if "hype" is the right word for what I'm about to describe) as an all-male Golden Girls update, Mid-Century Modern stars the great trio of Nathan Lane, Matt Bomer, and Nathan Lee Graham as three gay middle-aged friends who live together as a kind of found family. It comes from Max Mutchnick and David Kohan, creators of Will & Grace, and feels like a throwback in many ways—but we could do worse than to enjoy an old-fashioned sitcom with a talented cast (including the last performances by Linda Lavin, who seems to have been having a blast here). Stream Mid-Century Modern.


King of the Hill (2025 – )

There's something fundamentally disorienting about this particular revival: The comfort of cartoons is, typically, that the characters don't change. But King of the Hill picks up several years after the end of the original series (which ended in 2009) with Hank and Peggy returning from years working in oil in Saudi Arabia to find that their beloved Arlen has become, well—not unrecognizable, exactly, but much different than they'd prefer. Given the pace of change for all of us over the last few years, it's a relatable feeling, even if you've not gone anywhere. Hank and Peggy are as set in their ways as they ever were, but people who remember only that aspect of the characters are quickly reminded that the two have always been capable of acceptance and growth, confident in their beliefs without being jerks to those who live differently. The returning cast members are as good as ever and, most importantly, the show is as funny as it ever was. Stream King of the Hill.


Futurama (1999 – , renewed for a 14th season)

Picked up by Hulu in 2022, this is the third-ish time that Futurama has been revived, and, even if the show's very best days are behind it, there's still a fair bit of life in the current iteration. Many episodes exemplify the series' amiable goofiness, there are a few high-concept classics mixed in: “All the Way Down” sees Bender becoming attached to multiple overlapping simulated universes, "Otherwise" calls back to an emotional time loop, and "The Numberland Gap" sees the crew pulled into a world of pure mathematics. Stream Futurama.


Queenie (2024 – , renewal pending)

Based on Candice Carty-Williams' popular novel of the same name, Queenie stars Dionne Brown as a 25-year-old British-Jamaican journalist navigating a rough breakup that sends her into a self-destructive spiral. She's a deliberately and refreshingly messy character, navigating quarter-life at an intersection of multiple overlapping identities while struggling to grow. Carty-Williams serves as the showrunner, while Brown offers up a phenomenal lead performance. Stream Queenie.


Spellbound (2023 –, third season in production)

A successor to Find Me in Paris (also on Hulu), set at that show's same Paris Opera Ballet School, Spellbound introduces a new cast and, where the earlier series dealt with time travel, Spellbound is, as the title suggests, more about magic. Here, 15-year-old American Cece Parker Jones travels to Paris to join the prestigious dance school, only to discover that she's an actual witch with a family history of magic. Now, she struggles to balance dance, magic, and her desire to be a normal teenager while dealing with the Mystics, natural enemies to Cece's type of witch. It's a solid teen drama. Stream Spellbound.


The Bravest Knight (2019 – , two seasons)

A Canadian import that you can presumably still watch sans tariff, this was Hulu's first original show for kids, and it's delightful. T. R. Knight voices Cedric, a former pumpkin farmer married to Prince Andrew (Wilson Cruz), as he recounts stories of his journey to becoming the greatest knight to his daughter, Nia. There's action, but the lessons are about how being a hero is less about fighting and more about helping others and trying to make friends rather than jumping to conclusions about people. Stream The Bravest Knight.


Hit-Monkey (2021 – 2024)

A breath of fresh air among Marvel's million+ hours of TV and movie content, the animated Hit-Monkey eschews pat morality in favor of—well, monkey violence, mostly. Named only Monkey (Fred Tatasciore), the lead is a particularly aggressive macaque forced from his tribe who is mentored by Bryce (Jason Sudeikis), an assassin who's been killed and returns as a helpful ghost. Ally Maki, Olivia Munn, George Takei, Leslie Jones, and Cristin Milioti are among the talented voice cast. Stream Hit-Monkey.


Shōgun (2024 – , renewed for second and third seasons)

So successful was the first season of this miniseries, based on the 1975 James Clavell novel, that two further seasons were commissioned to continue the story. Set at the tail-end of Japan's Warring States period, the series sees ambitious English maritime pilot John Blackthorne (Cosmo Jarvis) finding himself shipwrecked in Japan and in the power of powerful warlord Lord Yoshii Toranaga (Hiroyuki Sanada)—each with something to offer the other. Reluctantly serving as translator between the two is Toda Mariko (Anna Sawai), highly loyal to Toranaga but with a complicated past. The main characters all have real-life analogues, so there's a verisimilitude to everything in this (mostly) Japanese-language drama alongside the Game of Thrones-esque intrigue and drama. Stream Shōgun.


PEN15 (2019 – 2021, two seasons)

It takes a minute to get used to the show’s conceit/gimmick: Thirty-something creators/comedians Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle play young teenagers among a cast of actual 13-ish-year-olds. It’s weird, but Erskine and Konkle are so good, and the show so committed to the bit, that after a while, you forget that it’s even a thing. What’s left is an effective and funny cringe comedy that accurately recreates the pain of seventh grade with a surprising amount of heart. Though cut short after only two seasons, the show’s still very much worth the trip, and ends on a relatively satisfying note. Stream PEN15.


High Fidelity (2020, one season)

It’s easy to compare it to the 2000 John Cusack movie, but keep in mind that this is actually the third major adaptation of Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity—so it’s perhaps less of a remake situation than a burgeoning, generational thing. Maybe idiosyncratic music nerds of the future will get their own version, where everyone, I don’t know, shares a Spotify login? Anyway, here, Zoë Kravitz takes on the gender-flipped lead role of Rob, a biracial, bisexual record-store owner with a checkered romantic history and a compulsive need to make ranked lists, both of music and her past relationships. It can occasionally be tough to buy into effortlessly cool Kravitz’s awkwardness as a character, but otherwise the show successfully updates the beats of the book, film, and musical. The surprise cancellation after one season was a small tragedy. Stream High Fidelity.


The Orville (2017 – , three seasons)

A pick-up from Fox, Seth MacFarlane's The Orville began life looking like a slightly scatological Star Trek parody—a show with a reverence for The Next Generation but also jizz jokes. It quickly grew into something more interesting, though, as McFarlane's obvious affection for Trek sent the show off in a more serious direction—certainly by the Hulu-produced third season, it's become one of the most ambitious sci-fi shows on the air. A fourth season is allegedly on the way, though I'll believe it when I see it. Stream The Orville.


Shrill (2019 – 2021, three seasons)

Based on Lindy West’s memoir Shrill: Notes from a Loud Woman, this comedy-drama stars SNL’s Aidy Bryant as Annie, the unapologetically fat heroine. Annie (and the show) make no bones about using the f-word, insisting there’s no stigma in being fat. Annie’s not interested in changing her body, though the first couple of episodes make clear that there’s plenty of other stuff the journalist is working on. Annie is an impressively funny and fully realized character, and there’s a lot of joy to be had in watching her overcome people’s perceptions of her over the course of the series. Stream Shrill.


Castle Rock (2018 – 2019, two seasons)

It’s hard to imagine a J.J. Abrams production based on various Stephen King’s books could possibly have escaped anyone’s attention, but the fact that this show was canceled after only two (excellent) seasons suggests it was a victim of Peak TV more than anything else. The promotion leaned too hard, I think, on King Easter eggs without ever making it clear that there were actual stories here, told with real dramatic heft—the first season’s “The Queen,” told from the unstable perspective of a character with worsening dementia, was one of the best things on television that year. The cast across the two seasons (each with a separate storyline) is stellar: André Holland, Bill Skarsgård, Sissy Spacek, Lizzy Caplan, to name but a few. There’s plenty of stuff for King fans to sink their teeth into, but it all works just fine on its own. Stream Castle Rock.


Into the Dark (2018 – 2021, two seasons)

This is sometimes marketed more like a collection of short-ish movies, but it’s technically an anthology series, so that’s what I'm going to call it—and there are small narrative threads that run through many of the episodes, for the benefit of attentive horror fans. There’s never been, and likely never will be, a horror anthology that isn’t a bit of a mixed bag, but that’s somehow a virtue here, in that different episodes represent different genres. Some are psychological thrillers, some are splatter, some social satire, and a couple of them star a giant furry named Pooka. They’re all entertaining and professionally produced, and the standout episodes are really great. Highlights include A Nasty Piece of Work (with the late Julian Sands hosting a nasty holiday work holiday party), immigration-themed Culture Shock, the aforementioned Pooka!, and the queer slasher Midnight Kiss. Stream Into the Dark.


Welcome to Chippendales (2022 – 2023, miniseries)

The true story of Indian immigrant Steve Banerjee (played here by Kumail Nanjiani) is wildly dramatic and juicy, but not always in the ways you might expect. Chronicling Banerjee’s rise to fortune as the founder of the soon-to-be-iconic male strip joint, the origins of Chippendales is a story in itself, but its creator’s fall is even more wild, propelling the miniseries into true crime territory: Less than a decade after the founding of his empire, Banerjee threw it away when he decided that the only way to grow the business involved murder. Murray Bartlett, Annaleigh Ashford, Juliette Lewis, and Dan Stevens also appear. Stream Welcome to Chippendales.


Harlots (2017 – 2019, three seasons)

Harlots takes the historical costume drama in unique directions, and deserved more attention than it got during its three-season run. Its women aren’t dressed in fancy dresses because they’re royalty, but because they’re high-end sex workers (if the title didn’t make clear) in Georgian England. When Margaret Wells moves her brothel to more upscale Soho, she comes into direct competition with her own former madam, who runs a high-end establishment in the same neighborhood. It’s got more sex and moves at a faster pace than more traditional period pieces, and the chess game between rival houses (as they both fight the male-dominated law enforcement establishment) makes for some juicy entertainment. Stream Harlots.


UnPrisoned (2023 – 2024, two seasons)

The always-great Kerry Washington plays Paige Alexander, a therapist who, naturally, has issues of her own that she needs to work on. Her life gets infinitely more complicated when her father Edwin (Delroy Lindo) moves in with her and her teenaged son following a long prison sentence. Her need for order is upended, while her father’s charismatic exterior conceals uncertainty about his new life. Creator Tracy McMillan based the comedy, in part, on her own experiences, and the result is a knowing but refreshingly upbeat take on life after prison. Stream UnPrisoned.

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30 of the Best Shows You Can Watch for Free on Tubi

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Unlike the other big streamers, Tubi only has a handful of original shows, most of them imports (its original movie selection is much larger). That's not to say it's a wasteland for TV addicts: The streamer might actually have too many shows, a vast and sometimes wild catalog that spans decades.

As the likes of Netflix and HBO Max have slimmed down their catalogues, Tubi is growing, offering a mix of established hits, underrated gems, and more obscure offerings. For the sheer breadth of material on offer, it has become the first place I look for anything outside the current zeitgeist—like the following 18 shows, an entirely non-comprehensive sampling of what Tubi has to offer, crossing genres and decades.

Dead Hot (2024)

Vivian Oparah and Bilal Hasna star in this Tubi original comedy (mostly) about a couple of roommates united by a mysterious disappearance. Hasna is Elliott, who came home five years ago to find his boyfriend Peter's finger in a pool of blood—and nothing else. The guy hasn't been seen since. Oparah is Jess, Peter's twin sister who hasn't given up on finding him, or at least finding out what happened to him. The tone here is all over the place, and it mostly works: it's a caper, a thriller, and a dark comedy, with elements of horror tossed in. If nothing else, it's energetic and pretty unique. Stream Dead Hot.


The Twilight Zone (1959 – 1964)

As we close out Rod Serling's centennial year, what better way to celebrate one of the 20th century's great dramatists than with his signature anthology series. Serling's science fiction, fantasy, and horror series offers up morality tales that spoke to his time, and ours—try watching "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" without finding it depressingly relevant. If you've mostly caught the show during seasonal marathons, you'll appreciate that there are many episodes that you've probably never seen, as they don't make the syndication rounds as often. Stream The Twilight Zone.


Maude (1972 – 1978)

Before they were Dorothy and Blanche, they were Maude and Vivian. Bea Arthur and Rue McClanahan star in this Norman Lear series offering a progressive take on Archie Bunker that's funny, acerbic, and pointed. The character became a TV icon in a show that skewers Maude's reflexive liberalism even as she's very much the heroine—and good luck finding shows even decades later that would tackle racism, homophobia, and abortion rights nearly so plainly. All that and "And Then There's Maude," one of the great sitcom theme songs. Stream Maude.


Demascus (2025)

Sci-fi comedy Demascus was a victim of that very stupid moment a couple of years ago when streamers and studios were shelving every other project for tax reasons. Demascus, originally an AMC project, was rescued by Tubi—and a good thing, too. From playwright Tearrance Arvelle Chisholm (Hooded: Or Being Black for Dummies), the show stars Okieriete Onaodowan as the title character, turning 33 and pursuing therapy for the first time in an alternate present. He's offered the chance to use DIRT (Digital Immersive Reality Therapy), in which he can visit and view other versions of himself, as long as he doesn't interfere. Which, of course, he does, with results that are sometimes poignant and sometimes funny. Hard to believe that this clever show almost wound up in the bin. Stream Demascus.


Ranma ½ (1989 – 2012)

Whether or not you've seen the Netflix update, you can still catch the original (all 161 gender-bending episodes!) over on Tubi. After falling into a cursed spring, martial arts prodigy Ranma Saotome finds that he turns into a girl when he gets wet, with hot water turning him back into a boy; not to be outdone, his dad turns into a panda. That same father pledged him in marriage years ago to one of the daughter of the Soun Tendo, owner of a prestigious dojo with no male heir. Akane Tendo is a fiery, skilled martial artist in her own right, and the love-hate relationship between the two unwilling partners is the focus of most of the comedy and the drama. Stream Ranma ½.


Babylon 5 (1993 – 1998, five seasons)

J. Michael Straczynski’s wildly ambitious sci-fi epic was way ahead of its time, with a planned (more or less) five season story arc set on the titular space station. Babylon 5 is a remote outpost that becomes the last best hope for peace in the face of conflicting human and alien agendas—even more so after an ancient threat is awakened. With increasingly complex storylines that expanded over its run, this was a stab at prestige TV before that was a thing, and it still holds up (dated CGI effects notwithstanding. Stream Babylon 5.


All in the Family (1971 – 1979)

The show that almost singlehandedly rewrote the rules for broadcast television, Norman Lear's long-running sitcom focused on a working-class family and dealt with gender roles, racism, war, religion, sexual orientation—issues that sitcoms had never bothered with before. Shows with more on their minds than chuckles would follow in its wake, but none were quite as fearless as this one. Stream All in the Family.


Upstairs, Downstairs (1971 – 1975)

The prestige drama without which there'd be no Downton Abbey, this series (which was a big major international hit back in the day) follows the wealthy Bellamy family and the servants and staff who keep things running at their prime London address. Through years of scandal, war, and economic uncertainty in the early decades of the 20th century, the show tracks the decline of the British aristocracy alongside the rise of a new middle class with all the twists and turns that make for a really great soap opera. Stream Upstairs, Downstairs.


Empire (2015 – 2020)

Hip hop mogul and Empire Entertainment CEO Lucious Lyon (Terrence Howard) is dying, having been diagnosed with ALS at a young age. He wasn't planning to hand off his company so early, but nevertheless finds himself preparing his three very different sons (Trai Byers, Jussie Smollett, and Bryshere Y. Gray) to take the keys to the kingdom—by pitting them against one other. Into this already Shakespearean setup steps Lucious' ex-wife Cookie (Taraji P. Henson), just released from prison and harboring her own plans for Lucious's empire. Stream Empire.


Girlfriends (2000 – 2008)

Tracee Ellis Ross (Black-ish) leads the comedy about the lives of four women from different backgrounds living in Los Angeles, blending slice-of-single-life comedy with some cutting social satire. It’s funny and smart, and deserves a lot bigger place in pop culture history given its impressive eight seasons (and nine-season spin-off, The Game). Ross, Jill Marie Jones, Golden Brooks, and Persia White just recently reunited for a commercial, and there's been scattered chatter about a possible revival. In the meantime... Stream Girlfriends.


This Is Us (2016 – 2022)

Dan Fogelman's primetime drama was one of the buzziest series' of the late aughts, following the lives of the Pearson family over several decades. Introducing us to siblings Randall, Kate, and Kevin (Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, and Justin Hartley) in the present, episodes then takes us back to their early lives and those of their parents, Jack (Milo Ventimiglia) and Rebecca (Mandy Moore). It's a big-hearted family show at its core, but the interwoven narratives allow for some mystery and a few shocks—think Yellowjackets with more hugging and crying. Stream This Is Us.


Boarders (2024 - , two seasons)

This British import feels a bit like a latter-day Skins, with a talented cast of young stars-in-waiting (including leads Josh Tedeku and Jodie Campbell) and a scholastic setting. At the (fictional) prestigious boarding school St. Gilbert’s, five Black teens are newly attending, having earned scholarships, but their integration into the existing cliques is less than smooth. The blend of coming-of-age drama with a willingness to take the piss when it comes to the whole rich private school thing makes this Tubi original a good time. Stream Boarders.


