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Best new movies to stream on Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video, Max (HBO), and more

Nicholas Hoult stares in close-up with simmering unease in a still from the movie Juror #2.
Nicholas Hoult in Juror #2 Warner Bros. / Warner Bros.

After a couple of huge weeks, it’s a little bit slower this week for our list of the best movies to stream on Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video, Max (HBO), and other services. Nonetheless, there are still five new additions, although none is at the popularity level of December’s biggest highlight so far, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

This week, four streamers receive additions, highlighted by Clint Eastwood’s Juror #2 on Max and the Jason Schwartzman vehicle Between the Temples on Netflix. Read on for the updates.

We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.

New movies to stream at a glance

Max (formerly HBO and HBO Max)

Juror #2 (2024)

Juror #2
72%
pg-13
114m
Genre
Crime, Drama
Stars
Nicholas Hoult, Toni Collette, Chris Messina
Directed by
Clint Eastwood
Watch on max

As it’s thought to be Clint Eastwood’s last movie, it’s a bit confusing that Juror #2 didn’t receive a wider theatrical release. Critics have raved about this quiet drama, so it will hopefully find a wider audience now that it has landed on Max.

Nicholas Hoult plays Justin Kemp, a family man selected to serve as a juror in a high-profile murder trial. Soon after sitting in court, he realizes he has a serious moral dilemma that should have precluded him from being selected. Now he has a card to play to sway the jury one way or the other. Will he use it?

Joker: Folie à Deux (2024)

Joker: Folie à Deux
45%
r
138m
Genre
Drama, Crime, Thriller
Stars
Joaquin Phoenix, Lady Gaga, Brendan Gleeson
Directed by
Todd Phillips
Watch on max

Nobody wanted or needed a sequel to Todd Phillips’ Oscar-nominated Joker, but Warner Bros. made one anyway. The results weren’t pretty. Nonetheless, it’s a recent, highly talked-about movie, so it makes this list for now.

In the second edition, Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) is institutionalized at Arkham Asylum while awaiting trial for his crimes as Joker. As he struggles with his dual identity, Fleck stumbles into love with an admirer, Lee Quinzel (Lady Gaga), and discovers that there has always been music inside him. Yes, Joker 2 is a musical.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024)

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
62%
pg-13
105m
Genre
Comedy, Fantasy, Horror
Stars
Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, Catherine O'Hara
Directed by
Tim Burton
Watch on max

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is one of the strangest sequels going, and yet, the strangest thing about this movie might be just how incredibly fast it’s made it to streaming. After a September 6, 2024, theatrical release, it was exactly three months before it landed on Max. Just in time for Christmas!

Tim Burton is back behind the camera, Michael Keaton returns in the titular role, and Winona Ryder’s Lydia still has nightmares of Beetlejuice. But after an unexpected family tragedy, three generations of the Deetz family return home to Winter River, where Lydia’s teenage daughter, Astrid (Jenna Ortega), discovers the mysterious model of the town in the attic, accidentally reopening the portal to the afterlife. Now, there’s trouble brewing in both realms and somebody, at some point, is going to have to say that name three times.

Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (2024)

Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story
77%
8.1/10
pg-13
104m
Genre
Documentary, Drama
Stars
Christopher Reeve, Dana Reeve, Matthew Reeve
Directed by
Ian Bonhôte, Peter Ettedgui
Watch on max
This heartwarming documentary tells the story of Christopher Reeve, the man who played Superman in four films (among dozens of other roles) before a tragic horse-riding accident in 1995 that left him paralyzed from the neck down. After his quadriplegia, Reeve became one of the most charismatic and vocal leaders for disability rights. Reeve embarked on a quest to find a cure for spinal cord injuries and served on the forefront of debates around stem cell research.

Sweethearts (2024)

Sweethearts
62%
Genre
Comedy, Romance
Stars
Kiernan Shipka, Nico Hiraga, Caleb Hearon
Directed by
Jordan Weiss
Watch on max
A Gen Z college movie, this Max Original stars Kiernan Shipka and Nico Hiraga as two college sweethearts who pull a “Turkey Dump.” The duo breaks up with their high school sweethearts on the chaotic, drunken night before Thanksgiving when everybody is back in town for the holiday. Soon after, the two friends realize their codependency that is probably making college harder than it should be and indicates there might be something more to their relationship.

