Entertainment

The 25 Best Movies on Netflix to Stream Right Now

The great conundrum of the streaming age is that dozens, if not hundreds, of movies are available at your fingertips to stream—but it can be extremely hard to decide on the best movies on Netflix. Let this list be your guide as you navigate Netflix’s catalog of feature films. These 25 movies feature something for everyone—science fiction, romance, Channing Tatum, Tom Cruise, and Anna Kendrick. From some of the best movies of recent years to a few stone-cold classics, you’re sure to find plenty worth checking out without wasting half your life on a never-ending scroll.

Ali

Release Year: 2001

Director: Michael Mann

Notable Cast: Will Smith, Jon Voight, Jamie Foxx

If all biopics of legendary sports figures were as intense, intelligent, and well cast as Michael Mann’s take on the life of Muhammad Ali, the biopic would have a much better reputation than it currently does. Back in 2001, Will Smith was still mostly known as the July Fourth weekend blockbuster guy. His transformation into the legendarily loquacious and opinionated boxer changed how audiences, and especially critics, saw him. Mann finds plenty to work with when it comes to his traditional themes of tortured masculinity and self-determination, and the film also has a few great supporting performances, including a Jamie Foxx turn that also announced his intentions to level up from sitcom comedian to dramatic film actor.

American Psycho

Release Year: 2000

Director: Mary Harron

Notable Cast: Christian Bale, Reese Witherspoon, Jared Leto

Before he was Bruce Wayne, Christian Bale played another handsome, rich urbanite who was concealing a secret dark side. In Mary Harron’s clever, unsettling, and utterly brash adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’s novel, Bale plays Patrick Bateman: investment banker by day, bloodthirsty killer by night, Phil Collins fan pretty much always. American Psycho is both a satire of the unrepentant greed and materialism of the Reagan ’80s as well as a horror movie about what happens when greed and materialism take human form. Depending on how you see the movie, Patrick Bateman is either a metaphor for the terrifyingly amoral id of American capitalism, or the actual embodiment of it. Either way, Harron and Bale team up for an over-the-top portrait of a killer like you’ve never seen.

Burning

Release Year: 2018

Director: Lee Chang-dong

Notable Cast: Yoo Ah-in, Jeon Jong-seo, Steven Yeun

Director Lee Chang-dong crafts an insidious psychological thriller out of what first seems to be a story of young love. Yoo Ah-in plays a young man who falls for a girl (Jeon Jong-seo) shortly before she leaves South Korea for a trip to Africa and returns with…not exactly a boyfriend, but he’s played by Steven Yeun, so you can see why Yoo’s character would feel threatened. What follows is a game of psychological paranoia, unreliable perceptions, and possible murder. Yeun in particular gets to dig into his role as a plausible villain, making cryptic threats (or are they?) while seeming unnervingly charming. It’s one of his best performances.

Captain Phillips

Release Year: 2013

Director: Paul Greengrass

Notable Cast: Tom Hanks, Barkhad Abdi

The meme that emerged from this movie was Abdi’s pirate character saying, “I’m the captain now.” But there is truly so much more to Captain Phillips than that. Based on the real-life story of an American cargo ship that was hijacked by Somali pirates, the film stars Hanks as the titular captain straddling the line between reassuring competence and all-too-human vulnerability. It’s one of his best performances in a long and very impressive career, and the fact that he somehow didn’t get an Oscar nomination for it is one of life’s great puzzlers. Regardless, Greengrass tells a gripping story, and when all that tension releases at the very end, Hanks delivers something special.

Easy A

Release Year: 2010

Director: Will Gluck

Notable Cast: Emma Stone, Patricia Clarkson, Stanley Tucci

Before she became a two-time best-actress winner, Emma Stone had one of her big breakthrough roles with this teen comedy about a high schooler who pretends to have sex with her gay bestie only to end up with a promiscuous reputation. Hey, look, it was 2010. This was considered edgy. The story, loosely—very loosely—based on The Scarlet Letter, is good enough for basic teen comedy fare, but Stone’s performance greatly elevates it. It’s absolute, must-see, Winona-in-Heathers–, Alicia-in-Clueless–level stuff. Whether she’s singing in the shower, telling off some idiot classmate, or feeling romantic feelings for the high school mascot (Penn Badgley), she’s every bit a movie star.