Archer (2017 – 2023)

H. Jon Benjamin, lovable schlub of Bob's Burgers, leads this show as Bob Belcher's polar opposite: a handsome spy who's also a deeply narcissistic womanizer with and endless capacity for alcohol. The addictive and irreverent satire includes one of TV animation's best-ever voice casts, including Jessica Walter, Aisha Tyler, Amber Nash, and Judy Greer as the sociopathic heiress Cheryl Tunt. Stream Archer.


Murder, She Wrote (1984 – 1996)

Once a week for 12 seasons (and a handful of spin-off movies), crime novelist Jessica Fletcher would employ her charm, wit, and general nosiness toward solving a murder that she'd stumbled into (no one questions why this particular woman just happens to be on the scene for hundreds of murders, and I'd suggest you don't either). Angela Lansbury is iconic as one of TV's greatest detectives, and the celebrity guest stars make for fun star-spotting—even if some of the faces are a tad less recognizable in 2025. Stream Murder, She Wrote.


The Equalizer (2021 – 2025)

The Queen Latifah-led Equalizer reboots the 1980s series (and sidesteps the Denzel Washington movies) by spinning the premise in a slightly different direction: Latifah plays single-mom Robyn McCall, an impossibly skilled former CIA operative who puts her talents to work for those in need. While the original's vibe was more about the cops being handcuffed by things like "rules" and "giving perps their basic human dignity," this one is more about those who've been failed by systems that don't care about them—and who might benefit from the help of a woman who can beat just about anyone's ass. It's very satisfying watching Robyn and company spy and/or punch their way out of sticky situations to help the oppressed. Stream The Equalizer.


Kitchen Nightmares (2007 – 2014)

Your restaurant on the rocks? Gordon Ramsey will whip the place into shape, usually with yelling. He's often a bit much, and his staggering self-regard is alternately deeply off-putting and hypnotic—but of such things are great TV reality shows forged. Stream Kitchen Nightmares.


Big Mood (2024 – , renewed for a second season)

Another UK import and Tubi original (at least stateside), Big Mood stars Nicola Coughlan (Bridgerton) and Lydia West (It's a Sin) as a couple of besties in East London, living their best millennial 30-something lives. Well, kind of: Maggie's dealing with bipolar disorder, and unclear on whether she wants to continue with her medication as she sets out to write a play, while Lydia is doing her very best running a tanking dive bar inherited from her father. It's both a cute dramedy and an impressively frank exploration of the challenges of living with mental illness. Stream Big Mood.


Community (2009 – 2015)

Dan Harmon’s influential series didn’t do huge numbers during its initial run on NBC, but has had an impressive afterlife. Led by Joel McHale, with the noteworthy presence of Chevy Chase in the earlier seasons, pretty much everyone in the show’s cast (including Yvette Nicole Brown, Danny Pudi, Donald Glover, Alison Brie, and Ken Jeong) has become a star. Canceled after six seasons, the show’s getting a movie wrap-up—allegedly. Someday. You should still have plenty of time to catch up on the clever original. Stream Community.


Murdoch Mysteries (2008 – , )

Granted, Tubi currently only has the first eight seasons of this beloved Canadian crime drama, but that should keep you busy for a while, eh? Kicking off in 1895, the show follows Detective William Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) of the Toronto Constabulary and his team solve Upper Canada's most alarming crimes. The chemistry between the leads is a plus, as is the show's whimsical attitude toward historical accuracy, throwing in real-life figures and innovations into a mix that just as readily includes technology that might as well be steampunk. Stream Murdoch Mysteries.


Space: 1999 (1975 – 1977)

Kicking off with the, OK, fairly implausible scenario of the moon breaking free of Earth's orbit, Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's Space: 1999 quickly develops into a uniquely introspective bit of 1970's sci-fi, with Martin Landau and Barbara Bain as leaders of the moon base that survives on the surface. There's plenty of weird sci-fi and a fair bit of action, but also some metaphysical ideas in mind: We're all alone in a deeply hostile universe, the show suggests, so all the more reason for us to stick together. Stream Space: 1999.


Homicide: Life on the Street (1993 – 1999)

One of TV's best (and most critically acclaimed) police procedurals was constantly on the verge of cancellation while it was on, and then was unavailable to stream for years. Based on a nonfiction book by then-journalist David Simon (The Wire), Homicide felt more real (and a bit more cynical) than just about any cop show up to that point. The show made Andre Braugher a star, and birthed breakout character John Munch (Richard Belzer), a character who'd go on to appear on Law & Order, The X-Files, The Wire, and many other shows. Stream Homicide.


Vicious (2013 – 2016, two seasons)

The old-school sitcom formula has never been executed quite this bitchily, with the inspired pairing of Ian McKellen and Derek Jacobi as Freddie Thornhill and Stuart Bixby, a couple of nearly 50 years who’ve developed a love-hate relationship. This cast, which includes Frances de la Tour and Game of Thrones’ Ian Rheon, is unbeatable, and the one-liners are hilariously nasty. Stream Vicious.


The Haves and the Have Nots (2013 – 2021, eight seasons)

Tyler Perry's old-school primetime soap was the show that practically built OWN; it was the then-new network's first scripted show, and an immediate breakout. It follows three families: The wealthy Harringtons and the Cryers are wealthy movers in Atlanta, Georgia, while the Young family is overseen by single mom Hanna, who's both a maid for the Cryers and confidante to the family matriarch. There's juicy tension galore between the three families, in no small part because of class differences, but also because they're all equally screwed. Stream The Haves and the Have Nots.


Broadchurch (2013 – 2017)

Creator Chris Chibnall's dark crime drama didn't invent its particular sub-genre (whatever you call the one where two troubled homicide detectives butt heads in a gloomy town), but it did popularize it to the point that we've been inundated with countless imitators. With the great pairing of Olivia Colman and David Tennant (joined by yet another Doctor Who Doctor, Jodie Whittaker), Broadchurch still stands alongside the best of its kind. Stream Broadchurch.


Haven (2010 – 2015)

Tubi is a haven for small gems like this one, a five-season Stephen King adaptation originally produced by SyFy. Emily Rose stars as Audrey Parker, and FBI Special Agent sent to the small town of Haven, Maine on a routine case who gets drawn into “The Troubles," a series of harmful supernatural events that have recurred throughout the town’s history. A supernatural-case-of-the-week format gives way to a bigger mystery when Audrey comes to learn that this isn’t her first time in Haven, nor the first time she’s encountered the Troubles. Stream Haven.


Scandal (2012 – 2018, seven seasons)

Shonda Rhimes was already a powerhouse producer and screenwriter with several successful seasons of Grey's Anatomy under her belt when Scandal debuted, but its blend of political thrills and sexy, soapy drama is what solidified her brand, and her spot atop of the modern TV landscape. Kerry Washington stars as Olivia Pope, head of the DC-based crisis management firm Olivia Pope & Associates (OPA), who is the person to call when you've got a PR disaster to fix. If you want to get a sense of the stakes involved, consider that Tony Goldwyn costars as Fitzgerald Grant III, President of the United States, and also Olivia's lover. Stream Scandal.


Highlander (1992 – 1998, six seasons)

An classic of '90s-era syndicated action/adventure, Highlander stars Adrian Paul as the title hero, taking over from Christopher Lambert in the film series. Duncan MacLeod is an immortal warrior living in the modern(-ish) day, hunted by others of his own kind, whose goal is singular: to chop off Duncan's head in order to steal his power. Episodes typically involve some sort of flashback to an earlier era in Duncan's life where we first encounter the threat he'll face in the modern day. There's at least one good sword fight in every episode, and I can't imagine what more you'd want out of a series. Bonus: It carries over the films' kick-ass Queen theme song. Stream Highlander.


Z Nation (2014 - 2019)

The Walking Dead made prestige television out of the zombie apocalypse, but this SyFy channel original is all a campy, gory good time. Things kick off with a soldier who’s been tasked with transporting a package across country. The package in question is actually a human being, the survivor of a zombie bite who might be able to help create a vaccine (take note, The Last of Us fans). This one comes from the schlock-masters at The Asylum, purveyors of infamous B-movies like Sharknado, which should tell you all you need to know about the tone. Stream Z Nation.


Columbo (1968 – 2003, 16 seasons)

Peter Falk's sublimely rumpled detective practically invented the style that Peacock's Poker Face has recently revived: a crime (usually a murder) is committed, the viewers know whodunnit, and Columbo has to solve it. Early on in any given episode, we get to watch the crime being committed, though we don't always know the motive. The challenge isn't to figure out the culprit, but to discover exactly how TV's greatest detective is going to solve the case. Stream Columbo.


The French Chef with Julia Child (1963 – 1973)

You may think that this public television show from the '60s/'70s has nothing to teach you, but I'm here to tell you that you're wrong. Julia's never yet been matched in offering simple, but thorough explanations for recipes both basic and elaborate. Having learned to cook only later in life, Julia clearly understands where amateur cooks are likely to go wrong, and she's entirely comfortable making mistakes. When she, for example, flips an a potato dish that winds up all over the stove, she simply chuckles at herself and moves on—it's the kind of moment that wouldn't wind up in a modern cooking show, but that instills a bit of extra confidence in a beginning chef. Stream The French Chef.

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The 30 Best Original Shows Streaming on HBO Max Right Now

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HBO Max has always benefited from being the home for HBO hits like Game of Thrones, The White Lotus, and The Last of Us, but has also produced some quality original programming of its own.

Given the volume of streaming content out there, and the number of shows Max and HBO have already produced, together and separately, there are some great choices that might have flown under your radar. In our current streaming era, in which good shows aren’t just canceled but erased from existence (farewell, Raised by Wolves), it never hurts to take a moment to consider the slightly less talked-about shows that are equally worthy of your attention. In that spirit, I'm suggesting some popular hits and a few shows that might have flown under your radar.


It: Welcome to Derry (2025 – , )

Who doesn't love a clown? Set in the 1960s, this It prequel fives into the backstory of Derry and Pennywise the clown through the eyes of some kids and grownups who met him during a previous visit to the town. I'm not entirely convinced that we need this backstory, but, rather than the obvious clownery, we open on a horrifying birth sequence and a lot of gory, nightmarish imagery. By the end of the first episode, it's clear that even the most adorable children aren't safe, and this is a show that will, if nothing else, go hard. And that's before Bill Skarsgård's memorably creepy Pennywise even shows up. Stream It: Welcome to Derry.


Task (2025 – , )

Hey! Look at that—a streaming show actually getting a relatively quick second-season renewal. Must be that Mark Ruffalo magic, or perhaps it's the touch of Brad Ingelsby, creator of Mare of Easttown, who's operating in a similar detective-drama vein here. Ruffalo's Tom Brandis is half the story here: a former Catholic priest and current FBI agent with a troubled home life who's assigned to investigate the robberies of a series of drug trap-houses run by a local gang. Robbie Prendergrast (Tom Pelphrey) is our robber, using his job as a refuse collector to scope out the houses and collect some relatively easy cash. The show smartly gives equal weight to both complicated characters before setting them on a slow-burn, but inevitable, collision course. Stream Task.


I Love LA (2025 – , )

Will wonders never cease? With its first season underway, the show received a renewal—the second of three just recently, so someone must be in a good mood over at HBO HQ. Rachel Sennott (Shiva Baby, Bottoms) created, produces, writes, and stars in this take on twenty-something existence, part of a venerable TV comedic tradition that must, of necessity, receive an update every decade or so. Sennott plays Maia, 27, and desperate for promotion in her job as an assistant talent manager. She's joined in town by Tallulah (Odessa A’zion), a former New York City influencer fallen on messy times—alternately very fun and exhausting to a circle of friends that includes West Hollywood stylist Charlie (Jordan Firstman) and Maia's teacher boyfriend, Dylan (Josh Hutcherson). It's early days here, but the show looks great and, though tolerance for a coming-of-age comedy about twenty-ish-year-olds in LA will vary, it's smartly written and impressively acted. Stream I Love LA.


The Chair Company (2025 – , )

Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin followed up their sketch comedy Netflix show, I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, with this... cringe comedy/thriller? Somehow this surreal, genre-defying caper broke HBO Max records, and deservedly so. Robinson plays Ron Trosper, a middle manager in charge of building a new shopping mall. A collapsing chair during a public presentation sends Ron on a quest to uncover a massive conspiracy—he's convinced that the broken chair is just the first rung in a chain of sabotage. He's having a mid-life crisis and the show sends us along with him on a darkly funny, sometimes subtly horrific, journey down a rabbit hole that still, nonetheless, feels like a reflection of a modern American work culture that's no less nuts than a Ron's conspiracy of chairs. Stream The Chair Company.


Creature Commandos (2024 – , renewed for a second season)

A pretty wild choice to kick off the current iteration of the DCU, the animated show sees Amanda Waller (Viola Davis, reprising the role) assembling a black ops team to protect a foreign nation from the Amazonian sorceress Circe. Waller can't be trusted with people, so her team is made up entirely of literal monsters: The Bride (Indira Varma), Doctor Phosphorus (Alan Tudyk), Eric Frankenstein (David Harbour), and aquatic mutant Nina Mazursky (Zoë Chao), along Nazi-obsessed G.I. Robot and the rodent-like Weasel (Sean Gunn). The cartoon is pretty violent with an extremely dark sense of humor, but James Gunn also brings an impressive amount of heart to the show, making it very hard not to care about these very unlikeable characters. Stream Creature Commandos.


Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake (2023 – , )

Both Adventure Time and its follow-up miniseries, Distant Lands, followed on the adventures of Finn the Human and Jake the Dog. This show introduces their multiversal counterparts. In a universe without magic, Fionna and her cat live boring lives by day, but by night dream of adventures in a strange world. Meanwhile, the Ice King is struggling to exist without his powers when he discovers that Fionna and Cake, who he believed to be purely products of his fan fiction, are in fact real, and that they need help to save their own universe. The series hits all those sweet Adventure Time notes while advancing both characters and lore. Stream Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake.


Dune: Prophecy (2024 – , renewed for a second season)

No matter how good the movies have been, a Dune prequel tie-in series was, most likely, going to be pretty inessential. But this one's been a surprise: a juicy space soap opera set 10,000 years before the Denis Villeneuve films, a time frame that puts it well out of the way of later events and lets it stand alone. There are a lot of threads here, but the series focuses on Valya and Tula Harkonnen (Emily Watson and Tula Williams), struggling to build and maintain the Sisterhood that we'll later come to know as the Bene Gesserit in the face of an unstable political order. The ruling dynasty has a new weapon in Desmond Hart (Travis Fimmel), a manipulative former soldier who seems immune to the persuasive abilities of the Sisters, thus threatening their places at the Emperor's side. Especially given that we're on HBO Max, it's not entirely unfair to suggest that the vibe (full of intrigue, shady dealings, and violent plot-twists) is a bit that of a star-spanning Game of Thrones. Stream Dune: Prophecy.


It's Florida, Man (2024 – , renewed for a second season)

This comedy anthology, based on truly true Florida stories, kicks-off with the tale of a man (played by Sam Richardson) in need of money placing a Craigslist ad, offering to do anything within reason for cash. The response? He'll get $4,000 if a guy gets to cut off and eat a couple of his toes. The show includes testimonials from actual people involved in these events, as well as famous actors and comedians (Anna Faris, Ego Nwodim, Mary Elizabeth Ellis, etc.) performing in recreations (think: Drunk History). Horrifying, but very funny, particularly if you don't live there. Stream It's Florida, Man.


And Just Like That... (2021 – 2025)

We loved it and we hated it, sometimes all at once, but this weird, messy, very occasionally profound series won't soon be forgotten—the series finale, wrapping up decades of Sex and the City storylines, generated tremendous chatter and plenty of online arguing. What the series did inarguably right was to present these women, now in their 50s, as being every bit as complex and alive as they were a quarter of a century ago. As for the rest of it? Sporadic highs and baffling lows, along with a seemingly steadfast commitment to tossing in awkward and unlikeable characters. It could have been great, but it's something almost as good: never boring. Stream And Just like That...


Duster (2025)

J. J. Abrams is back, and Hollywood's preeminent excavator of faded genres (for better and worse) is taking on the hard-driving (literally) 1970s, with Josh Holloway (Lost, Yellowstone) starring as Jim Ellis, a getaway driver with a sweet cherry-red Plymouth. He's becoming increasingly disenchanted with his crime-syndicate boss, Ezra Saxton (Keith David), especially when he's tasked to transport a just-harvested human heart and then asked to then help with the surgery. Into his life walks Nina Hayes (Rachel Hilson), the FBI's first Black woman agent (this is 1972, after all) who enlists Ellis in her plan to bring down Saxton. It's fast-paced and (mostly) fun, with immaculate period vibes. The buzzy show was canceled after its first season, but that's hardly an indicator of lack of quality these days. Stream Duster.


The Pitt (2025 –, second season coming January 2026)

E.R.'s Noah Wyle is back in scrubs as Dr. Michael "Robby" Rabinavitch, senior attending at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital’s emergency room. Robby’s mentor died during the height of COVID-19, and he’s only just recovering from his traumatic experiences. It's gonna be a long day, though: Each episode represents a single hour of a tumultuous 15-hour shift, peppered by tragedies including a mass shooting. It feels like medical dramas are a dime a dozen, but this one is quite a bit more interesting, and a lot buzzier, than most. Stream The Pitt.