Netflix

Between the Temples (2024)

Between the Temples
83%
r
111m
Genre
Comedy, Drama
Stars
Jason Schwartzman, Carol Kane, Dolly de Leon
Directed by
Nathan Silver
Watch on Netflix

If you’re looking for a thoughtful indie comedy starring Jason Schwartzman, Between the Temples feels like a spiritual successor to the movie that made Schwartzman famous, Rushmore. Ben Gottlieb (Schwartzman) is a Jewish cantor experiencing a crisis of faith when his grade school music teacher, Carla Kessler (Carol Kane), suddenly reenters his life as his new adult Bat Mitzvah student.

As Ben loses his faith, Carla is seeking faith to establish some meaning in her life. Although contemplating opposite solutions, Ben and Carla experience a spiritual crisis and find a special connection with one another.

The Six Triple Eight (2024)

The Six Triple Eight
57%
pg-13
127m
Genre
Drama, War
Stars
Kerry Washington, Sam Waterston, Susan Sarandon
Directed by
Tyler Perry
Watch on Netflix

Inspired by the first and only Women’s Army Corps unit of color to serve overseas in World War II, Tyler Perry’s The Six Triple Eight tells the story of their extraordinary non-combat mission. Tasked with sorting through a three-year backlog of more than 17 million pieces of undelivered mail, the unit is expected to finish the project within six months.

Despite being set up to fail, the unit nonetheless bands together to show the determination and grit necessary to get the job done. Kerry Washington, Susan Sarandon, and Oprah Winfrey headline a strong cast.

It Ends with Us (2024)

It Ends with Us
53%
pg-13
131m
Genre
Romance, Drama
Stars
Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, Jenny Slate
Directed by
Justin Baldoni
Watch on Netflix

It Ends with Us might be better known for Blake Lively’s disastrous press tour in which she came off as condescending and oddly dismissive of women suffering from domestic violence. Nonetheless, adapted from a Colleen Hoover novel, It Ends with Us found an audience and now lands on Netflix.

Lively plays Lily Bloom, a woman who overcomes her traumatic childhood to open a business and start a new life in Boston. When she meets charming neurosurgeon Ryle Kincaid (Justin Baldoni), the two spark a deep connection. However, Lily soon sees sides of Ryle that trigger memories of her parents’ abusive relationship. When her first love, Atlas Corrigan (Brandon Sklenar), suddenly reenters her life, everything is thrown into disarray.

Maria (2024)

Maria
63%
r
123m
Genre
Drama, Music
Stars
Angelina Jolie, Pierfrancesco Favino, Alba Rohrwacher
Directed by
Pablo Larraín
Watch on Netflix

From Spanish director Pablo Larraín (El Conde), Maria tells the story of Maria Callas, the world’s greatest female opera singer, in her final days in 1970s Paris. Angelina Jolie plays Maria with grace as the singer relives and reimagines her life as she faces her mortality.

This Netflix original has received strong reviews, and Jolie has earned praise for one of her best performances in recent memory.

That Christmas (2024)

That Christmas
59%
pg
92m
Genre
Animation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy
Stars
Brian Cox, Fiona Shaw, Jodie Whittaker
Directed by
Simon Otto
Watch on Netflix

In the mood for a Christmas movie for the whole familyThat Christmas is a new Netflix Original based on Richard Curtis’s trilogy of award-winning children’s books. The vignette-style animated film follows several entwined stories about family and friends, love and loneliness, and Santa Claus being fallible in the town of Wellington-on-Sea.

When the worst snowstorm in history hits, it’s an unusual Christmas holiday for everybody. Curtis — famous for films like Love Actually and Four Weddings and a Funeral — makes his first foray into animation.

Hulu

Cuckoo (2024)

Cuckoo
62%
r
103m
Genre
Horror, Mystery, Science Fiction
Stars
Hunter Schafer, Jan Bluthardt, Marton Csokas
Directed by
Tilman Singer
Watch on Hulu

Tilman Singer wrote and directed Cuckoo, an American/German co-production about a young woman who reluctantly relocates from America to join her father in the German Alps. Seventeen-year-old Gretchen (Hunter Schafer) isn’t exactly thrilled to be cohabitating with her father’s new family, but she doesn’t have much of a choice.