Edge of Tomorrow

Release Year: 2014

Director: Doug Liman

Notable Cast: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt

The last 15 years of Tom Cruise’s career have been an extended Mission: Impossible stunt spectacular, with one Top Gun: Maverick thrown in there just to show off. But the best movie he made in that span happens to be a film that underperformed at the box office and remains an underrated gem. Doug Liman’s Edge of Tomorrow (sometimes known as Live Die Repeat) is a crackling sci-fi action movie where Cruise’s character must keep traveling back through time in order to partner with a super-soldier (Emily Blunt) to save the world from an alien invasion. It’s a clever action flick with a pair of A+ star turns from Cruise and Blunt—and is easy to recommend if you’re looking for something fun and engaging on a Saturday night.

The Equalizer 3

Release Year: 2023

Director: Antoine Fuqua

Notable Cast: Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning

There are plenty of reasons to see The Equalizer 3, most of them having to do with how good Denzel Washington is at this kind of no-fuss, crowd-pleasing action movie. Or how well he and director Antoine Fuqua tend to work together after films like The Magnificent Seven and Training Day (not to mention the previous two Equalizer films). But the sneakily best reason to fire up The Equalizer 3 is that it features the reunion of Denzel with Dakota Fanning, 20 years after they both starred in Tony Scott’s Man on Fire.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Release Year: 2004

Director: Michel Gondry

Notable Cast: Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet, Tom Wilkinson, Kirsten Dunst

Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich) won an Oscar for this story of a heartbroken man (Carrey) who undergoes an experimental procedure to remove all memories of his ex-girlfriend (Winslet) from his mind…only to change his mind halfway through the procedure. Kaufman’s typically biting comedy is tempered by a kind of wistful romance, as Carrey fights to rescue the good parts of a love that ended badly. If you’re in the right mood for it, Eternal Sunshine just might be the best love story of the 21st century.

Frances Ha

Release Year: 2013

Director: Noah Baumbach

Notable Cast: Greta Gerwig, Mickey Sumner, Michael Zegen

One of Greta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach’s earliest collaborations as screenwriters (Baumbach directed) was this contemporary black-and-white story about a young woman (Gerwig) trying to deal with the fact that she’s seemingly the last person her age to figure her life out. In what would become a hallmark of Gerwig’s future work, she manages to pull off story beats and character traits that might otherwise come off as twee or annoying by committing hard to finding insight and compassion in Frances’s story. The supporting cast is killer, with places of prominence taken by Mickey Sumner as Frances’s estranged best friend and Michael Zegen as her star-crossed would-be love interest. But Adam Driver, Grace Gummer, and Charlotte d’Amboise get great scenes to play as well.

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

Release Year: 2022

Director: Rian Johnson

Notable Cast: Daniel Craig, Janelle Monáe, Edward Norton, Kate Hudson

Rian Johnson followed up his hilarious and clever 2019 film, Knives Out, with a brand-new Benoit Blanc mystery that, true to its title, put the mystery right out into the open for anyone observant enough to see it. As a storytelling device, it was a bold move, but it announced that Johnson would be relying on a stellar cast to keep the audience hopping from one foot to the next. That they did, from Janelle Monáe’s double dip as twin antagonists, to Kate Hudson and Dave Bautista as two different flavors of empty-headed influencer, to Kathryn Hahn and Leslie Odom Jr. as guilt-ridden acolytes—and especially Edward Norton as the film’s detestably ludicrous tech billionaire. Even if you’re not up to the challenge of solving the mystery, Glass Onion is a hoot and a half, one of the best times to be had on your couch.

Godzilla Minus One

Release Year: 2023

Director: Takashi Yamazaki

Notable Cast: Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Munetaka Aoki

If you’re already a Godzilla fan, Takashi Yamazaki’s origin story offers a fresh take that doesn’t sacrifice on action. If you’re not all that into Godzilla movies, definitely try this one out. There is a very low bar to entry here, as well as an incredibly user-friendly story and characters that are easy to invest in even if you’re not obsessing over Godzilla lore. At a time when action-blockbuster franchises are losing their steam left and right, it’s thrilling to watch such a venerated property rejuvenate itself simply by making a no-frills picture with a compellingly human story.

His Three Daughters

Release Year: 2024

Director: Azazel Jacobs

Notable Cast: Carrie Coon, Elizabeth Olsen, Natasha Lyonne

Three sisters divided by family alignment and longstanding resentments must coexist in a cramped Lower East Side apartment to care for their father in his dying days. All three actors are at the absolute top of their game as the sisters’ personalities clash and their grief bubbles over, but Jacobs’s script also gives all three characters ample moments of humanity and humor. Catharsis doesn’t come easy in His Three Daughters, which ends up feeling more satisfying when the emotional crescendo hits. (Yeah, you’ll probably cry.)