When No One Sees Us (2025 –)

A distinctive police thriller imported from Spain, When No One Sees Us stars Mariela Garriga (Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning) as a Cuban-American special agent of the U.S. Army, and Maribel Verdú (Pan’s Labyrinth) as a Spanish Civil Guard sergeant, both investigating an apparent death by violent suicide on an air base during Holy Week. It's a twisty-turny mystery, but the performances and the emphasis on character over plot make it a standout. No word yet on whether or not we'll get another season. Stream When No One Sees Us.


Industry (2020 – , renewed for a fourth season)

This British co-production debuted somewhat quietly back in 2020, getting good reviews but not much in the way of buzz. Perhaps because it was a different era (meaning: barely five years ago), HBO brought the show back, giving it time to grow until the third season premiere was up by almost 90% in viewership over the series debut, and earned a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score. (Wild, isn't it, what happens if you actually give viewers time to discover a show? Surely a fluke with no discernible lessons for networks and streamers.) The show, created by two actual former investment bankers, chronicles the cutthroat world of the fictional Pierpoint & Co in which, at the series' outset, a group of young graduates are made to compete for a vanishingly small number of permanent positions. There are juicy soap-opera vibes, but the attention to detail when it comes to the world of high finance gives the show a feeling that the stakes are very real when it comes to the lives, and mental health, of our leads. Stream Industry.


Doom Patrol (2019 – 2023, four seasons)

Max’s early DC show was originally ported from the now-defunct DC Universe streamer (past and future episodes are now Max-exclusive), a largely forgotten effort. Thank goodness it survived; it was an uncharacteristically bold and freaky entry in the superhero canon. Nearly indescribably weird, the show includes characters like the non-binary Danny the Street (a literal street), paranormal investigators the Sex Men, Imaginary Jesus, and orgasm-generating body builder Flex Mentallo—while also grounded in some excellent, frequently emotional character work from the entire cast, including Brendan Fraser, Matt Bomer, Michelle Gomez, and Timothy Dalton. It’s also very queer and sex-positive, making it a standout among the usually chaste and straight world of superhero cinema. Stream Doom Patrol.


Hacks (2021 – , renewed for a fifth season)

After getting canceled over a tweet, 25-year-old writer Ava (Hannah Einbinder) struggles to get her career back in order, reluctantly taking a job for Deborah Vance (Jean Smart)—a comedy trailblazer who remains popular with an older Vegas crown, but whose career is largely on autopilot. They're an entirely mismatched pair, but their chemistry is ultimately explosive, with Jean Smart doing some of the best work of her incredible career as the often deeply unlikeable Vance, and Einbinder more than holding her own in return. It's funny, bitchy, and surprisingly moving when it wants to be. Stream Hacks.


The Flight Attendant (2020 – 2022, two seasons)

Kaley Cuoco plays hard-living (i.e. alcoholic) flight attendant Cassie Bowden, who, in the first episode, wakes up in a Bangkok hotel room with no memory of the night before. Which could be a good thing or a bad thing, given that she's sharing a bed with a dead passenger from her last flight. Afraid to call the police, she tries, on her own, to piece together the increasingly convoluted memories of that last night. Impressively twisty-turny, but also with a hallucinogenic sense of fun, it's a unique show that earned several Emmy nominations, including for a great Cuoco. Despite generating plenty of buzz and seemingly good numbers, it was canceled after two seasons—which will become something of a theme with Max. Stream The Flight Attendant.


The Sex Lives of College Girls (2021 – 2025, three seasons)

Kimberly (Pauline Chalamet) is an endlessly naïve scholarship student; Bela (Amrit Kaur), is an aspiring comedy writer on the make for the hottest guys; Whitney (Alyah Chanelle Scott) is an overachieving athlete and senator’s daughter; Leighton (Reneé Rapp) is a closeted sorority girl. They're randomly assigned to room together as freshmen at the fictional Essex College in Vermont. Created by Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble, the comedy-drama isn't nearly as salacious as its title suggests: There's sex, for sure, but like Sex and the City before it, the funny and queer-friendly show is more about female friendship. Stream The Sex Lives of College Girls.


Jellystone! (2021 – 2025)

The Hanna-Barbera cartoon pantheon has been largely dormant in recent decades, but this is a fun revisit, with the titular town serving as home to dozens of characters from back in the day, led by Mayor Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear (now a doctor at Jellystone Hospital), Augie Doggy, Jabberjaw, Top Cat, and dozens more, with out-of-towners like The Jetsons and Space Ghost popping in now and again. The show's silly, anarchic style is definitely not a one-for-one match to the source material, but it's not a terrible thing that the show is focused on appealing to modern kids rather than their parents (or grandparents, at this point). It's fun for that older elementary age group. Stream Jellystone!.


The Gilded Age (2022 – , renewed for a fourth season)

Julian Fellowes made period drama buzz-worthy with Downton Abbey, and does something similar here while shifting the time and place to the 1880s in New York City. We're introduced to the world of upper and extremely upper-class New York City society by Marian Brook (Louisa Jacobson), poor relation to the estranged aunties who take her in, and Peggy Scott (Denée Benton), a young Black writer from a solidly middle-class family who becomes a secretary to Christine Baranski's Agnes van Rhijn. Old-money Agnes and sister Ada (Cynthia Nixon) live across the street from new-money social climbers the Russells (led with juicy imperiousness by Carrie Coon's Bertha); established society isn't keen on letting in these upstarts—though money very much talks. In one sense, the stakes here could not possibly be lower (Bertha wants a better seat at the opera!)—so why is the show so addictive? Stream The Gilded Age.


Gremlins: Secrets of the Mogwai (2023 –, two seasons)

It was weird, but kinda cool, that the original Gremlins movie was marketed toward kids, given that the plot turns on moments like a Mogwai blowing up in a microwave and an anecdote about someone's dead dad mouldering in a chimney dressed like Santa Claus. That all being said, this animated prequel is legit kid-friendly, even if it doesn't shy away from the Looney Tunes-esque style of the live-action movies. It also takes the awkward Orientalism of those movies and makes it a virtue: Sam Wing (played by Hollywood legend Keye Luke in Gremlins) is, here, a 10-year-old boy who meets Gizmo and is then forced to join him on a journey through the Chinese countryside, sometimes encountering mythical creatures. The stacked voice cast includes Izaac Wang, Ming-Na Wen as Fong Wing, B. D. Wong, and the great James Hong; no word yet on a third season. Stream Secrets of the Mogwai.


The Other Two (2019 – 2023, three seasons)

Heléne Yorke and Drew Tarver stars as a couple of meandering siblings whose lives are turned upside-down when their younger brother becomes a viral sensation. The show has a lot of fun dissecting modern pop culture, and, though it has a sweet side, it’s some of the best cringe comedy you'll find on Max. As class satires go, it never quite achieved Succession levels of obsession, but deserves a bit more love. Stream The Other Two.


Scavengers Reign (2023, one season)

A qualified recommendation for this one, only because it was canceled after its first season with plenty left unresolved. Nevertheless, it's a smart, impressively voice-acted, and beautifully animated sci-fi epic following the stranded survivors of the crashed interstellar cargo ship Demeter 227. The web of natural life on the world on which they find themselves is unusually complex, an the rules they're used to don't seem to apply. The creators are shopping a second season around, but it seems likely we'll be left with a few questions—which is maybe not the worst thing. Stream Scavengers Reign.


Rap Sh!t (2022 — 2023, two seasons)

Issa Rae follows up Insecure with the story of socially conscious Miami rapper Shawna (Aida Osman), who winds up selling out, at least in her own eyes, when she teams up with her friend Mia (KaMillion), whose popular OnlyFans brings the new rap group a built-in fanbase. Meanwhile, Shawna’s boyfriend Cliff (Devon Terrell) has to come to terms with the fact that Shawna’s more commercial career path might put his dreams of political success in danger. Like Insecure, it’s deeply funny, but also has plenty to say about friendship and ambition between young Black women. Stream Rap Sh!t.


It’s a Sin (2021, miniseries)

Russell T. Davies (Queer as Folk, Doctor Who) revisits the 1980s through the story of a group of friends living in London during the height of the HIV/AIDS crisis. The miniseries brings an impressive cast to bear on a story that tracks them through the early days of queer liberation through the developing menace of a disease that no one in the broader world was willing to talk about, much less do anything about. Stream It's a Sin.


Peacemaker (2022 – 2025)

A funny and violent bright spot in the wildly convoluted onscreen world of DC Comics, Peacemaker spins out of James Gunn's snarky 2021 entry The Suicide Squad, with John Cena reprising his role. Having survived the events of that film, he's recruited once again by the United States government to join a team trying to stop mysterious butterfly creatures inhabiting human hosts. It's got the same bloody comic tone of the movie, but adds just enough dimension, and an emotional arc, to the jingoistic superheroes' story that it's easy to root for him, even as his self-awareness remains limited. It also seems to be a bit of a bridge between the old DC movie universe and the upcoming, James Gunn-led one—the second season follows the events of the new Superman movie, and there's also a Viola Davis-lead Waller spin-off in the works. Stream Peacemaker.


South Side (2019 – 2022, three seasons)

Creators/writers Bashir Salahuddin and Diallo Riddle (who also have parts in the series) brought a unique style to their three-season sitcom set in Englewood—the close-knit cast and production crew (Bashir’s brother, Sultan, plays one of the leads) give the show a familial vibe. it follows two mismatched friends (Sultan Salahuddin and Kareme Young) trying to find success while running a rent-to-own store amid a widely diverse ensemble, and trying to find some kind of accord with the local PD. Stream South Side.


Julia (2022 – 2023, two seasons)

I’m increasingly drawn to stories of people who made it later in life, probably unrelated to being solidly middle-aged while having accomplished (as yet) nothing of note. Sarah Lancashire plays Julia Child magnificently, capturing much of her distinctive style and patter, and the show has a lot of fun with the production woes of early public television. Even though it has a light touch, the show’s also an important reminder of the importance of a woman like Julia, a woman in her 50s who become an unlikely trailblazer as not just an on-camera personality, but also as an innovative producer. Another one that deserved more than two seasons, but still delightful. Stream Julia.


Young Justice (2010 – 2022, four seasons)

This is the little cartoon that could—canceled way back in 2013, picked up by the defunct DC Universe streamer for season 3, and then getting a final season as a Max original (those first three seasons are also on Max). There’s a reason it has hung in there, even without the name recognition of some of DC’s other stuff: It’s an impressively animated series that draws from any number of comics sources while scrupulously developing its characters. Unlike a lot of cartoons (or comics), it’s also allowed its characters to grow up over the years and introduced new generations of heroes along the way. Stream Young Justice.


Harley Quinn (2019– , renewed for a sixth season)

Kaley Cuoco voices Harley in this very adult cartoon series starring the anti-hero who made her debut in Bruce Timm and Paul Dini’s Batman: The Animated Series way back in the day. Don’t expect traditional superheroics—it’s a zany comedy that's often funny and delivers some solid queer representation. A Kite Man spin-off debuted in 2024, and still might get a second season of its own. Stream Harley Quinn.


Our Flag Means Death (2022 – 2023), two seasons

I think everyone probably knows about this one already—at least those of you who are extremely online—but the swashbuckling pirate comedy isn’t only wonderfully goofy and funny: It also features, unexpectedly, one of the most believable and compelling gay romances of the last several years, so I just wanted to give it a little extra love. Max cut it short after a mere two seasons which, boo! But that doesn't mean it's not worth diving in. Stream Our Flag Means Death.

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The 30 Best Christmas Movies on Netflix Right Now

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Gone are the days when you watched one Christmas movie a year, and it was either about a guy trying to jump off of a bridge or a child setting traps to kill the two grown men who want to murder him.

Now there’s a lot more where those came from—many of them available for streaming on Netflix year-round. Here are some of the best the streamer has on offer during the festive season—however early or late yours starts. (And while this is a roundup of holiday movies, yes, it’s heavily skewed toward Christmas; Netflix’s current offerings are heavy on Santa and light on everything else.)

Champagne Problems (2025)

Minka Kelly stars here as Sydney, a hard-driving American executive who heads off to Paris in order to acquire a Champagne brand for her company—and it needs to happen before Christmas. C'est pas possible! She brings along the precocious family dog, Bulles (a West Highland Terrier who's already become a bit of a fan favorite), but that's not the only complication: The heir to the company just happens to be a French hunk played by Tom Wozniczka, and, évidemment, their swoony romance puts the big deal on the line. Stream Champagne Problems.


The Merry Gentlemen (2024)

It might not be entirely traditional, but there's absolutely no rule against adding a little beefcake to your holiday feast. Britt Robertson plays Ashley, a professional dancer who finds herself out of a job and so makes her way home for Christmas—only to discover that the bank is about to shut down the sketchy local performing venue run by her parents. Naturally, it's time to put on a show! An all-male revue, specifically, including an array of middle-aged hunks like Chad Michael Murray and Maxwell Caulfield who'll heat up a holiday gathering for you and your mom. Stream The Merry Gentlemen.


Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey (2020)

As kids’ holiday fare goes, this one’s a little different, both in style and in pedigree. It’s a straight-up fantasy (rather than the more traditional romantic variety) with a toymaker inventing a living matador fighting for his right to individuality. The pedigree includes playwright David E. Talbert in the director’s chair and an all-Black cast that includes Forest Whitaker, Keegan-Michael Key, and Anika Noni Rose, all having a lot of fun in a colorful (and musical!) adventure. Stream Jingle Jangle.


Last Christmas (2019)

Emilia Clarke and America’s sweetheart Henry Golding have tremendous chemistry as a down-on-her-luck aspiring singer and the slightly mysterious man with whom she shares a lovely and inspiring holiday season. The twist ending here will either work for you, or it really won’t (either way, it’s hilarious on paper). I was prepared to chuckle, but it still got me in the end. Stream Last Christmas.


Dolly Parton’s Christmas on the Square (2020)

It’s the holidays, and Regina Fuller (Christine Baranski!) is on her way home, to evict a bunch of people so she can sell some land to a mall developer. Naturally, she’s got some learning to do, with help from Jenifer Lewis—and Dolly herself (typecast as an all-singing angel). Dolly wrote all the musical numbers, and it’s dorky fun in the best ways. The whole cast is several cuts above, as are the dance numbers, choreographed by Debbie Allen—it's a goofy good time, and I mean that in the best way. Stream Christmas on the Square.


Klaus (2019)

A charming, bespoke Santa origin story based on nothing in particular, Klaus finds the lazy son of a postmaster general in 19th-century Norway banished to a distant island town where he’s tasked with delivering 6,000 letters within a year, lest he be cut off from the family fortune. Arriving there, he discovers the two primary feuding families can’t be bothered to send letters for him to deliver, but that an elderly widower might be able to help him in a scheme he’s concocted to convince the town’s children to write letters in the hopes of receiving toys in return—toys crafted by old Klaus, in search of the family he never had. It’s all beautifully hand-animated, and the genuine emotion wrings tears, Pixar-style. Stream Klaus.


The Holiday Calendar (2018)

Kat Graham stars as struggling photographer Abby Sutton, who gets an old Advent calendar from her grandfather—she’s very not into it initially, until the calendar reveals a tiny pair of boots on day one, and later that day, her friend Josh (Quincy Brown) gives her a real pair of boots. As the calendar’s gifts seem to line up with things that actually happen, Abby begins to suspect that there’s magic, and romance, in the air. Ethan Peck (Star Trek) also stars. Stream The Holiday Calendar.


Jingle Bell Heist (2025)

A sharp-witted retail worker (Olivia Holt) and a repairman who's seen better days (Connor Swindells) realize that they both have designs on the titular holiday heist: they're going to rob London's biggest department store during the seasonal rush. With no choice but to team up, they reluctantly scheme together—before the two mismatched thieves start to find that their feelings are getting in the way of the perfect score. Stream Jingle Bell Heist.


Let It Snow (2019)

Not to be confused with Hallmark’s 2013 Let It Snow, which is also a Christmas movie, but not a particularly (or at all) diverse one. Nor is this the 2020 snowboarding horror movie of the same name. Based on a novel by Maureen Johnson, John Green, and Lauren Myracle that intertwines three distinct stories, this Let It Snow involves a large and fairly diverse cast of characters figuring into holiday romances both straight and queer, all taking place in the same small town. Stream Let It Snow.


Hot Frosty (2024)

A perfect pairing with The Merry Gentlemen for your lightly horny holiday, Hot Frosty stars Lacey Chabert as a widow running a cafe in the tiny made-up town of Hope Springs, New York. One day she picks up a scarf at a secondhand store and places it around the neck of a particularly chiseled snowman because, while all snowman bodies are valid, it's gonna take abs to score free winter apparel. The snowman, quite naturally, comes to life, leading to a series of wacky misunderstandings but also a little holiday romance. Stream Hot Frosty.


My Secret Santa (2025)

Alexandra Breckinridge hops over from Netflix's long-running romantic drama, Virgin River, to take the lead in this Christmas movie, Here, she's a struggling single mom trying to raise the cash to send her daughter off to snowboarding camp at a luxury resort (which: OK?). What are you gonna do but get a job at the resort playing Santa, requiring that she first masquerade as an old man—which is almost certainly some kind of statement about sex- and gender essentialism in the ski-resort-Santa business. When she gets the hots for her new boss (New Amsterdam's Ryan Eggold), shenanigans ensue. Stream My Secret Santa.