As her father’s boss, Mr. König (Dan Stevens), takes a strange liking to Gretchen’s mute half-sister, Alma, things begin to feel weird in this tranquil vacation paradise. Soon, Gretchen is haunted by strange noises and bloody visions, leading her to a dark secret that impacts her family.

Sugarcane (2024)

Sugarcane
90%
r
107m
Genre
Documentary
Stars
Julian Brave NoiseCat, Willie Sellars, Charlene Belleau
Directed by
Emily Kassie, Julian Brave NoiseCat
Watch on Hulu

One of the year’s most provocative documentaries, this National Geographic production investigates the abuse of the missing children at a Canadian Indian residential school.

The investigation soon sparks a reckoning among the survivors and descendants, spilling over onto the nearby Sugarcane Reserve. Sugarcane premiered at Sundance this year and won the Grand Jury Award for directing. This gripping watch is not for the faint of heart.

Summer Camp (2024)

Summer Camp
41%
pg-13
96m
Genre
Comedy
Stars
Diane Keaton, Kathy Bates, Alfre Woodard
Directed by
Castille Landon
Watch on Hulu

This is another kind of weird one to land on streaming in December, but if you’re looking for a winter warmer, this Golden Girls-esque comedy will fit the bill. Nora (Diane Keaton), Ginny (Kathy Bates), and Mary (Alfre Woodard) have been best friends since they met at summer camp 50 years ago. But as they’ve gotten older, they’ve seen each other less and less.

So when an opportunity arises for a summer camp reunion, they jump right back in the saddle. While it’s a little rocky at first, the three women soon remember the magic of camp and rediscover how much they need one another.

The Convert (2024)

The Convert
66%
r
119m
Genre
Action, Drama
Stars
Guy Pearce, Tioreore Ngatai-Melbourne, Antonio Te Maioha
Directed by
Lee Tamahori
Watch on Hulu
A hit at the 2023 Toronto Film Festival, The Convert stars Guy Pearce as Munro, a soldier-turned-lay preacher who is desperately trying to put his violent past behind him. Arriving at a British settlement in 1830 New Zealand hoping to do some good, he soon finds himself caught between the first British colonists and two local Maori tribes. Soon, his warrior past is brought back to the surface as he’s called by chief Maianui (Antonio Te Maioha) to serve a different purpose and help dispense earthly justice.

Nutcrackers (2024)

Nutcrackers
53%
pg-13
104m
Genre
Comedy, Drama
Stars
Ben Stiller, Linda Cardellini, Edi Patterson
Directed by
David Gordon Green
Watch on Hulu
Ben Stiller stars in this Christmas Hulu original as Mike Maxwell, a workaholic on the verge of closing the biggest deal of his career. Just as things are about to be finalized, a tragic turn of events leaves his four nephews orphaned in rural Ohio. Reluctantly, Mike passes on his bachelor life in the big city to help his nephews find a new home. Based on a real story, this holiday dramedy will be a great one to enjoy with the whole family at your next family gathering.

Disney+

Beatles '64 (2024)

Beatles '64
80%
pg
108m
Genre
Documentary, Music
Stars
Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon
Directed by
David Tedeschi
Watch on Disney+
Disney+ has become an interesting hub for music documentaries, with original features on John Williams, The Beach Boys, and now The Beatles. Beatles ’64 takes you on a journey back to 1964, at the height of Beatlemania when Paul, John, George, and Ringo landed in New York City for their first American tour. The documentary includes never-before-seen footage of the band and interviews from performers and fans alike who remember that first tour. Already the biggest band in the world, that 1964 tour would solidify The Beatles as one of the greatest bands the world has ever seen.

Deadpool & Wolverine (2024)

Deadpool & Wolverine
56%
r
128m
Genre
Action, Comedy, Science Fiction
Stars
Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman, Emma Corrin
Directed by
Shawn Levy
Watch on Disney+

Disney+ is now the streaming home to the summer’s two top movies: Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine. The third film in the Deadpool series finds Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds) living listlessly in civilian life, retired from his days as the mercenary Deadpool.

As tends to happen in these movies, however, the planet soon faces an existential threat, forcing Deadpool to don the suit once again. But this time, he’s looking for reinforcements in the form of Wolverine (Hugh Jackman). Except this isn’t his Wolverine. Instead, Deadpool has to use Cable’s time travel device to rope in another Wolverine from another timeline.