Hit Man

Release Year: 2024

Director: Richard Linklater

Notable Cast: Glen Powell, Adria Arjona

It’s an onslaught of charm as Richard Linklater reteams with his Everybody Wants Some!! actor Glen Powell for a wildly clever, funny, sexy crowd-pleaser that bowled over audiences at last year’s film festivals. Powell plays a college professor who moonlights with the New Orleans PD and gets roped into pretending to be a killer-for-hire for a sting operation. His character proves to be quite good at faking it, which gets him in deep with Adria Arjona, playing a beautiful prospective client. Linklater knows how to keep a light, propulsive tone, while Powell is walking the line between cocky bravado and winking charm better than anyone in movies today.

Logan Lucky

Release Year: 2017

Director: Steven Soderbergh

Notable Cast: Channing Tatum, Adam Driver, Riley Keough, Daniel Craig

There are some Steven Soderbergh films that operate like a Swiss watch, and there are some that are all the more charming for their shagginess. Logan Lucky seems like it ought to be the former, since it’s about brothers Channing Tatum and Adam Driver planning a heist at the Charlotte Motor Speedway. But in fact, it’s the latter, full of ace supporting players (Daniel Craig as an incarcerated break-in expert; Riley Keough as the Logan boys’ sister-slash-accomplice), silly comedy, hairpin plot twists, and the greatest Game of Thrones joke you’ve ever seen.

Magic Mike XXL

Release Year: 2015

Director: Gregory Jacobs

Notable Cast: Channing Tatum, Jada Pinkett Smith, Joe Manganiello

Steven Soderbergh’s first Magic Mike movie was a canny blend of fleshy pleasures and the hard realities of the 2010s economy. It was a great movie with some great performances and a smart script. Yet Magic Mike XXL ditches all that economic angst for a male stripper road trip odyssey to Myrtle Beach—the best decision made for a movie sequel this side of Mad Max Fury Road. Tatum, Manganiello, Adam Rodriguez, Matt Bomer, and Kevin Nash have by this point attained a familial chemistry that is absolutely unbeatable, and new characters played by the likes of Jada Pinkett Smith and Andie MacDowell provide for some sexy, fun, feisty encounters. This movie includes the single best mini-mart scene of all time. I’m not sure what else you need.

Marriage Story

Release Year: 2019

Director: Noah Baumbach

Notable Cast: Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson, Laura Dern

After spending the early years of his career making acidic movies about the failures of family and the insufferability of Brooklyn academics, Noah Baumbach made a few movies with his now wife, Greta Gerwig, and came out the other end a more empathetic, wise, and generous filmmaker. There are still sharp edges in Marriage Story, such as when Driver’s character cuts his estranged wife to the quick by telling her she’s just like her mother. But Marriage Story is also a warm and forgiving film about the end of marriage, the courtroom sharks whom exes set upon each other (Laura Dern won a well-deserved Oscar, but Ray Liotta and Alan Alda do A+ work here as well), and the ways that people hold on to family even after a marriage is over.

May December

Release Year: 2023

Director: Todd Haynes

Notable Cast: Natalie Portman, Julianne Moore, Charles Melton

Popular fascination with the subjects of trashy tabloid scandals is only one of the many themes at work in Todd Haynes’s latest film. Natalie Portman plays an actor whose next role will be a Mary Kay Letourneau–esque figure, so she goes to visit this woman (Julianne Moore) and her family more than 20 years after the scandal in order to do research for her performance. This one was all over year-end top 10 lists and awards ballots, with Portman and Moore delivering some of their best work and Charles Melton giving a true breakthrough performance in what’s easily one of the best newer movies on Netflix.

Midnight Run

Release Year: 1988

Director: Martin Brest

Notable Cast: Robert De Niro, Charles Grodin

Movies where a hard-boiled dramatic actor proves himself to be just as adept at comedy are gifts, and Midnight Run certainly qualifies. Robert De Niro stars as a bounty hunter who needs to transport a neurotic mob accountant (Grodin) across the country to Los Angeles, leading to a buddy comedy that is still cited by filmmakers and critics as a perfect example of the genre. The supporting cast is a character-actor bonanza, featuring the likes of Joe Pantoliano, Dennis Farina, Philip Baker Hall, and Yaphet Kotto. In other words, it’s dad-movie perfection.