Chicken Run (2000)

The holidays are in the background of this funny, fowl take on The Great Escape, with a reminder that Christmas is less fun if you’re stuck laying eggs on the farm. The sharp Aardman Brothers comedy has some incredibly fun stop-motion animation, and an awful lot of chickens. It remains the top-grossing stop-motion animated movie of all time. (Netflix also has the two-decades-later sequel, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget.) Stream Chicken Run.


Operation Christmas Drop (2020)

Congressional aide Erica Miller (Kat Graham) drops everything for a mission to visit a beachside Air Force base—and find reasons to defund it. She clashes with the studly pilot assigned to escort her around, who is particularly involved in one of the base’s pet projects: an annual airdrop of supplies and gifts to various Micronesian islands. You know where this is all going, but that’s part of the fun. Stream Operation Christmas Drop.


Carry-On (2024)

Sometimes you want a Christmas movie with all the trimmings, and sometimes you need a break from all the tinsel. And so: Carry-On, a thriller that takes place on Christmas Eve. At the airport—literally the worst place to be during the holidays! Taron Edgerton is a TSA agent who's blackmailed into allowing Jason Bateman onto a flight with a very dangerous package. And yet I can't get through with my belt. Stream Carry-On.


Love Hard (2021)

Natalie (Nina Dobrev) gets catfished for Christmas (fun!). The poor woman travels across the country to see the guy she met on an app, and discovers that Josh (Jimmy O. Yang) was using pictures of his friend Tag (Darren Barnet) the whole time. She gets something going with Tag, but soon has to decide which of the two guys she really has feelings for. Stream Love Hard.


Scrooge: A Christmas Carol (2022)

It might not replace all of the many, many earlier Dickens adaptations in your holiday heart, but this computer-animated musical version boasts some fun songs, and a strong voice cast led by Luke Evans and Olivia Colman. It’s slightly less scary and maudlin than many other takes, so it might not be a bad way to introduce young kids to the holiday tale. Stream Scrooge: A Christmas Carol.


That Christmas (2024)

This fairly delightful all-ages animated Christmas boasts an impressive cast: Brian Cox as Santa is joined by Fiona Shaw, Jodie Whittaker, and Bill Nighy (among other British luminaries). A record-breaking blizzard in the coastal town of Wellington-on-Sea throws Santa's plans into chaos, but also threatens to separate several families, physically and emotionally, in a series of intertwined stories that blend a bit of comedy with some sincere emotional beats. Stream That Christmas.


Tangerine (2015)

Just your typical girlfriend/buddy/revenge comedy movie about two trans sex workers on the hunt for the man who did one of them wrong. As heartfelt as it is madcap, it all takes place on a wild Christmas Eve in Hollywood (so don’t expect snow). Shot on a couple of iPhones, director Sean Baker and company make a virtue of the intimacy and immediacy that modern technology can bring. Stream Tangerine.


Merry Liddle Christmas (2019)

Kelly Rowland produced and stars in the first of what has become a series (four movies, so far), though Netflix currently only has the first one. Here, Rowland plays Jacquie Liddle, a tech entrepreneur who’s got it all together until her incredibly messy family shows up for Christmas. Still, she’s determined to put together a marketing video that shows her vision of a perfect Christmas, which goes about as well as you can imagine. Complicating things further is her hot new neighbor Tyler (Thomas Carrot). Like Jacquie herself, the whole movie is a bit more impressively put together than the standard quickie Christmas movie, with a competence and charm that’s made those cozy sequels rather welcome. Stream Merry Liddle Christmas.


Meet Me Next Christmas (2024)

Veteran TV and movie director Rusty Cundieff (Tales from the Hood and Chappelle's Show, among many other credits) helms Meet Me Next Christmas, starring Christina Milian as a woman who finds herself rushing around New York City in search of sold-out Pentatonix tickets (oddly specific, but sure). You see, she met a guy named James last year at Christmas, and they'd agreed to reunite at the concert, An Affair to Remember-style—but wait! The handsome ticket concierge (Devale Ellis) helping her out is pretty cute, too. Stream Meet Me Next Christmas.


Holidate (2020)

Sloane (Emma Roberts) and Jackson (Luke Bracey) have figured out how to deal with all the questions that arise (apparently?) when you’re single and you show up at family gatherings: They’re going to be each other’s platonic plus-ones at holiday meals. Would it be much of a holiday movie if something other than friendship weren’t in the offing? Stream Holidate.


Falling for Christmas (2022)

Speaking of Christmas casting coups, this one saw the return of Lindsay Lohan in a lead role after a decade. She plays a snotty heiress who loses her memory following a ski accident and learns lessons about love and life while recovering in a ski lodge run by earthy Jake Russell (Chord Overstreet). Stream Falling for Christmas.


The Princess Switch (2018)

Stacy De Novo (Vanessa Hudgens) is a pastry chef from Chicago off to fictional Belgravia to compete in a holiday baking contest. There she meets a duchess, who’s also the fiancee of the local prince (Sam Palladio)—and who happens to look exactly like Stacy (surprise: They’re both played by Hudgens). The two decide it might be fun to see how the other half lives, and so they swap lives, which (unsurprisingly) complicates things with the prince. If you like this one, the series continues in two more movies that add yet another Hudgens. Stream The Princess Switch.


A Christmas Prince (2017)

Another trilogy, you say? Look, sometimes you just want to sink into the couch for hours of holiday schmaltz. No problem: Here, an American journalist (Rose McIver) heads to fictional Aldovia on the hunt for a scoop. A case of mistaken identity leads to her being mistaken for the tutor to the young princess. And, of course, she’s soon cozying up to the prince (Ben Lamb). It goes well enough that they get two more movies out of it. (Yes, all these movies have nearly identical plots, which is a cozy feature, not a bug.) Stream A Christmas Prince.


The Noel Diary (2022)

This one’s more of a comedy/drama in a holiday vein, so it’s less generally goofy and a bit less predictable than some of the other modern Christmas movies (whether that’s a pro or con will largely depend on your mood). Writer Jake (Justin Hartley) returns home for Christmas to settle his late mother’s estate; he’s just in time to meet Rachel (Barrett Doss), who’s looking for information about her birth mother, who’d been Jake’s nanny. Stream The Noel Diary.


The Christmas Chronicles (2018)

A deeply cute Christmas adventure finds a couple of kids (Judah Lewis and Darby Camp) accidentally crashing Santa’s sleigh (Santa here is played by Kurt Russell). It’s got plenty of family-friendly action, and Russell seems to be having a ton of fun. If you like this one, the sequel is approximately as good. Stream The Christmas Chronicles.


Holiday Rush (2019)

Another dramedy, Holiday Rush finds widowed hip-hop radio DJ Rush (Romany Malco) losing his job and heading back to his old home with a plan to buy the local station where he got his start alongside his producer, Roxy (Sonequa Martin-Green). The professional plans don’t run particularly smoothly, but the pair do discover that their feelings might not be all business. Stream Holiday Rush.


Our Little Secret (2024)

Lindsay Lohan is back in her third Netflix movie, following her big comeback in 2022's Falling for Christmas. Here she joins a stacked cast, including Kristin Chenoweth, Ian Harding, Jon Rudnitsky, and Chris Parnell, in the story of a couple of exes forced to spend the holiday together (her new boyfriend's sister is dating her old boyfriend, and neither of them wants anyone to know). Seasonal shenanigans ensue! Stream Our Little Secret.


Christmas Bloody Christmas (2022)

Christmas Carnage, as a genre, is at least as venerable as the holiday rom-com (Black Christmas predates every single one of those cozy Hallmark-style movies), and there's nothing wrong with adding some blood and guts to your holiday display. Here, Riley Dandy plays Tori Tooms, a record store owner closing up for Christmas Eve, and heading out for drinks with her flirtatious employee and a couple of pals. Those friends happen to run a toy store that has in stock a Santa robot—one that's been recalled because of its original military programming. You probably won't be surprised to learn that this particular robot is about to malfunction, and cut a bloody swath through the holiday season. Not quite as scary as more modern AI, but still best not mess with robot Santa. Stream Christmas Bloody Christmas.


Single All the Way (2021)

Peter (Michael Urie) is in a high-stress LA-type job on his way home to New Hampshire for the holidays. Sick of questions about being single, he decides to invite his best friend Nick (Philemon Chambers) to pose as more than his roommate. A tried-and-true setup! Complications ensue when his mom (Kathy Najimy) sets him up with her fitness instructor, James (Luke Macfarlane), before learning about the fake boyfriend who’s soon on his way to becoming a maybe real boyfriend. The fun cast also includes Barry Bostwick and Jennifer Coolidge. Stream Single All the Way.

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30 of the Best New Movies Streaming on HBO Max

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HBO was, for at least a couple of generations, the home of movies on cable—no one else could compete. For a while, it seemed like HBO Max could well be the ultimate streaming destination for movie lovers, but the jury is still out.

Even so, HBO Max maintains a collaboration with TCM, giving it a broad range of classic American and foreign films. It's also the primary streaming home for Studio Ghibli and A24, so even though the streamer hasn't been making as many original films as it did a few years ago, it still has a solid assortment of movies you won't find anywhere else.

Here are 30 of the best of HBO Max's recent and/or exclusive offerings.


The Conjuring: Last Rites (2025)

Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are back as paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. In the 1980s, they're investigating a cursed mirror that has ties to one of their first cases from 1964; that demon-possessed home furnishing threatens our heroes alongside their now-grown daughter. There aren't a ton of surprises but still a bit of spooky fun in this, the "last" Conjuring film (until the already-announced next one). Bonus points for casting actual actors (Orion Smith and Madison Lawlor) as young Ed and Lorraine, rather than doing the creepy CGI de-aging that other franchises have toyed with. Stream Conjuring: Last Rites.


Sinners (2025)

Ryan Coogler's dusty, sweaty supernatural horror movie became the year's crossover hit, defying expectations for an R-rated horror movie—particularly when that movie is also a Depression-era period drama with an almost entirely Black cast. Michael B. Jordan plays a dual role as Smoke and Stack Moore, returning to rural Mississippi after having made names for themselves in Chicago. They intend to open a juke joint with some help from their cousin Sammie (Miles Caton), an up-and-coming blues singer whose music has the power to bust down barriers, between the local Black and immigrant communities, and between our world and a darker one. Beautifully unclassifiable, and an increasingly rare example of a major studio movie with an original concept—it's already one of the year's best. Stream Sinners.


Superman (2025)

David Corenswet dons the cape in this James Gunn-led reboot that brings a light touch back to the DC movie universe. While the plot turns on Superman's dive into international power politics and unexpected betrayals, the pulpy also brings us old-school robots, flying cars, and a thoroughly ill-behaved superdog. Rachel Brosnahan's Lois Lane is as tough as she is big-hearted, Nicholas Hoult's Lex Luthor is a perfectly punchable billionaire, and Edi Gathegi steals every scene as Mister Terrific. It's a ton of fun, which is a nice change of pace after a decade of far more dour Superman flicks. Stream Superman.


Eddington (2025)

Ari Aster, who brought us such divisive "delights" as Hereditary, Midsommar, and Beau is Afraid, is back with a new film which has, surprise!, divided both audiences and critics. Aster takes us back to 2020, and to the New Mexico town of the title. Eddington mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) institute a COVID-19-related mask mandate that divides the town and puts him at odds with the local sheriff, Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix). Also in the mix are the sheriff's volatile wife (Emma Stone) and conspiracy-loving mother-in-law, as well a cult leader, various social-justice-warriors, and a couple of terrorists. The questions the film grapples with are less about who's right and who's wrong, and more about whether any of us can accomplish anything good given the chaos, confusion, and division that has become the normal way of doing things in modern America. Stream Eddington.


Materialists (2025)

Playwright and filmmaker Celine Song follows up the acclaimed Past Lives with this rom-com (-ish) love triangle involving matchmaker Lucy (Dakota Fanning), actor/cater-waiter John (Chris Evans), and millionaire Harry (Pedro Pascal). Like Past Lives, the deliberate pacing and subdued tone might put off viewers looking for something brighter and bubblier, but a bit of patience will be rewarded if you can settle in for a mature and thoughtful story of complicated lives and tentative relationships. Stream Materialists.


Mickey 17 (2025)

The latest from Bong Joon Ho (Parasite, Snowpiercer), Mickey 17 didn't do terribly well at the box office, but that's not entirely the movie's fault. It's a broad but clever and timely satire starring Robert Pattinson as Mickey Barnes, a well-meaning dimwit who signs on with a spaceship crew on its way to colonize the ice world Niflheim. Because of his general lack of skills, he's deemed an Expendable—his memories and DNA are kept on file so that when he, inevitably, dies (often in horrific ways), he'll be reprinted and restored to live and work and die again. Things get complicated when a new Mickey is accidentally printed before the old one has died—a huge taboo among religious types who can handle one body/one soul, but panic at the implications of two identical people walking around. It's also confusing, and eventually intriguing, for Mickey's girlfriend, Nasha (Naomi Ackie). Soon, both Mickey's are on the run from pretty much everyone, including the new colony's MAGA-esque leader (Mark Ruffalo). Stream Mickey 17.


Final Destination Bloodlines (2025)

Are we a little exhausted with all the nostalgic legacy sequels? We are. Does that mean there aren't some pretty damn good examples of the form floating around out there? It does not. Bloodlines picks up the franchise last seen in 2009 with an appropriately lean, mean, and bloody sequel that doesn't reinvent the Final Destination wheel, but that does everything these movies are supposed to do, and better than most. The opening sequence alone, set in 1969 at a high-rise restaurant tower, is a series best, rivaling even the log truck of part two for white-knuckle ingenuity. The movie also bids a lovely, spooky farewell to William Bludworth, played for the last time by the late, great Tony Todd. Stream Final Destination Bloodlines.


Pee-Wee as Himself (2025)

Paul Reubens participated in dozens of hours worth of interviews for this two-part documentary, directed by filmmaker Matt Worth, but from the opening moments, the erstwhile Pee-Wee Herman makes clear that he is struggling with the notion of giving up control of his life story to someone else. That's a through line in the film and, as we learn, in the performer's life, as he spent decades struggling with his public profile while maintaining intense privacy in his personal life. Reubens' posthumous coming out as gay is the headline story, but the whole thing provides a fascinating look at an artist who it seems we barely knew. Stream Pee-Wee as Himself.


The Legend of Ochi (2025)

In an age of encroaching AI, it's always encouraging to find that there are filmmakers still doing things the old-fashioned way—even more so with Ochi, which mostly forgoes even CGI in favor of actual puppetry and animatronics for anything other than wide shots. There's nothing inherently wrong with digital imagery, but our brains still kinda know when something has weight and presence in the real world, and the work that went into this fantasy pays off beautifully. Helena Zengel plays Yuri, a young girl growing up on the remote island of Carpathia. Her father, Maxim (Willem Dafoe) leads teams of (mostly) boy soldiers to hunt the island's wild Ochi—vaguely simian creatures that they've been trained to fear. Yuri discovers an injured infant Ochi and, rather than kill or capture it, she sets out to return it to its family. A rare family film from A24. Stream The Legend of Ochi.


The Brutalist (2024)

Brady Corbet's epic period drama, which earned 10 Oscar nominations and won Adrian Brody his second Academy Award for Best Actor, follows László Tóth (Adrien Brody), a Hungarian-born Holocaust survivor who emigrates to the United States following the war. His course as a refugee follows highs and devastating lows—he's barely able to find work at first, despite his past as an accomplished Bauhaus-trained architect in Europe. A wealthy benefactor (Guy Pearce) seems like a godsend when he offers László a high-profile project, but discovers the limitations of his talent in the face of American-style antisemitism and boorishness. Stream The Brutalist.


Babygirl (2024)

Nicole Kidman stars in this modern erotic thriller as CEO Romy Mathis, who begins a dangerous (i.e. naughty) affair with her much younger intern (Harris Dickinson). After an opening scene involving some deeply unfulfilling lovemaking with her husband (we'll have to suspend disbelief on the topic of Antonio Banderas as a schlubby, sexually disappointing husband), Romy runs into Samuel (Dickinson), who saves her from a runaway dog before taking her on as his mentor at work. She teaches him about process automation while he teaches her about BDSM, but his sexy, dorky charm soon gives way to something darker. For all the online chatter (Nicole Kidman on all fours lapping up milk!), the captivating performances, and the chilly direction from Halina Reijn, elevate it above more pruient erotic thrillers. Stream Babygirl.


Death of a Unicorn (2025)

Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega, playing father and daughter Elliot and Ridley, accidentally kill a unicorn whose parents go on a blood-soaked rampage by way of avenging their offspring. And if that isn't the platonic ideal of a plot for an A24 horror movie, I don't know what is. There are some themes here about class and the dangers of big pharma that don't entirely work, but there's still a well-acted family drama here with plenty of unicorn action—so it's certainly unique. Stream Death of a Unicorn.