Inside Out 2 (2024)

Inside Out 2
73%
pg
97m
Genre
Animation, Family, Adventure, Comedy, Fantasy, Drama
Stars
Amy Poehler, Maya Hawke, Kensington Tallman
Directed by
Kelsey Mann
Watch on Disney+
One of the biggest movies of the summer, Inside Out 2, picks back up in the mind of a now-teenage Riley. But while Joy (Amy Poehler), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Anger (Lewis Black), Fear (Tony Hale), and Disgust (Liza Lapira) have felt like things have been going OK, they’re not ready for the explosive arrival of new teenage emotions like Anxiety (Maya Hawke), who shows up and commandeers the whole operation with a bunch of new emotions in tow.

Amazon Prime Video

Red One (2024)

Red One
34%
pg-13
124m
Genre
Action, Comedy, Fantasy
Stars
Dwayne Johnson, Chris Evans, J.K. Simmons
Directed by
Jake Kasdan
Watch on Amazon

What would you get if you crossed The Santa Clause with Mission: Impossible? Well, you’d get Red One and you might wonder why you ever thought of this idea in the first place. Regardless, it’s the biggest-budget Christmas movie of all time and is arriving on Prime Video less than a month after it’s theatrical release.

So, buckle up and follow E.L.F. (Extremely Large and Formidable) operative Callum Drift (Dwayne Johnson) and the world’s greatest tracker, Jack O’Malley (Chris Evans), as they chase down a villain who has kidnapped Santa (J.K. Simmons) to try and stop Christmas.

My Old Ass (2024)

My Old Ass
74%
r
89m
Genre
Comedy, Drama
Stars
Maisy Stella, Aubrey Plaza, Percy Hynes White
Directed by
Megan Park
Watch on Amazon
Aubrey Plaza and Maisy Stella star as the same person at different stages of her life in this heartwarming Amazon Original. On her 18th birthday, free-spirited Elliott (Stella) takes mushrooms, only to find the trip brings her face-to-face with her 39-year-old self (Plaza). Initially, the two women hit it off — they’re each other, after all — but as Elliott’s “old ass” starts doling out advice, the younger Elliott realizes she still has some hard questions to answer about life.

Canary Black (2024)

Canary Black
r
103m
Genre
Thriller, Crime, Action
Stars
Kate Beckinsale, Rupert Friend, Saffron Burrows
Directed by
Pierre Morel
Watch on Amazon
Kate Beckinsale is back in the action movie saddle with the Amazon Prime Original Canary Black. When terrorists kidnap her husband, top CIA operative Avery Graves (Beckinsale) is blackmailed into betraying her country. Cut off from her elite team, Graves delves into the underworld to search for the intelligence the kidnappers seek. But she’s not the only one looking for it, and she’ll have to lean on every ounce of her training and fighting skills to free her husband and avert a global crisis.

Brothers (2024)

Brothers
r
88m
Genre
Action, Comedy
Stars
Josh Brolin, Peter Dinklage, Glenn Close
Directed by
Max Barbakow
Watch on Amazon
Josh Brolin and Peter Dinklage star in this oddball comedy that looks almost like a remake of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito’s Twins. Brothers, however, is a bit more of an action comedy. Reformed criminal, Moke (Brolin), finds his attempt to go straight derailed when his twin brother, Jady (Dinklage), ropes him in for the score of a lifetime. As they embark on a road trip to make it big, they find themselves dodging bullets, the law, and their overbearing mother, all the while healing their brotherly bond.

Challengers (2024)

Challengers
132m
Genre
Romance, Drama
Stars
Zendaya, Mike Faist, Josh O'Connor
Directed by
Luca Guadagnino
Watch on Amazon
Who knew a great movie could be made out of tennis games and complicated love triangles? Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers is not only one of 2024’s best movies, but it’s also one of the most purely enjoyable experiences out there. Zendaya stars as Tashi Duncan, a former tennis wunderkind who coaches her pro husband, Art, whose career has hit a lull. When an old rival of Art’s and an old flame of Tashi’s sweeps back into their lives, will he change their game both on and off the court? Challengers is sexy without being graphic and sporty without needing to know too much about tennis to follow along. It also gives Zendaya and co-stars Mike Faist and Josh O’Connor a chance to showcase their impressive acting and irresistible charisma.