The Nest

Release Year: 2020

Director: Sean Durkin

Notable Cast: Jude Law, Carrie Coon

Sean Durkin—who just directed Zac Efron in The Iron Claw—has a knack for bringing spooky vibes to non-spooky stories, and he uses that ability to great effect in The Nest. Jude Law and Carrie Coon play a married couple in the ’80s who move to England so that Law can make a splash in the markets (he absolutely does not make a splash in the markets). Stranded all day in a half-empty country house, Coon watches her husband fail and her children become strangers to her, which is when the real emotional fireworks start. Coon brings a barbed and combative energy to her character, while Law is fascinating as a man who’s fighting a losing battle with capitalism and the sense of worth he can only get from being a man with money. It’s a top-notch psychological drama that sometimes feels like a haunted-house movie, only the ghosts are 1980s capitalism.

No Hard Feelings

Release Year: 2023

Director: Gene Stupnitsky

Notable Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Andrew Barth Feldman

It’s not exactly a surprise that Jennifer Lawrence turns out to be incredible at broad comedy. But it’s still a hilarious thrill to watch her tear into a role like this one. She plays a Long Island townie who needs to make some extra money, so a rich couple pays her to date their sheltered 19-year-old son so that he’s not a complete antisocial disaster when he enters Princeton in the fall. The son is played by breakthrough talent Andrew Barth Feldman, and he and Lawrence have tremendously sweet comedic chemistry with each other in one of the best comedy movies on Netflix. No Hard Feelings rides the line of friend-com and rom-com, but it’s so winning, and Lawrence’s beachfront naked fight scene is worth a stream all on its own.

Oldboy

Release Year: 2003

Director: Park Chan-wook

Notable Cast: Choi Min-sik, Yoo Ji-tae, Kang Hye-jung

Revenge is a dish best served in the most messed-up, psychologically damaging way possible in Park Chan-wook’s groundbreaking film. Park combines the grimy aesthetic of a crime drama with the elaborate cruelty of a horror movie. That, mixed with the perverse psycho-thriller aspect of the twist, makes for a movie that has been oft-imitated over the last 20 years, but never quite duplicated. (Apologies to Spike Lee’s unfortunately lifeless 2013 remake.) If you don’t know where this movie is headed, do yourself a favor and watch it immediately before you get spoiled.

Rebel Ridge

Release Year: 2024

Director: Jeremy Saulnier

Notable Cast: Aaron Pierre, Don Johnson

Aaron Pierre delivers a star-making lead performance in this crime thriller about a former Marine who travels to the South to post bail for his cousin, only to have racist Louisiana cops steal his money. Director Jeremy Saulnier is one of American cinema’s true hidden gems, having delivered banger movies on the subject of revenge (Blue Ruin), the occult (Hold the Dark), and fighting your way out of a Nazi rock show (Green Room), with all three unfolding in ways you never quite expect them to. Critics and viewers yearning for a return to the classic mid-budget crime thriller were over the moon about this one.

RRR

Release Year: 2022

Director: S.S. Rajamouli

Notable Cast: N.T. Rama Rao Jr., Ram Charan

This record-breaking Indian action epic was an Oscar winner last year for best original song, thanks to one of the most eye-popping, energetic musical numbers in years: “Naatu Naatu.” And the music is only part of the appeal for this movie, which tells an oversized story about brotherhood and revolution and features action scenes in which a tiger just comes flying right at the screen. There are set pieces in this movie that will have you breaking out in applause in your living room. In terms of international action blockbusters that have hit big in the United States, this is a singular achievement; nothing else in America is remotely like this film.

Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit

Release Year: 2005

Director: Nick Park, Steve Box

Notable Cast: Peter Sallis, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter

The latest Nick Park–directed animated adventure for the beloved pair of Wallace and Gromit will hit Netflix in early 2025. The stop-motion animated pair—Wallace is a human inventor, Gromit is his dog companion—were a favorite of audiences and Oscar voters for years before the Academy finally gave Park and Box the Oscar in 2006 for best animated film for this film. A plague of vandalized vegetable gardens lead the titular pair to a giant, ravenous bunny rabbit in a parody of classic monster movies, all with that signature Aardman Animations style you can also find in films like Chicken Run and Shaun the Sheep.

Woman of the Hour

Release Year: 2024

Director: Anna Kendrick

Notable Cast: Anna Kendrick, Daniel Zovatto

Kendrick made her directorial debut in confident fashion with this cleverly constructed crime thriller. The true-life story of California serial killer Rodney Alcala is told via a split structure, with part of the movie following Alcala’s terrifying killing spree, and the other half centered on Cheryl (Kendrick), a struggling actress who takes a gig as the bachelorette on The Dating Game. There, her story ultimately converges with Alcala’s, who is one of the three eligible bachelors. Kendrick handles a tricky tonal balance quite well, and Daniel Zovatto (Station Eleven) gives a chilling performance as the killer.

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