A Minecraft Movie (2025)

A fun, and wildly successful (third-highest grossing movie of the year, so far) live-action take on the very popular sandbox video game, Minecraft stars Jack Black as Steve, a doorknob salesman who first discovers the Overworld, a world of easy-to-manipulate cubes (a la the game), and then is kidnapped and taken to the hellish Nether. Following in his wake are four normal people: Garrett “The Garbage Man” (Jason Momoa), Henry (Sebastian Hansen), Natalie (Emma Myers), and Dawn (Danielle Brooks) who are pulled into the Overworld and have to learn to work together to master the rules of the game/world. The mythology is surprisingly complicated, but the leads have great chemistry, which is where the movie's charm lies. Stream A Minecraft Movie.


Bring Her Back (2025)

If you saw Danny and Michael Philippou's previous feature, Talk to Me, then you have some idea what you're in for here, though this one goes even deeper and darker. Siblings Andy (Billy Barratt) and Piper (Sora Wong) discover their father dead on the floor in the shower; Andy is almost 18, a difficult age for foster care, but he begs to stay with his sister until he can formally take custody. The two are placed with former social worker Laura (Sally Hawkins), who is herself recovering from the tragic death of her daughter, and whose son is clearly struggling. Things get strange (and terrifying) very quickly as one of these grieving souls attempts to, well, consider the title. This is a horror film that speaks to the shattering power of grief. Stream Bring Her Back.


2073 (2024)

Inspired by Chris Marker's 1962 featurette La Jetée, which itself inspired the feature 12 Monkeys, docudrama 2073 considers the state of our world in the present through the framing device of a woman (Samantha Morton) gazing back from the titular year and meditating on the road that led to an apocalypse of sorts. Her reverie considers, via real-life, current news footage, the rise of modern popular authoritarianism in the modes of Orbán, Trump, Putin, Modi, and Xi, and their alignment with tech bros in such a way as to accelerate a coming climate catastrophe. It's not terribly subtle, but neither is the daily news. Stream 2073.


Weapons (2025)

One night, 17 kids get out of their beds at exactly 2:17 a.m. and run off down the street with their arms held out in a bizarre manner, never to be seen again. That's the unsettling start to writer/director Zach Cregger's followup to the similarly batshit Barbarian. In school the next day, only one kid remains in the class of teacher Justine Gandy (Julia Garner), and the town soon comes to wonder what she could have had to do with the disappearances, and what's different about the remaining child. Everyone, it seems, has a story and a secret to hide, and there are no easy answers to what happened. It's a truly wild ride that introduces a new horror icon, Amy Madigan's Aunt Gladys. Stream Weapons.


Flow (2024)

A gorgeous, wordless animated film that follows a cat through a post-apocalyptic world following a devastating flood. The Latvian import, about finding friends and searching for home in uncertain times, won a well-deserved Best Animated Picture Oscar. It's also, allegedly, popular with pets—though my dog slept right through it. Stream Flow.


Opus (2025)

Mixed reviews for this thriller from debut director Mark Anthony Green, but a stellar cast (lead by Ayo Edebiri and John Malkovich) and plenty of outright weirdness lend the movie some spooky watchability. Edebiri plays rookie journalist Ariel Ecton, on assignment with her boss (Murray Bartlett) to cover the forthcoming return of a '90s rock icon played by Malkovich. Ariel is meant to be, largely, a note-taker, but she's the first one to see through the glitz and glamour of this king of rock and roll and understand that there's more to the bizarre goings-on at his compound than mere eccentricity. Stream Opus.


Heretic (2024)

Two young Mormon missionaries (Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East) show up at the home of a charming, reclusive man (a deeply creepy Hugh Grant) who invites them in because, he says, he wants to explore different faiths. Which turns out to be true—except that he has ideas that go well beyond anything his two guests have in their pamphlets. It soon becomes clear that they're not going to be able to leave without participating in Mr. Reed's games, and this clever thriller doesn't always go where you think it's going. Stream Heretic.


Queer (2024)

Director Luca Guadagnino followed up his vaguely bisexual tennis movie Challengers with this less subtle (it's in the title) William S. Burroughs adaptation. Daniel Craig plays William Lee (a fictionalized version of Burroughs himself), a drug-addicted American expat living in Mexico City during the 1950s. He soon becomes infatuated with Drew Starkey's Eugene Allerton, and the two take a gorgeous journey through Mexico, through ayahuasca, and through their own sexualities. Stream Queer.


The Parenting (2025)

Rohan (Nik Dodani) and Josh (Brandon Flynn) invite both their sets of parents to a remote country rental so that everyone can meet, which sounds like plenty of horror for this horror-comedy. But wait! There's more: A demon conjured from the wifi router enters the body of Rohan's dad (Brian Cox), an event further complicated by the arrival of the house's owner (Parker Posey). It's wildly uneven, but there's a lot of fun to be had. The supporting cast includes Edie Falco, Lisa Kudrow, and Dean Norris. Stream The Parenting.


Juror #2 (2024)

Clint Eastwood's latest (last?) is a high-concept legal drama that boasts a few impressive performances highlighted by his straightforward directorial style. Nicholas Hoult stars as Justin Kemp, a journalist and recovering alcoholic assigned to jury duty in Savannah, Georgia. The case involves the death of a woman a year earlier, presumably killed by the defendant, her boyfriend at the time. But as the case progresses,Kemp slowly comes to realize that he knows more about the death than anyone else in the courtroom, and has to find a way to work to acquit the defendant without implicating himself. Stream Juror #2.


We Live in Time (2024)

Director John Crowley had a massive critical success with 2015's Brooklyn, but 2019's The Goldfinch was a disappointment in almost every regard. Nonlinear romantic drama We Live in Time, then, feels like a bit of a return to form, with Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield displaying impressive chemistry as the couple at the film's center. The two meet when she hits him with her car on the night he's finalizing his divorce, and the movie jumps about in their relationship from the early days, to a difficult pregnancy, to a cancer diagnosis, without ever feeling excessively gimmicky. Stream We Live in Time.


Trap (2024)

Cooper (Josh Hartnett) is a pretty cool dad in M. Night Shyamalan’s latest, taking his daughter Riley (Ariel Donoghue) to see a Billie Eilish-ish pop star in concert. But we soon learn that Cooper is also a notorious serial killer (this is not the patented Shyamalan twist, in case you were worried about spoilers). The FBI knows that "The Butcher" will be at the concert, even if they don't know exactly who it is, and the whole thing is a, yes, trap that Cooper must escape. Of such premises are fun thrillers made, and Hartnett has fun with the central role, his performance growing increasingly tic-y and unhinged even as Cooper tries to make sure his daughter gets to enjoy the show. Stream Trap.


Caddo Lake (2024)

While we're on the subject of M. Night Shyamalan, he produced this trippy thriller that spends a big chunk of its runtime looking like a working-class drama before going full whackadoo in ways best not spoiled. Eliza Scanlen stars as Ellie, who lives near the title lake with her family, and where it appears that her eight-year-old stepsister has vanished. Dylan O'Brien plays Paris, who works dredging the lake while dealing with survivor's guilt and the trauma of his mother's slightly mysterious death. Their stories (and backstories) merge when they discover that one doesn't always leave the lake the same as they went in. Stream Caddo Lake.


The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (2024)

An anime-infused take on Tolkien's world, The War of the Rohirrim boats the return of co-writer Philippa Boyens, who helped to write each of the six previous LOTR movies. In this animated installment, we're taken back 200 years before Peter Jackson's films, to when the king of Rohan (Brian Cox) accidentally kills the leader of the neighboring Dunlendings during marriage negotiations, kicking off a full-scale war. Miranda Otto reprises her role of Éowyn, who narrates. Stream War of the Rohirrim.


Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (2024)

Alternating between Christopher Reeve's life before and after the horse riding accident that paralyzed him, this heartfelt and heart wrenching documentary follows the Superman actor as he becomes an activist for disability rights. Archival footage of Christopher and wife Dana blends with new interviews with their children, as well as with actors and politicians who knew and worked with them both. Stream Super/Man.


The Front Room (2024)

Adapted from a short story by Susan Hill (The Woman in Black), The Front Room gets a fair bit of mileage out of its in-law-from-hell premise. Brandy plays Belinda, a pregnant anthropology professor forced to quit her job by hostile working conditions. Her deeply weird mother-in-law Solange (a scene-stealing Kathryn Hunter) makes Brandy and husband Norman an offer that could solve the resulting financial problems: if they'll take care of her in her dying days, she'll leave them everything. Of course, the psychic religious fanatic has no interest in making any of that easy. It's more silly than scary, but perfectly entertaining if that's the kind of mood you're in. Stream The Front Room.


Quad Gods (2024)

We spend a lot of time fearing new technology, often with good reason, but Quad Gods offers a brighter view: for people with quadriplegia, for whom sports like football are out of the question, esports offer a means of competing and socializing among not only other people with physical restrictions, but in the broader world of what's become a major industry. While exploring the contrast between day-to-day life for the Quad Gods team and their online gaming talents, the documentary is an impressively upbeat look at the ways in which technology can put us all on a similar playing field. Stream Quad Gods.


Elevation (2024)

There's not much new in this Anthony Mackie-lad post-apocalyptic thriller, but Elevation is nonetheless a well-executed action movie that never feels dumb. Just a few years before the film opens, predatory Reapers rose from deep underground and wiped out 95% of humanity. Now, single dad Will (Mackie) is forced to leave his sanctuary to travel to Boulder, Colorado, the closest place he can get air filters to help with his son's lung disease. On the way, he's joined, reluctantly, by scientist Nina (Morena Baccarin), whose lab may contain a way to kill the Reapers. Stream Elevation.

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The 30 Best Movies Streaming on Tubi Right Now

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While other streaming services thrive on carefully selected and endlessly curated (meaning: limited) selections of movies, Tubi's a bit different: It feels like the Wild West, with everything from originals to popular hits to critically acclaimed favorites to the lowest-brow, lowest-budget movies you'll find this side of an old Blockbuster. In that spirit, here's a sampling of some of the best stuff currently streaming on Tubi. It's a wide variety—the streamer will not be pinned down. (If you're unfamiliar, Tubi is a free, ad-based service, but generally I find the ads to be less obnoxious and less frequent than on other, similar streamers.)

Friday (1995)

Craig and Smokey (Ice Cube and Chris Tucker) are just a couple of guys hanging out hoping for something to do. They shoulda been careful what they wished for, as this one impossible Friday will see them involved with burglaries, shoot-outs, and excessively horny pastors. As in all the best buddy/stoner comedies, it's all in goofy fun. Stream Friday.


Titanic (1997)

In a modern world of blockbusters designed to be as comforting and non-threatening as possible, be the movie that made an entire generation of moviegoers sob. James Cameron somehow crafted an all-time crowd-pleaser out of one of the 20th centuries greatest tragedies. Stream Titanic.


Titanic II (2010)

And then there's this non-sequel from The Asylum, purveyors of fine cinematic schlock such as the immortal classic Sharknado. Here, a perfect replica of the Titanic sets sail exactly 100 years after the original disaster, this time beset by the man-made disaster that is global climate change. Goofier, a million times cheaper, but with 100% more Bruce Davison, this gives you some sense of Tubi's sublime-to-ridiculous range. Stream Titanic II, and toss in supernatural shocker and Tubi original Titanic 666 for one wild movie marathon.


Slay (2024)

This Tubi original (It's a foreign film! From Canada!) stars Drag Race alumni Trinity the Tuck, Heidi N Closet, Crystal Methyd, and Cara Melle as—you guessed it—drag queens who stop off in a middle-of-nowhere biker bar while on tour. Things are dodgy, and only get dodgier when the bar is overrun by vampires, forcing the queens and the bikers to team up and fight for survival. It's good, campy fun with a heartfelt message, and a marvel of high-energy, low-budget filmmaking. Stream Slay.


Misery (1990)

Before she was Matlock, Kathy Bates was winning Oscars and smashing shins as Stephen King's iconic fangirl gone wild, Annie Wilkes. When James Caan's Paul Sheldon, author of the popular Misery series of romance novels, ends up stuck in Annie's remote house—well, suffice it to say that things are gonna get cockadoodie pretty darn quick. Stream Misery.


The Godfather (1972)

Francis Ford Coppola's triumph (at least until Part II) introduces the all-American Corleone family, lead by an Oscar-winning (and declining) Marlon Brando as Vito alongside his youngest, most reluctant son, Michael (Al Pacino). The Godfather was always a distinctly American story, but, now that our political leaders are explicitly mobsters, it feels more timely than ever. Stream The Godfather.


Trap (2024)

Cooper (Josh Hartnett) is a pretty cool dad in M. Night Shyamalan’s latest, taking his daughter Riley (Ariel Donoghue) to see a very cool Taylor Swift-ish pop star in concert. We quickly learn, though, that Cooper is a hunted serial killer, and that the FBI knows that "The Butcher" will be at the concert, even if they don't know exactly who it is. Of such premises are fun thrillers made, as Cooper has to try to escape the pop concert while somehow making sure his daughter gets to enjoy the show. Stream Trap.


New Jack City (1991)

New Jack City is a serious, thoughtful crime drama that's also an impressively thrilling action movie, and (just as importantly) a time capsule of ‘90s cool, as epitomized by Wesley Snipes. Mario Van Peebles comes swinging right out of the gate with his directorial debut. Stream New Jack City.


Wrapped Up in Christmas (2017)

This was a Lifetime original holiday movie, so you already know the vibe, and not to expect too many surprises. Still, this is a fun one: To advance in her hard-driving management career at the mall, Heather (Tatyana Ali) has to impress her boss, played by the always-hilarious Jackée Harry in full Scrooge mode. Complications arise when her niece sets her up with hottie Brendan Fehr, who helps run an unprofitable toy store with his mom. Heather is tasked with getting these good-natured toy merchants out in favor of renters with deeper pockets, and she'll have to decide whether she's willing to risk her career and teach Jackée the true meaning of Christmas. At the mall. Stream Wrapped Up in Christmas.


Jason X (2001)

It's certainly not for everyone, not even for every slasher fan—but, in Jason X, we have a movie that does exactly what it says on the tin and sends Jason into space. Having been captured, Jason is being contained and studied at the Crystal Lake Research Facility. He's placed into cryogenic suspension where he remains until 2455, when a group of mostly horny young scientists accidentally release him onto their spaceship following a field trip to the dead planet Earth. As if plain old Jason wasn't bad enough, he gets some badass cyborg upgrades that really do not bode well for our hapless crew. Stream Jason X.


Gladiator (2000)

Ridley Scott's historical epic cleaned up at the box office and at the Academy Awards. Russell Crowe stars as Maximus Decimus Meridius, a general in the Roman army forced, in unjust disgrace, to fight in the arena for the pleasure of Emperor Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix), a man on whom he swears revenge. Stream Gladiator.


The Thin Man (1934)

The boozy chemistry between all-time greats Myrna Loy and William Powell gives The Thin Man the kind of loose energy that makes it not only easy to watch, but a real joy, whether or not you’re paying any attention to the central murder mystery. Nick and Nora are always a good hang. Stream The Thin Man.


Threads (1984)

This nuclear-war drama terrorized British television audiences back in 1984, depicting daily life in a small English city before and after an armed conflict between the U.S. and the USSR. A seemingly realistic depiction of the impacts of nuclear winter, it's unrelentingly grim (which: fair) but masterfully crafted. It's also a great example of the kind if cinematic archaeology that Tubi allows for. Stream Threads.


Stargate (1994)

A fun, high-concept sci-fi adventure that kicked-off an impressive TV franchise. An archaeologist discovers a portal (a.k.a. stargate) in the Egyptian desert that connects to a distant point in space—one which happens to be the home of ancient Egyptian Gods. James Spader is the linguist called in to help figure things out, while Kurt Russell is the military guy ready to blow things up. On the other side, they meet Jaye Davidson's memorably sexy, though hardly benevolent, Ra. Stream Stargate.


The Raid (2022)

A fictionalized reaction to the 2007 police raids against the Ngāi Tūhoe community in the small town of Rūātoki, this Tubi original is saddled with a generic title that makes it sound disposable (internationally, the title is Muru). A two-day raid costing millions led to few arrests and only a couple of convictions on minor gun charges, all because New Zealand authorities were convinced that Māori were preparing some kind of uprising. Here, Cliff Curtis (Whale Rider) plays local cop Taffy Tāwharau, who becomes caught between following the law and the dictates of his conscience as the danger and violence escalates. Stream The Raid.


Color Out of Space (2019)

Nicolas Cage is at his Nic Cage-iest in this H. P. Lovecraft adaptation about a family's descent into madness. A beautiful, horrifying, utterly unique sensory experience. Stream Color Out of Space.


Some Like It Hot (1959)

Tubi offers up a better assortment of classics than many of the other streamers, most of which have shifted to a newer-is-better focus. Hot stars Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis as a couple of jazz-age musicians who run afoul of a mob boss, deciding to escape by posing as members of an all-female band (one that, memorably, includes Marilyn Monroe). Director Billy Wilder pitches the farce just right, at the intersection between smart and silly. Stream Some Like It Hot.


The Philadelphia Story (1940)

It's one of Hollywood’s all-time team-ups, with director George Cukor at the helm of a Katherine Hepburn vehicle in which she’s pursued by both Cary Grant and James Stewart (and, of course, her fiancé played by John Howard—but he never really has a chance). It’s hard to know who to root for. Even when she’s back-footed by the men in her life, Hepburn's still the whole show, bandying brilliant dialogue in a movie that veers effortlessly from sophisticated to screwball. Stream The Philadelphia Story.