Peacock

Conclave (2024)

Conclave
79%
r
120m
Genre
Thriller, Drama
Stars
Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow
Directed by
Edward Berger
Watch on Peacock

Based on Robert Harris’ bestselling novel of the same name, Conclave goes behind the scenes of one of the world’s most secret, ancient traditions: selecting a new pope. Ralph Fiennes stars as Cardinal Lawrence, the man tasked with running this covert process after the beloved Pope’s unexpected death.

When the Catholic Church’s most powerful leaders gather from around the world, they’re locked together in the Vatican halls. That’s when Lawrence realizes he’s at the center of a conspiracy that could destroy the Church.

Speak No Evil (2024)

Speak No Evil
66%
r
110m
Genre
Horror, Thriller
Stars
James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Scoot McNairy
Directed by
James Watkins
Watch on Peacock

An American remake of the 2022 Danish horror film of the same name, Speak No Evil is Blumhouse at its best. When an American family befriends a charming British family on vacation, they can’t pass up the invitation to rendezvous at their new friends’ idyllic country estate.

What begins as a dream weekend soon warps into a psychological nightmare as the Americans realize they’re not the first to be invited to this estate. Instead, they’ll have to try to be the first to leave alive. James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, and Scoot McNairy lead a strong cast.

Twisters (2024)

Twisters
65%
pg-13
123m
Genre
Thriller, Action
Stars
Daisy Edgar-Jones, Glen Powell, Anthony Ramos
Directed by
Lee Isaac Chung
Watch on Peacock

About a year ago, you might have asked yourself if anyone really wanted a sequel to the 1996 disaster flick Twister. Now, one question remains: Why didn’t they do it sooner? After racking up more than $370 million at the box office, Twisters was the summer’s fourth-biggest movie, and the second if you remove the two kids’ movies on this list.

In the standalone sequel, Daisy Edgar-Jones plays Kate Carter, a former storm chaser still haunted by a horrific tornado encounter in college. Although she studies storm patterns on screens in New York City, she’s lured back into the field by her friend, Javi (Anthony Ramos), to test a groundbreaking new system. There, she meets social media storm-chasing superstar Tyler Owens (Glen Powell), who offers to test the system in the field. But what starts as an ordinary test soon turns perilous as the crew finds themselves in the path of multiple converging storm systems in central Oklahoma.

Paramount+

Smile 2 (2024)

Smile 2
66%
r
127m
Genre
Horror, Mystery
Stars
Naomi Scott, Rosemarie DeWitt, Lukas Gage
Directed by
Parker Finn
Watch on Paramount+

The Smile horror franchise has taken off like a shot, with the second film already landing on Paramount+ just two short years after the theatrical release of the first one. Smile 2 gets even messier and gorier as global pop sensation Skye Riley (Naomi Scott) begins to experience increasingly horrifying and unexplainable events.

Believing they’re at least in some part related to the pressures of her tour and her fame, Skye is forced to face a very dark past to regain control of her life. Yet, she’s being haunted by something relentless.

Dear Santa (2024)

Dear Santa
34%
pg-13
108m
Genre
Comedy, Fantasy
Stars
Robert Timothy Smith, Jack Black, Keegan-Michael Key
Directed by
Bobby Farrelly
Watch on Paramount+

Dear Santa has a pretty ridiculous premise, and, depending on how you react to that, you can probably decide whether or not it’s your kind of Christmas movie. When a sixth-grader named Liam writes to Santa asking him to prove his existence, his dyslexia causes a minor issue.

Instead of addressing the letter to Santa, he sends it to Satan by mistake. As such, Satan (Jack Black) shows up at Liam’s front door pretending to be Santa and eager to take a sneaky little piece of Liam’s soul. Dear Santa has Jack Black being Jack Black, jokes about kids with dyslexia, and Christmas chaos. Do with that what you will!

Apple TV+

Fly Me to the Moon (2024)

Fly Me to the Moon
53%
pg-13
132m
Genre
Romance, Comedy
Stars
Scarlett Johansson, Channing Tatum, Woody Harrelson
Directed by
Greg Berlanti
Watch on Apple TV+

The rare film to be made by another studio and get a theatrical release before landing on Apple TV+, Fly Me to the Moon had some modest box office success this summer. Marketing pro Kelly Jones (Scarlett Johansson) is brought in to fix NASA’s public image problems as the agency prepares for its most important mission to date: putting a man on the moon.