Donnie Darko (2001)

Jake Gyllenhaal stars in this memorable emo mind-bender about a troubled teenager who dodges disaster thanks to a bit of sleepwalking. An instant cult classic, it's the movie all the cool kids were talking about back in the day. Stream Donnie Darko (director's cut), or the theatrical version.


God's Own Country (2017)

Josh O’Connor (The Crown’s Prince Charles) and Alec Secăreanu play Yorkshire farmer Johnny and Romanian migrant worker Gheorghe. The initially tempestuous relationship that develops really does feel like it’s headed for tragedy (à la Brokeback Mountain), which makes the film’s unexpected turn in the direction of a happier ending particularly thrilling. Stream God's Own Country.


Hollywood Shuffle (1987)

Robert Townsend directs himself as Bobby Taylor, in a satire about the perils of navigating the Hollywood system for an actor simultaneously too Black and not Black enough for the tastes of studio bosses. Through elaborate fantasy sequences and parodies of popular movies, Townsend creates a sharp and often extremely funny sendup that’s (sadly) still relevant. Stream Hollywood Shuffle.


The Apartment (1960)

Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine star in this searing, bittersweet, but ultimately humane comedy. MacLaine's Fran Kubelik is an elevator operator having an affair with the big boss at an insurance company, while Lemmon's Bud Baxter gets ahead by loaning out his apartment to upper management for various extramarital assignations. The budding friendship between the two threatens both of their careers. Stream The Apartment.


Ray (2004)

It’s not just Jamie Foxx’s Oscar-winning performance that sells this take on the troubled rise of Ray Charles; he’s flawless, but every main performance here is great—Regina King, Kerry Washington, and Clifton Powell, in particular. Some of the beats here are pretty recognizable, but the performances create the feeling that we’ve gained some essential insight into these characters and the real-life individuals they represent. Stream Ray.


Whale Rider (2002)

Pai is a 12-year-old Māori girl and the direct descendant of their tribe’s traditional notable ancestor, the Whale Rider—except that, traditionally, women can’t lead. Star Keisha Castle-Hughes became the youngest nominee for a Best Actress Oscar for her open, genuine performance. Stream Whale Rider.


Terrifier (2016)

Damien Leone's low-budget slasher series quietly builds into a queasy empire, with the most recent film being a legit box office smash. Here, literal clown-from-hell Art stalks partygoer Tara Heyes and her sister Victoria (Scaffidi) on Halloween night. Stream Terrifier.


Return of the Living Dead (1985)

This horror comedy with punk style is both a knowing parody of zombie movies while also managing to be an impressively gory thriller in its own right that moves the whole genre forward. Plus, it’s got a great death-rock soundtrack. Stream Return of the Living Dead.


Ghost in the Shell (1995)

One of the best anime films of all time, at least when it comes to sci-fi and cyberpunk, Ghost in the Shell boasts impeccable style in addition to the thoughtfulness and complexity of its story. Major Motoko Kusanagi is a cyborg security agent hunting an enigmatic hacker known only as "the Puppet Master" in the rapidly approaching year 2029, a time when the rise of AI threatens even the idea of individual existence. Stream Ghost in the Shell.


The Leather Boys (1964)

A classic of British kitchen sink realism, a movement in the 1960s that saw hyperrealistic portraits of, often, angry teens and young people, The Leather Boys sees young couple Reggie and Dot becoming increasingly estranged when Reggie mostly wants to just hang out with his biker friends. Among those friends is Pete, who seems to be developing an attraction to Reggie that goes a bit beyond that of a typical biker bro. Stream The Leather Boys.


Cabaret (1972)

Liza Minnelli and Joel Grey star in this essential musical about the good times and extravagant style of Weimar Germany giving way to the rising tide of fascism. Stream Cabaret.


It Happened One Night (1934)

The template for a million romantic comedies to come, It Happened One Night, despite appearing during the awkward early years of sound, remains unsurpassed in its charm and sexiness. Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable have terrific chemistry, and their relationship is one of near-equals—something that would grow increasingly rare in the succeeding decades. It’s one of only three films to have won an Academy Award in every major category, and deservedly so. Stream It Happened One Night.

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20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025

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Black Friday sales probably have you deep in your Christmas shopping already, but don't forget we've got another holiday to get through first. And while nothing gets you in the mood for the holidays like a good Christmas movie, there are a host (no pun intended) of Thanksgiving movies too.

Now, there are plenty of films with Thanksgiving vibes (family gatherings and cozy fall colors), but you have to dig a bit deeper if you want that holiday specificity. Planes, Trains, and Automobiles gets mentioned overwhelmingly when people are asked about their favorite Turkey Day movie, in part because it's a legitimately good, but also because it's one of the few that people remember, but it's far from the only one. Here are 20 to stream while you're cooking, eating, or settling into a food coma this year.


What’s Cooking? (2000)

While movies and TV often portray a sameness in traditions, every culture, subculture, and family that celebrates brings its own sets of traditions and baggage to the holiday. What’s Cooking? brings together four ethnically and culturally diverse families (Latino, Vietnamese, Jewish, and African American...with a lesbian couple in the mix) who celebrate Thanksgiving together, with each contributing different foods (and family dramas) to the proceedings. Mercedes Ruehl, Kyra Sedgwick, Joan Chen, Lainie Kazan, Julianna Margulies, and Alfre Woodard lead the impressive cast. Stream What's Cooking on Prime Video and Tubi or rent it from Apple TV.


Home for the Holidays (1995)

Jodie Foster followed up her 1991 directorial debut Little Man Tate with this all-star holiday get-together. Holly Hunter stars as Claudia Larson, a just-fired single mom coming back to Baltimore to spend Thanksgiving with her family. Because what could be less stressful? Her old friends make her feel insecure about being divorced; her mom's sister Gladys, in the early stages of dementia, confesses her love for her father; her gay brother drops a turkey on the conservative sister; and a friendly after-dinner wrestling match gets serious. Sounds generally less explosive than my typical family gathering, but still. Robert Downey Jr., Anne Bancroft, Charles Durning, Dylan McDermott, Claire Danes, Austin Pendleton, and David Strathairn also star. Stream Home for the Holidays on Paramount+ or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Planes, Trains, and Automobiles (1987)

One of John Hughes’ best movies barely involves teenagers at all, instead serving as a two-hander between Steve Martin and John Candy, a pair of desperately mismatched travelers headed to their respective Thanksgiving gatherings. Only the most fortunate among us have been spared the torments of holiday travel, and Hughes captures those trials, even as the movie reaches more absurd heights as the protagonists near their destinations—with enough well-earned sweetness by the end to lift this one into the holiday pantheon. Stream Planes, Trains, and Automobiles on Paramount+ or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (1972)

At only 25 minutes, this holiday special perhaps doesn't count as a movie, but it packs a lot of holiday spirit into its short runtime. As Charlie and Sally make plans to head off to their grandparents' for Thanksgiving dinner, Peppermint Patty finds herself adrift, her father out of town. So she goes ahead and invites herself, and the rest of the gang, over to the Brown place—with no dinner planned. Charlie's determined to do right by his friends, even if he doesn't know how to make much more than toast. Troubles naturally ensue. But what Thanksgiving prep doesn't involve drama? Between scenes of Snoopy's antics are some subtle lessons about managing expectations and finding the real meaning of gathering with friends. Stream A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving on Apple TV+.


Addams Family Values (1993)

Say what you like about the Addams family (go ahead! They will not care); they’re one of the most loving and mutually supportive families in pop culture. I’d rather spend Thanksgiving dinner with them than almost any other fictional family (though I might bring my own food). The nod to the holiday here isn’t to a meal, though, but to the national mythology around which the holiday is built. When camp counsellors make the mistake of asking Wednesday and Pugsley to participate in a seasonal play, they turn it into a fiery indigenous revenge fantasy par excellence. Having white kids playing Native Americans doesn’t do much by way of indigenous representation, but at least the movie doesn’t glorify early contact. The Addams' are definitely screwed up, but they're doing better than most of us. Rent Addams Family Values from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The Ice Storm (1997)

Perhaps not family viewing, precisely—though I'm hardly here to judge yours. Journey back to 1973 in Ang Lee’s Thanksgiving-set classic, as gathering for the annual dinner brings out dark secrets in the lives of two clans in a quiet, picture-perfect suburb. The meal gives way to a key party (ask your grandparents) weekend, which, if it had caught on, might have seen swinging and group sex with the neighbors become as much of a holiday tradition as green bean casserole. Alas. Rent The Ice Storm from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Pieces of April (2003)

Katie Holmes stars as the title’s April Burns in this indy dramedy built around an unconventional  Thanksgiving celebration for an extremely dysfunctional family. April lives in a tiny Lower East Side apartment but is nevertheless determined to gather the entire family for dinner—though she's estranged from her parents and her siblings, her mom Joy (Patricia Clarkson) has breast cancer, and there’s every chance that this will be her last holiday. But April's best intentions can’t make things go smoothly. Her broken stove is a problem, as is her drug-dealer ex. And her very suburban family members will have to get over their fear of THE CITY. Thankfully, there’s some holiday cheer to be had, even if it’s desperately hard won. Stream Pieces of April on Tubi and The Criterion Channel or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Thanksgiving (2023)

Another one that's probably not for the whole family, this grisly, satirical Thanksgiving-themed slasher from director Eli Roth kicks off with one of those early-morning Black Friday sales that are totally fun, and where nothing could ever possibly go wrong. Taking a cue from real-life events, a crowd lined-up outside of a Wal-Mart-esque big box store gets unruly when they see the owner's daughter inside early with her friends. A stampede ensues, and it's so horrific it's nearly funny; customers and staff are killed with abandon by out-of-control shoppers (though it doesn't feel that far removed from some of the Black Friday near-tramplings we've seen on the news). The following year? A mystery killer seeks holiday-themed revenge. Stream Thanksgiving on Hulu or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Lez Bomb (2018)

A charming, if lesser-known suburban comedy about the very relatable experience of trying to come out at a family gathering, and the ensuing mixed reactions. Jenna Laurenzo writes, directs, and stars as Lauren, who’s all ready to introduce her girlfriend to the family at Thanksgiving...until her male roommate shows up, and everyone auumes he’s her boyfriend. Stream Lez Bomb on Tubi or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


For Your Consideration (2006)

What does any Thanksgiving gathering need but more lesbian coming-out drama? This essential Christopher Guest mockumentary follows the production of an arthouse movie initially called Home for Purim, starring Callie Webb (Parker Posey) as a young woman who brings her girlfriend to a holiday dinner during the 1940s. As the absolutely cursed production gains Oscar buzz, the studio takes things in hand, deciding that the setting of a movie called "Home for Purim," is way too Jewish. Soon, our cast and crew (played by Guest mainstays Catherine O'Hara, Harry Shearer, Michael McKean, Fred Willard, Bob Balaban, Jennifer Coolidge, and Jane Lynch) are promoting "Home for Thanksgiving," which is the relatively thin thread by which I'll hang the movie on this list. Watch it now, and then watch it again during Oscar season. Rent For Your Consideration from Prime Video and Apple TV.


Mistress America (2015)

In this screwball-style holiday comedy, Greta Gerwig (who also co-wrote the film with director Noah Baumbach) plays Brooke, an unstoppable force who's some combination of influencer, interior designer, and fitness instructor—and who's nevertheless barely holding things together. Tracy (Lola Kirke), meanwhile, is a quiet, intense college freshman. Tracy's mom is about to marry Brooke's dad. The two women hit it off immediately, but their differences set off a sting of fairly zany happenings that all lead to a funny, poignant, and very New York Thanksgiving dinner. Rent Mistress America from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The Humans (2021)

The past is very much present at nearly any family gathering, and that’s the case in this psychological drama, written and directed by Stephen Karam, who also wrote the Tony-winning and Pulitzer-nominated play on which it’s closely based. It begins with a father struggling with 9/11-related trauma at his adult daughter’s apartment, which is too close to ground zero for his comfort (and might also possibly be haunted). Everyone brings traumas and resentments to the holiday table—but the movie is smart and subtle enough to avoid obvious beats and easy answers. Stream The Humans on Tubi or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The House of Yes (1997)

Screwball dark comedy The House of Yes is, perhaps, not terribly representative of any particular American family at Thanksgiving—unless you too have a psychotic sister (Parker Posey) who believes that she’s Jackie Onassis. This is Posey in her wacky indie golden age, starring in a darkly funny seasonal comedy which, OK, includes incest and murder so, you know, maybe don't watch it with the kids. But as a heightened version of the kinds of wackiness that family members can bring to the dinner table, it rings true. Rent The House of Yes from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The Daytrippers (1996)

You could spend an entire afternoon watching classic ‘90s Parker Posey movies—which honestly sounds better than 80% of typical Thanksgiving activities. Here she’s crammed into a Buick with Hope Davis and Live Schreiber as they head out on a day-after-Thanksgiving road trip to track down Davis’ husband and confront him about his cheating ways. Stream The Daytrippers on HBO Max and The Criterion Channel or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The Myth of Fingerprints (1997)

Upper-middle class white family dysfunction was a big topic in the 1990s, and this is a standout example of the form. On one level, it's another story of a family coming together over the holidays while grappling with resentments and secrets and abusive histories, but it's a big step up from the typical family drama, unravelling the various relationships with uncommon subtlety and a sense of humor. The entire family is extremely horny, and having various couples under one roof for the holidays makes it very hard for anyone to get any sleep. Blythe Danner, Roy Scheider, Noah Wyle, and Julianne Moore star. Stream The Myth of Fingerprints on Tubi.


The Gold Rush (1925)

One of Charlie Chaplin's most memorable films isn't exactly full of images of Thanksgiving abundance, though there are reasons for gratitude by the movie's end. But one of the best remembered scenes (not just in the film, but in all of American cinema) takes place during an extremely unconventional Thanksgiving meal: Chaplin's Tramp cooks up one of his shoes for himself and Jim (Mack Swain), with whom he's trapped in a tiny snowbound cabin during the Klondike Gold Rush. Their Thanksgiving repast doesn't end there, as The Tramp hallucinates a giant chicken, leading to a round of fisticuffs, before a more discernibly tangible bear comes to investigate. It's a good reminder to appreciate whatever food winds up on your plate, assuming it isn't also made of laces and leather. Stream The Gold Rush on HBO Max and Prime Video or rent it from Apple TV.


Turkey Hollow (2015)

There's hardly any modern technology at all in the town of Turkey Hollow, making it a great place for recently divorced Ron to take his two kids for the holiday. They're all off to the home of Ron's eccentric Aunt Cly (Mary Steenburgen) for some peace and quiet—until teens Tim and Annie get involved in the hunt for the "Howling Hoodoo," a 10-foot-tall monster of local legend. That leads them into a plot to take over Aunt Clay's farm, as well as some other delightfully Muppet-y weirdness; produced by the Jim Henson Company, the movie is based on one of his original stories. Definitely a fun family watch. Stream Jim Henson's Turkey Hollow on Prime Video.


Spider-Man (2002)

There's not a lot of Thanksgiving in the first Sam Raimi Spider-Man film, but this is about it if you're looking for a super-powered holiday. Here, the festivities occur at a key moment: Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) is having the whole gang over for turkey—Peter (Tobey Maguire) and pals Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst) and Harry (James Franco), of course, but also Harry's dad Norman Osbourne (Willem Dafoe). He's secretly Spider-villain the Green Goblin, and it's during this meal that he notices that Peter has some suspicious injuries. The tension grows as the arch-nemeses gradually cotton to each other's dual identities. And what Thanksgiving dinner isn't filled with bubbling tension? Stream Spider-Man on Disney+ or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


The Last Waltz (1978)

There's much that's poignant about The Last Waltz, the Martin Scorsese -directed concert film recorded during Thanksgiving 1976. The final performance of the Band feels like the end of a rock 'n' roll era, with the generation of musicians who exploded during Woodstock (Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Dr. John, Joni Mitchell, and many others) saying goodbye to what had been in the face of disco, rap, new wave, and pop. But there's more here than just that sense of encroaching twilight: there are squabbles, there's real affection, and there's a lot of booze and more than a few drugs. In other words: not an atypical family Thanksgiving celebration. (The entire audience was given a Thanksgiving dinner before the concert, if that helps to sell you on the holiday connection.) Stream The Last Waltz on Tubi or rent it from Prime Video and Apple TV.


My Blue Heaven (1990)

Once again, not a ton of explicit holiday here, but there is a sequence set at the mall during Thanksgiving—and the film is so charmingly goofy that it makes for solidly low-key seasonal viewing. Steve Martin plays Vinnie Antonelli, a mobster sent to live in the San Diego suburbs as part of the witness protection program—"Tod," as he's now called, struggles to give up his criminal ways, and doesn't even try to tone down his larger-than-life personality. This all makes life a bit of a blue hell for FBI agent Barney Coopersmith (Rick Moranis), assigned to keep an eye on Vinnie/Tod (they're joined by the reliably funny Joan Cusack). Herbert Ross (Steel Magnolias) directs a screenplay from Nora Ephron, and, if it's not the greatest use of all this assembled talent, it's still a very fun way to kill 90 minutes. Rent My Blue Heaven from Prime Video and Apple TV.

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The 30 Best Movies on Hulu Right Now

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Hulu doesn't always get the recognition of competitors like Netflix and Max, but the streamer has an unfailingly reliable and rotating selection of theatrical films, as well as some impressive original releases. These are some of the best, buzziest, and/or most fun movies currently streaming on the service, across a variety of genres.

Sovereign (2025)

This is based on a true story of father and son “sovereign citizens” who shot and killed police officers in 2010. Nick Offerman gives a full-throated and brilliantly chilling performance as Jerry Kane, a minor celebrity in right-wing circles possessed of nearly as much charisma as rage. He's decided that the government is illegitimate, as are all of his bills, and he's brought his shy and quiet son Jerry (Jacob Tremblay) along with him. Dennis Quaid plays the local police chief whose path they're about to cross, but the Harrowing film absolutely belongs to Offerman, who's terrifying. Stream Sovereign.


The Color Purple (2023)

This musical adaptation of Steven Spielberg's beloved 1985 didn't set the box office on fire, but it's still a lovely, rousing, and appropriately colorful film that scores extra points for the brilliant Black talent behind the scenes, including director Blitz Bazawule. Fantasia Barrino is Celie, raped and abused by her father before being shipped off to marry Mister (Colman Domingo), who's not much better. Separated from her children and her daughters, she finds some solace in her husband's lover, Shug Avery (Taraji P. Henson), whose joyful shamelessness and passion for Celie prove to be inspiring to everyone. Stream The Color Purple.


The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)

Just an old-fashioned love story about the romance between a young engaged couple, a genderfluid scientist, and a jacked lab experiment. The queen of cinematic cult classics, Rocky Horror plays just as well at home on TV as it does at all those midnight screenings you've been to, so don't be afraid to give in to absolute pleasure. On the couch. Stream The Rocky Horror Picture Show.


Dandelion (2024)

The plot here isn't terribly complicated: Struggling singer-songwriter Dandelion (Kiki Layne) is in a downward spiral when she meets Casey (Thomas Doherty), a Scottish musician who's all but given up. As Dandelion warms up to Casey and his scruffy crew, she begins to rediscover a love for her art. Where the movie stands out is in the vulnerable performances, but especially in the direction of Nicole Riegel, who carefully crafts a believable, fully realized relationship largely out of scenes in which music is more important than dialogue. A dreamy musical romance. Stream Dandelion.


The Last Showgirl (2024)

Something of a companion piece to The Substance, in that both films star Hollywood icons and deal with women paying a price for daring to age, The Last Showgirl's wistful, more down-to-Earth tone provides a brilliant showcase for lead Pamela Anderson. She plays Shelly Gardner, a Las Vegas showgirl with a three-decade career who finds herself at loose ends when the revue in which she stars closes. It's easily one of 2024's best performances. Stream The Last Showgirl.


The Last Duel (2021)

A box office flop that deserved much better, Ridley Scott's epic adapts a nonfiction work by Eric Jager involving a trial, by combat, in medieval France between Jean de Carrouges (Matt Damon) and Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver) following the rape of Jean's wife, Marguerite (Jodie Comer). Scott cleverly approaches the story as a European Rashomon, with the story presented from the different points of view of each man, before we get the full picture from Marguerite's perspective. History, and the players in the duel, might not have cared about that point of view, but Scott and the film do. Stream The Last Duel.


55 (2025)

Speaking of Ridley Scott, he came onboard as a producer for this underworld crime drama from Indian filmmaker Shyam Madiraju as a means of making sure that the movie received the widest release possible. The title refers to orphaned teenage pickpocket Pachpan, under the heel of the Fagin-esque local Mumbai gang lord who refers to the children who do his bidding only by numbers—55, in Pachpan's case. Stealing a wallet full of money, Pachpan visits the home of its owner, only to discover that his actions have consequences beyond a simple theft. Stream 55.


Summer of 69 (2025)

A surprisingly sweet coming-of-age comedy, given that it's about a young woman who wants to learn how to 69 (a sex position you might have heard of). Sam Morelos stars as Abby Flores, a popular game streamer who's shy in public and who hides her identity online. In her senior year of high school, she's ready to come out of her shell and hopes to make a play for Max, the guy she's had a crush on for years. With no sexual experience (and little social experience), she visits a local strip club and makes friends with dancer Santa Monica (Chloe Fineman), whom she'll pay to be her sex and confidence coach. Despite her outward demeanor, Santa Monica isn't entirely feeling like a success herself; it turns out that the mismatched pals have a lot in common and a lot to teach each other. It's a solid directorial debut from SNL writer Jillian Bell. Stream Summer of 69.


Anora (2024)

Writer/director Sean Baker (Tangerine, Red Rocket) has a long list of impressive film credits to his name, but comedy/drama Anora was the film that put him firmly into the mainstream, winning him a Best Director Oscar and the film a Best Picture prize. Mikey Madison (who also won Best Actress) plays the title's Anora, an exotic dancer whose life changes when she falls in love with the son of a Russian oligarch. It's all going very well until his parents show up to get their impromptu wedding annulled. Stream Anora.


The Family Stone (2005)

Holiday gatherings always offer great potential for comedy and drama, with The Family Stone landing a bit of each—this one taking on a bit of added poignance following the passing of Diane Keaton earlier this year. The setup involves Dermot Mulroney bringing home his new girlfriend, played by a fearlessly brittle Sarah Jessica Parker, for Christmas. That doesn’t go great, with the visitor constantly feeling out of place and embarrassed amid the insular, tight-knit, standoffish clan. But, in the background, strong-willed matriarch Sybil Stone (Keaton) is also looking for an opportunity, amidst the holiday chaos, to reveal a terminal medical diagnosis. The subtle final shot lands like a sledgehammer every time. Stream The Family Stone.


Osiris (2025)

Director William Kaufman (Sinners and Saints, Daylight's End) is a master of this type of cheapie military action thriller (the posters are always muscular guys with guns aimed roughly in your face), and that's not a bad thing if you're in the right mood. This one puts a sci-fi spin on the formula, as a special forces team operating in Uzbekistan is captured by a group of Predator-esque aliens who came to Earth to sample the local cuisine (i.e., us). Luckily, they meet Anya (Linda Hamilton), a woman who's managed to survive the aliens for 20 years or so and has a plan—one that, you won't be surprised to learn, involves a ton of explosives. Stream Osiris.


The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat (2024)

One of those great Soul Food/Steel Magnolia-style tearjerkers, The Supremes stars Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Sanaa Lathan, and Uzo Aduba as three middle-aged friends who've been through the wringer together. Following the three virtually from birth, we find them facing a seemingly endless number of twists and turns (unplanned pregnancy, cancer, alcoholism, and more) with a lot of heart and plenty of humor. Stream The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat.


Thelma (2024)

This delightful indie comedy stars the brilliant nonagenarian June Squibb (Nebraska) as Thelma Post, a woman living alone in Los Angeles—she's got a good relationship with her grandson, but finds his doting a bit much. Still, when a phone scammer cheats her our of $10,000 by claiming that Danny's been arrested, she refuses to take it lying down. The police won't do anything, so she gets hold of old friend Ben (the late Richard Roundtree) and a gun, and the two set off on a scooter to track down the scammer and get a little revenge. It's funny, but never gratuitously silly, and Squibb and Roundtree make for a fabulous cinematic pairing. Stream Thelma.


Longlegs (2024)

Oz Perkins, who more recently directed the Stephen King adaptation The Monkey, is the driving force behind this horror thriller starring Maika Monroe as a young FBI agent hunting the menacing serial killer known as Longlegs (Nicholas Cage). The murderer's trail has gone cold, but Agent Harker's seeming clairvoyance has put the two on a collision course, even though there's no evidence the suspect was ever even present at the killings for which he's apparently responsible. Stylish and nerve-jangling, with a predictably unhinged performance from Cage, it's a real killer. Stream Longlegs.


The Monkey (2025)

Speaking of The Monkey: Here's another Oz Perkins movie, just as deranged as Longlegs, but much funnier—well, if a series of increasingly gory deaths is your idea of a hoot. Theo James plays twin brothers haunted by a series of tragedies that befell them as children: A wind-up toy monkey belonging to their father revealed itself to be both protective and mean, a wind of its key leading it to initiate elaborate, deadly, Final Destination-esque scenarios. They threw the monkey down a well as kids, but that monkey was absolutely not going to stay down the well. The movie is incredibly gory, but almost cartoonishly so, and hints of heart reveal themselves through The Monkey's sick sense of humor. Stream The Monkey.


Sisu (2022)

A grizzled, broken-down lone prospector trudges across northern Finland during the last days of World War II, hoping to trade in his small gold stash in town. Some German soldiers heading out of the country decide that he's easy game—but it quickly becomes apparent that they've fucked with the wrong guy. Think John Wick, but with fewer assassins and more Nazis getting blown up real good. It's a ton of fun, and there's a sequel on the way. Stream Sisu.


A Complete Unknown (2024)

Another multiple Oscar nominee (though it didn't take home any prizes), A Complete Unknown comes from director James Mangold, whose resume includes award-season faves like Ford v Ferrari, Wolverine and Indiana Jones franchise movies, and another Oscar-winning musical biopic, Walk the Line. In this one, Timothée Chalamet stars as Bob Dylan alongside Ed Norton as Pete Seeger, with the narrative rotating around the moment in 1965 when Dylan went electric, scandalizing the Newport Folk Festival and leading fans to question whether the voice of his generation had sold out. Stream A Complete Unknown.


Fire Island (2022)

A queer, contemporary take on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Fire Island also takes aim at the overabundance of fat/femme/Asian stereotypes in the gay community. Social commentary aside, it's also a funny, smart romantic comedy with a great cast that includes Joel Kim Booster (in the Lizzy Bennett role—he also wrote the screenplay), Bowen Yang, Conrad Ricamora, and Margaret Cho as a group of friends who travel each summer to the titular island—but this summer proves more dramatic (and romantic) than most. Stream Fire Island.


Triangle of Sadness (2022)

One of the darkest (and funniest) satires of recent memory, Ruben Östlund's wild film feels like at least three movies in one, with narratives that take sharp right turns at unexpected moments, taking potshots at greed and skewering capitalism all the way. A memorable central section onboard a luxury cruise ship divided between the haves (passengers) and have-nots (the crew) climaxes in literal explosions of puke and shit. That's before a satisfying role-reversal inspired by Lord of the Flies. Brilliant and hilarious, if you've got the stomach for it. Stream Triangle of Sadness.


Presence (2024)

Steven Soderbergh's found-footage-esque psychological horror film doesn't have a lot of big scares for most of its runtime, something that's helpful to know going in. Instead, this is largely a drama about a damaged family from the perspective of the title's presence: The Payne family moves into a new home that's already occupied, and everything that we see is from the spirit's curious POV. Though its motives are unclear, the presence takes a special interest in daughter Chloe (Callina Liang), who's suffered the deaths of multiple friends and might be open to malign influences both worldly and otherwise. It's rather wonderfully chilling. Stream Presence.


Small Things Like These (2024)

Adapted from Claire Keegan's novella, Small Things Like These fictionally explores the real-life story and legacy of Ireland's Magdalene Laundries—a system of workhouses, run mostly by the Catholic Church and funded by the state, in which "fallen women" (broadly defined) would be involuntarily confined in order to provide cheap labor for the community. Children born to the confined women were typically put up for adoption at a profit for the institution. Here Cillian Murphy plays Bill Furlong, a quiet, unassuming coal merchant who witnesses things he ought not have, inadvertently running afoul of Sister Mary (Emily Watson)—she runs the local convent, as well as the school that Bill's five daughters attend, and she's all quiet menace in her implied threats. Absolutely chilling. Stream Small Things Like These.


Predator: Killer of Killers (2025)

A surprise drop from director Dan Trachtenberg, who saved the Predator franchise with Prey, the lushly animated Killer of Killers tells three distinct stories across three different time periods, with a conclusion that brings them all together: moments when, we learn, Predators had visited the Earth. The first sees a Viking warrior and her son leading an army against a rival clan, the second sees a hunter standing between rival sons of a samurai warlord in 1609 Japan, while the third involves a WWII dogfight with an unexpected rival. It's an appropriately and impressively lean and mean addition to the Predator mythos. Stream Killer of Killers.


Sally (2025)

It might seem excessively woke to acknowledge, in the year of our lord 2025, that Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, an astronaut and physicist, was also a gay woman in a 27-year-old relationship. But here we are. Ride felt that her work and career would suffer if she came out, and only did so less than a year before her 2012 death. Tam O'Shaughnessy, Ride's partner, provides the focus for this documentary that explores the trailblazer's work while also examining the personal and professional sacrifices that came as a result of needing to conceal so much of herself. Stream Sally.


Late Night With the Devil (2023)

The damn-near flawless evocation of 1970s talk show vibes gives Late Night much of its sense of purpose in the early going, before it gives way to a ghostly horror free-for-all in the back half. David Dastmalchian stars as the host of Night Owls with Jack Delroy, who spends his off hours at The Grove, an exclusive California spot for powerful men, and a place full of dark secrets. During a special Halloween broadcast in 1977, some of Jack's secrets are summoned into the open. Using found footage tricks—but not limited by them—it's a uniquely clever supernatural thriller. Stream Late Night with the Devil.


Perfect Days (2023)

Directed by Wim Wenders, Perfect Days represents a long-awaited narrative return to form for the director—it's easily a high point of his long film career, even with blessedly little plot to speak of. Kōji Yakusho plays Hirayama, a man in his 60s who follows the same routine every day: He wakes up in his modest apartment, grabs coffee from a vending machine, and sets out in his van to clean the public toilets of Tokyo. Perhaps it's a Japanese sensibility at play, but it's hard not to suspect that the American version of this film would come off as a melancholy tragedy; Hirayama's story, though, is joyful. It's a movie about appreciating the quiet beauty of everyday life, and the peace to be found in a beloved routing. It represents the first time that Japan ever submitted a film by a non-Japanese director for Oscar consideration. Stream Perfect Days.


Decision to Leave (2022)

Like most of writer/director Park Chan-wook's films (which include Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy, The Handmaiden), this one's tough to classify by genre. It alternately feels like a romance, a thriller, and a mystery—or all three at once. Insomniac detective Jang Hae-jun (Park Hae-il) doesn't miss a clue, until he starts to fall for (and then become obsessed with, Vertigo-style) a recently widowed woman (Tang Wei) who doesn't seem all that upset about her husband's seemingly accidental death. The mysterious and gorgeously directed film won Park Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival back in 2022. Stream Decision to Leave.


Alien: Romulus (2024)

An impressive return to xenomorph country from Fede Álvarez (Don't Breathe), Alien: Romulus proves that there's still a fair bit of life in this long-in-the-ovipositor franchise. An orphaned colonist on a relentlessly grim planet is, along with her friends, a virtual indentured servant to the ubiquitous Weyland-Yutani corporation—but there's an abandoned space station containing cryostasis equipment that would allow them to survive a journey away from the hellhole where they live and work. You might have guessed by now that the space station isn't entirely abandoned. Álvarez and company bring real horror back to the franchise, along with the evergreen reminder that major corporations are far eviler than hungry aliens. Stream Alien: Romulus.


The Contestant (2023)

In 1998, Tomoaki Hamatsu was cast on the new Japanese reality show Susunu! Denpa Shōnen. He was challenged to stay alone in his apartment, with no food or clothing, and survive only on what he could win from magazine contests. At various points, he would survive on uncooked rice (having no pots), or on dog food, or on soda. His only companion was a stuffed animal that he won. The show went on for a year, and became one of the most popular shows on the air, unbeknownst to Hamatsu. This documentary explores our reality fixation from both sides, as well as exploring the long and difficult transition back to normal life for someone who didn't even know that he was a star. Stream The Contestant.


Oddity (2024)

A wonderfully atmospheric—and often genuinely scary—Irish horror import, the movie kicks off with a tense murder in a country house that raises a number of questions for the dead woman's twin sister—like, is the formal mental patient believed to have committed the murder actually the guilty party? There are some great twists and turns here and it genuinely sticks the landing, not a given even among great thrillers. Stream Oddity.


The Sound of Music (1965)

A charmingly goofy nun-in-training gets a job at the home of an Austrian aristocrat, which would be just about enough of a premise for many a classic music. But what starts out as a very hummable sing-a-long takes a dark turn as the shadow of Nazi Germany comes to loom over our increasingly endangered family. That genuine threat elevates Julie Andrews' breakout into something as meaningful, and timely, as it is fun. One of cinema's finest musicals from legendary director Robert Wise. Stream The Sound of Music.

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The 25 Best Apple TV+ Original Movies Everyone Should Watch

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Though relatively new on the Hollywood scene (its first movie was released in 2019), Apple TV+'s slate of original films already includes everything from charming indies, to blockbuster fare, to award-winning prestige pictures. It was even the first streamer to win the Best Picture Oscar, for 2021's CODA.

Below, you'll find a sampling of the studio's best offerings so far, with something for every viewer. You might be excused for thinking many of them were typical theatrical releases—and some did hit theaters first—but strictly speaking, they are all Apple TV+ originals.

All of You (2025)

In the not-too-distant future, Soul Connex claims that it can match you with your one true love. This Black Mirror-esque premise finds Laura (Imogen Poots) signing up and taking the test with the reluctant encouragement of her college bestie, Simon (Ted Lasso's Brett Goldstein, also the co-writer). Matched with a guy named Lukas, she eventually marries and starts a family with her soulmate, but Simon never quite gets over his feelings for Laura. And, as years go by, Laura begins to wonder about the road not taken. It's not required homework, but the movie is something of a spin-off of the short-lived 2020 series Soulmates, an anthology of stories set in the same fictional world; All of You takes the same core premise in a new direction. Stream All of You.


Highest 2 Lowest (2025)

Spike Lee is a certified cinematic genius, but it seems he makes the kinds of movies that don't play in theaters anymore. His previous release, the war epic Da 5 Bloods, went straight to Netflix five years ago, and this new one, a remake of Japanese director Akira Kurosawa's noir-influenced High and Low, dropped on Apple TV+ after a cursory theatrical run. I'm not sure what it says about the state of the film industry that one of our best directors, paired with one of our most bankable stars in Denzel Washington, can't command a wide release, but here we are. Wherever you watch it, the film is a corker. Washington plays David King, a music mogul who receives a call from kidnappers who claim to have his son. King moves heaven and Earth to collect the millions he'll ned to pay the ransom—only to discover that there's been a mix-up, and the kidnappers actually have taken the son of his driver (Jeffrey Wright). King has to decide: Is saving the chauffeur's kid worth it? It's based on a 1959 Ed McBain novel, and after two adaptations, it's still a compelling premise. Stream Highest 2 Lowest.


Fancy Dance (2023)

Lily Gladstone follows up her Oscar-nominated performance in Killers of the Flower Moon with an equally impressive turn from Seneca-Cayuga filmmaker Erica Tremblay, making her feature directorial debut. Gladstone plays Jax, a queer Cayuga woman living on an Oklahoma reservation with her niece Roki (Isabel Deroy-Olson). Jax's sister (and Roki's mother) disappeared weeks ago, but neither tribal police nor the FBI are willing to take it seriously, given the family's troubled history. Child protective services tries to place Roki into the custody of her estranged white grandfather and his second wife, an arrangement that neither of the young women is comfortable with. The two set out on a dangerous journey to the tribal powwow in Oklahoma City—the FBI that wouldn't take their concerns seriously before are suddenly very interested in finding the two, who are also forced to evade local law enforcement and even ICE. It's not an entirely joyful narrative, but there is a powerful message about the power of community and family in the face of even the most oppressive external forces. Stream Fancy Dance.


The Lost Bus (2025)

The title might not suggest high-tension survival drama, but this film from director Paul Greengrass (United 93, Captain Phillips) is full of harrowing moments. The 2018 Camp Fire in Northern California's Butte County was, and remains, the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history, and here we revisit the true story of Kevin McKay (Matthew McConaughey), a down-on-his luck bus driver who reroutes his bus to pick up a bunch of school kids and their teacher (America Ferrera) trapped behind the fire line. McConaughey and Ferrera are great, but the movie excels in its sense of a roadtrip through an initially familiar environment that increasingly comes to feel like a descent into hell. Stream The Lost Bus.


F1 (2025)

Fair warning on this one: it's an Apple original, but co-distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures. What that means for streaming viewers is that, while it is available on Apple TV+, there is a rental/purchase fee while it's still lingering in theaters. It's worth it, though, reuniting much of the behind-the-scenes talent from Top Gun: Maverick (including director Joseph Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer) for a movie equally obsessed with going very fast. Brad Pitt plays Sonny Hayes, once at the top of his game as a race car driver, but whose career hit an oil slick following a nasty crash. He'a approached by a struggling team owner (Javier Bardem) who is convinced that Sonny might be just the guy to put them back on track—literally. The movie was made in full cooperation with Formula One, on real circuits and with actual participants, and Kosinski stages the races with a real sense of verisimilitude that still impresses, even on a small screen. Stream F1.


Blitz (2024)

British director Steve McQueen (Hunger, 12 Years a Slave, Widows) takes on the Blitz in this historical drama that's rousingly old-fashioned while also being revisionist in its willingness to upend our notions of the fighting spirit of British civilians during World War II. Saoirse Ronan plays Rita, single mom to a biracial son—her Grenadian partner was hounded by racists until he was forced to leave the country. She's a factory worker and a singer, struggling to survive in London's East End, where the poor are offered less protection than those in better-off parts of the city, and a single mother with a biracial child is treated a bit less well than that. It's not an entirely downbeat movie, and it's full of uplifting moments, but it's also not afraid to suggest that the Blitz of 1940 wasn't all "Keep Calm and Carry On." Stream Blitz.


Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost (2025)

Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara burst onto the comedy scene way back in 1963, first with appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, and then as a nightclub act who showed up frequently on TV variety shows. Their blended background was novel at the time (both were from New York City, but he was Jewish and she was raised Irish Catholic, a contrast that became part of the act. Their comedy was a blend of era-appropriate corn with some genuinely groundbreaking bits, including their "I Hate You!" sketch, which freshened up old bickering-couple vaudeville material for a more easily scandalized TV audience. Ben Stiller (joined by sister Amy Stiller) directs this documentary about the lives and legacies of the legendary duo and, if it's not exactly warts-and-all, it does make clear that nothing was ever guaranteed in the careers and personal lives of these two talented, but incredibly strong-willed, artists. Stream Stiller & Meara.


Echo Valley (2025)

Julianne Moore is joined by Sydney Sweeney in this twisty thriller that also includes Domhnall Gleeson, Kyle MacLachlan, and Fiona Shaw. Moore plays horse trainer Kate Garrett, living on a farm in southern Pennsylvania dealing with a recently deceased wife and also a deeply troubled daughter, Claire (Sweeney) who mostly only shows up when she sees money. This time around, she's brought a sketchy boyfriend and a drug dealer to whom she owes money. Without giving too much away: Someone winds up dead, but not the person we're expecting, and it quickly starts to look like Claire isn't quite the timid, damaged soul she appears to be. Moore is fab, as usual. Stream Echo Valley.


Fly Me to the Moon (2024)

The sort of goofy rom-com that they don't make anymore (or so it's said), Fly Me to the Moon rides on the strong chemistry between leads Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum, as well as a premise so outrageous that it just about works. Tatum is Cole Davis, a (fictional) NASA launch director during the Apollo 11 era. He finds himself saddled with Johansson's Kelly Jones, a slightly unscrupulous marketer publicly charged with helping to sell the public on the importance of a Moon landing. But she has a secret mission as well: She's charged with preparing a fake landing video to air if the real one fails. These two lock horns as the actual launch approaches, with Kelly coming to question her methods in the face of true-believer Cole. Director Greg Berlanti, best known for about a million DC Comics TV shows, follows up 2018's Love, Simon. Stream Fly Me to the Moon.


Fountain of Youth (2025)

A glossy and fun (if middling) entry in the Guy Ritchie oeuvre, Fountain of Youth plays as a diverting Indiana Jones pastiche, with some more overt fantastic elements in the style of National Treasure or its closest analogue, The Librarian series. John Krasinski stars as Luke Purdue, a roguish disgraced archaeologist not above stealing art treasures that he and his team (including Domhnall Gleeson's wealthy backer Owen Carver) believe contain clues as to the location of the title's mythical fountain—which is, perhaps, not a myth. Luke's sister Charlotte (Natalie Portman) gave up the action-archaeology lifestyle in favor of a job as a curator at the British museum, but is soon convinced to jump into the adventure. It's full of the kind of spry globe-trotting action that's thoroughly diverting, even if you're unlikely to give it much thought when it's over. Stream Fountain of Youth.


Deaf President Now! (2025)

A key moment in the disability rights movement, and an absolute thunderstroke for the Deaf community, the Deaf President Now! movement at Gallaudet University in 1988 isn't always discussed or well-understood outside of Deaf circles. And so, like the movement it chronicles, this documentary's time has definitely come. Gallaudet was founded in 1864 to serve Deaf students, but for the first 124 years of its existence the school had been overseen by hearing presidents, chosen by a board of trustees made up almost exclusively of hearing people. When that board chose yet another hearing leader—the well-meaning and largely qualified Elisabeth Zinser—students decided they'd had enough. While it's easy to look at the moment as a triumph given the outcome, the rather brilliantly done doc follows the events moment by moment, focusing on four very different students and an extremely turbulent week during which the campus was locked down in the face of opposition from the board and its chair, who never seemed to understand why Deaf people would want a Deaf president. Stream Deaf President Now!.


Lulu Is a Rhinoceros (2025)

An adaptation of the children’s book by the father-daughter writing duo Jason and Allison Flom, Lulu stars Auliʻi Cravalho (Moana) in the title role. Whenever Lulu looks in the mirror, she sees a rhinoceros, and feels like a rhinoceros—but everyone else sees a bulldog. With a bit of help from her bestie Hip Hop the bunny (Utkarsh Ambudkar) and Flom Flom the tickbird (Dulé Hill), she begins a journey of self-acceptance, and of learning not to always rely on validation from others. Leland provides the cute and catchy songs for this 47-minute movie for preschoolers and their families. Stream Lulu is a Rhinoceros.


The Gorge (2025)

Miles Teller, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Sigourney Weaver star in this sci-fi/action/romance that became Apple TV's most-streamed movie launch ever upon its February release. Teller and Taylor-Joy play snipers tasked by a mysterious woman (Weaver) with guarding two sides of the title's gorge: He's a former U.S. Marine with symptoms of PTSD, she's a Lithuanian covert operative with a dying father. The two are to stand watch for a year in complete isolation to ensure that nothing comes out of the gorge. Things get complicated when the bored snipers start sending each other messages, increasing their communication until they start to question just what it is that they're meant to be guarding. Stream The Gorge.


Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)

Though it didn't take home Oscar gold (let's put Lily Gladstone in more movies, please), Martin Scorsese's latest has more than proven that the octogenarian filmmaker hasn't lost a step. A story of creeping dread and existential terror in the American west, it chronicles the injustices that follow the discovery of oil on Osage tribal land in the 1920s. A good thing quickly goes bad when white political leaders plot a string of murders to keep the wealth staying where they think it belongs. The film might have gone deeper in presenting the true story from its natural Indigenous perspective, but the finished product still represents an important and harrowing story well told. Stream Killers of the Flower Moon.


Come From Away (2021)

A full cinematic adaptation of this musical about the events that unfolded at a rural airport on 9/11 was in the works before the pandemic put a stop to them. Thus, a special stage production was mounted using members of the original cast, filmed before an audience of 9/11 survivors and frontline workers. While it's impossible to know what that other version might have been like, this one is probably better. The musical, which opened on Broadway in 2017, takes place in the Newfoundland town of Gander following the 2001 attacks. Gander had once been a major refueling hub, but that changed over time, leaving the town with an enormous airport and relatively little traffic—until airplanes were diverted there in the wake of the terrorist attacks. The stranded plane passengers briefly more than doubled the town's population, and Gander leaders and residents pulled out all the stops to care for the unexpected guests. Based on a true story, the show has a smart sense of humor and, while it's not cynical, it never succumbs to schmaltz either. Stream Come From Away.


Wolfs (2024)

Jon Watts steps away from Marvel's Spider-Man movies to direct this action comedy led by George Clooney and Brad Pitt; it's still a little hard to process that we're in a world where two A-list stars would get paired with a director whose grosses are in the multiple billions, and yet we're direct-to-streaming (technically, this did get a one-week pro forma theatrical release). Regardless, the finished product is quite fun: Amy Ryan plays Margaret, a Manhattan District Attorney who meets a young man in a bar who ends up dead(-ish) in her hotel room. She contacts a fixer (Clooney) to help clean up the mess and keep her out of trouble. Meanwhile, the hotel's owner (voiced by Frances McDormand) witnesses much of what went on, and has brought in a person of her own (Pitt) to protect her hotel from blowback. The two very solitary fixers are forced to work together, and, naturally, things get increasingly complicated: The dead young man isn't entirely dead, as it happens, but was involved in shenanigans that include drugs and the Albanian mafia. Stream Wolfs.


Louis Armstrong's Black & Blues (2022)

Sacha Jenkins does an awful lot right in this biographical documentary about the American jazz legend, starting by offering new and archival interviews with musicians who've been influenced by Satchmo and his art: Wynton Marsalis, Miles Davis, Amiri Baraka, Ossie Davis, etc. But what he really gets right is in allowing Armstrong to tell his own story—the legend kept shelves worth of diaries on reel-to-reel tape, and it's quickly clear that there's no one better suited to tell his story, his instantly recognizable voice offering frank insights that no one else could. It's a love letter to the jazz giant—one that, smartly, doesn't try to smooth out the rough edges. Stream Black & Blues.


Cha Cha Real Smooth (2022)

You might have missed Cooper Raiff's 2020 indie Shithouse, a movie that earned great reviews on a $15,000 budget but couldn't overcome its unfortunate title. His follow-up, Cha Cha Real Smooth, got a bit more attention. Andrew is a bar/bat mitzvah party planner who falls for Domino, a mom 10 years his senior (Dakota Johnson). It's occasionally cloying, but Raiff's complex script and range of characters make for a charming movie from a filmmaker to keep an eye on. Stream Cha Cha Real Smooth.


Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie (2023)

The easy route would have been a tearjerking portrait of an inspirational figure—a one-time Hollywood golden boy bravely facing life with a debilitating illness. There's a bit of that in this documentary, but whenever that mood does overtake the film, it feels earned. Director Davis Guggenheim documents Fox's life with a thematic narrative through-line (an actor who could never be still in body or mind now struggles to do just that), even as it refuses to shy away from the knocks and bruises that attend any life with Parkinson's, nor from Fox's own complicated personality. The film works best when dealing with the overlaps, and disconnects, between Fox as a person and Fox as a public face of Parkinson's. Stream Still.


CODA (2021)

While I'm not sure it was the most worthy Best Picture Oscar winner, that doesn't detract from CODA as a charming and altogether likable film about Ruby (Emilia Jones), a young musician who is the only hearing member of her family. She struggles with the demands of the family's fishing business even as she discovers a passion for singing and a new boyfriend. The premise involves a worn and silly trope about Deaf people not understanding music, but it also depicts its characters as capable, complicated community leaders with actual sex lives. Emilia Jones is great in the lead, as are Marlee Matlin and Oscar-winner Troy Katsur as her parents. Stream CODA.


Napoleon (2023)

Sandwiched between 2021's superior The Last Duel and Gladiator 2, Ridley Scott's 2023 somewhat-accurate biopic about the one-time emperor of France proves his is the only name in town when it comes to historical epics. The shorter, theatrical version of this one is a slightly muddled affair, turning on a sly, subtly comedic lead performance from Joaquin Phoenix while also building to a number of massive, more traditional set pieces (Scott smartly doesn't ask us to be overly enamored of the man himself). When it works, it offers up the old-fashioned thrills of a gorgeously designed period drama, with the types of grand battle sequences that we don't get in a world where every movie fight involves superheroes and spaceships. The director's cut (my preferred version), also on Apple TV+, is, surprisingly, sharper and funnier—but it adds nearly an hour to an already-long movie, so manage your time accordingly. Stream the theatrical cut here, or the longer director's cut here.


The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)

Joel Coen's sole (thus far) solo directing project represents a bold choice: a beautiful, strikingly minimalist adaptation of the Scottish play—lean and mean in its production and its impact. Only a director of Coen's confidence would mount a production like this without feeling the need to reinvent the wheel, letting Shakespeare dialogue and the performances of Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand do the heavy lifting. During the 2021/22 awards season, it received far more nominations than wins, but still stands as one of the best cinematic takes on Macbeth since Kurosawa's Throne of Blood. Stream The Tragedy of Macbeth.


Wolfwalkers (2020)

Robyn Goodfellowe is apprenticed to her father as a hunter, the two of them traveling to Ireland to wipe out the last of the land’s wolves. Going off on her own, she encounters a free-spirited girl who needs Robyn’s help to find her mother; the girl’s tribe is rumored to have the ability to change into wolves, and Robyn’s alliance with her new friends threatens her relationship with her father. This stunningly hand-drawn animated film received a well-deserved Oscar nomination, and follows a thematic trilogy that began with the same filmmakers' The Secret of Kells (2009) and Song of the Sea (2014). They're all independent of one another story-wise, but if you love this one, you'll undoubtedly enjoy all three. Stream Wolfwalkers.


Hala (2019)

Most audiences seemed to overlook Apple's first original narrative movie when it was released back in 2019, and that's too bad. Written and directed by Minhal Baig, a native of Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood, the movie has a distinctive sense of place, particularly for anyone who grew up in the Chicago area. But its primary strength is as a smart, sensitive coming-of-age story. Geraldine Viswanathan plays the title's Hala Masood, a teenager from a strict Muslim family who falls for a non-Muslim boy at school, setting up a conflict that also brings a few family secrets out into the open. Stream Hala.


Bono: Stories of Surrender (2025)

Filmmaker Andrew Dominik (Killing Them Softly, Blonde) documents Bono's 2023 one-man show at the Beacon Theatre in New York City. That show included selections from his memoir, alongside performance of newly arranged U2 songs to complement the text. As a means of telling the performer's life story, this is far more dramatic, and cinematic, than a typical documentary—Bono has the same flair when reading as when singing, and director Dominik's rather gorgeous cinematography is easy on the eyes. There's also a fully immersive version if you're an Apple Vision Pro user. Stream Stories of Surrender.

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