All this messaging wreaks havoc on launch director Cole Davis’ (Channing Tatum) worksite. When the White House deems the mission too important to fail, suddenly both Jones and Davis have another job. They must stage a fake moon landing, just in case the real one doesn’t pan out.

Blitz (2024)

Blitz
71%
pg-13
120m
Genre
Drama, History, War
Stars
Elliott Heffernan, Saoirse Ronan, Harris Dickinson
Directed by
Steve McQueen
Watch on Apple TV+
As we get into Oscar season, Blitz headlines the new additions to Apple TV+. Directed by Oscar-winner Steve McQueen (12 Years a SlaveShame), Blitz is the director’s latest foray into history as he takes on the London Blitz. At the peak of World War II as London endures near-nightly air raids by the Nazis, Rita (Saoirse Ronan) seizes an opportunity to evacuate herself and her nine-year-old son, George, to the countryside. Furious that the rest of his family must stay behind, a defiant George runs back to the city to do what he can to rescue his family as Rita frantically searches for him.

MGM+

Shudder

Black Cab (2024)

Black Cab
r
87m
Genre
Horror, Thriller
Stars
Nick Frost, Synnøve Karlsen, Luke Norris
Directed by
Bruce Goodison
Watch on Shudder
Nick Frost stars in this Shudder original about a cab ride gone wrong. When Anne (Synnøve Karlsen) and Patrick (Luke Norris) hail a black cab after a night out, they’re in no mood to talk to their chatty driver. They’re barely talking to each other. But they soon realize they’re locked in a cab with a driver who has no intention of taking them home. As he drives them to a stretch of deserted and haunted road, the couple scrambles to figure out the driver’s motives and make an escape.

The Exorcism (2024)

The Exorcism
46%
r
96m
Genre
Horror, Thriller
Stars
Russell Crowe, Ryan Simpkins, Sam Worthington
Directed by
Joshua John Miller
Watch on Shudder
Troubled actor Anthony Miller (Russell Crowe) is shooting a supernatural horror film, but as he immerses himself in the role, he becomes increasingly unraveled. His estranged daughter, Lee (Ryan Simpkins), begins to suspect he’s relapsing into addiction, but as she investigates more closely, she sees something more sinister. Between Crowe and Sam Worthington, The Exorcism is a more star-studded release than usual for Shudder.
Movie images and data from:
Nick Perry

Nick Perry is a freelance writer who bounced from Hollywood to Silicon Beach to pajama pants. His work has been featured on Digital Trends, Good Morning America, Entrepreneur, Mashable, and more media outlets.

Jason Struss
Section Editor, Entertainment

Jason Struss joined Digital Trends in 2022 and has never lived to regret it. He is the current Section Editor of the Entertainment vertical and heads a team of over a dozen writers, editors, coordinators, and assorted hangers-on. When he’s not busy editing and writing, you can find him tending to his meticulously planned content schedule or dreaming up new ways to get more eyeballs to the site.

Jason’s love for cinema started when he was 10 years old. Saddled with a nasty cold, he was forced to stay home from school for a full week. To pass the time, he watched a marathon of classic Alfred Hitchcock films on Cinemax and the rest is history. He furthered his film education by raiding used bookstores to read dusty old film criticism volumes and salacious movie star biographies. His real education included studying at Whitman College and then Syracuse University, where he won a student Emmy for producing a truly terrible television series.

His career began at Marvel Entertainment, where he worked in the Digital Products department, and then DC Comics, where he worked in publishing and content strategy. He then worked at Warner Bros. and Screen Rant.

Jason currently resides in Seattle but has yet to appear in a Cameron Crowe movie. He loves hot coffee with cream and sugar, video games, bread, napping, and movies (duh), but not necessarily in that order. His favorite movies are The Thing, All About Eve, The Ice Storm, Rear Window, Heat, The Cranes are Flying, Belle de Jour, Showgirls, and Clue. He thinks Mad Men is genius, still watches Seinfeld twice a week, and likes listening to shoegaze music, podcasts, and Lana Del Rey. If you see him on the street, please, for the love of God, do not engage in conversation with him.

The best kids movies on Netflix right now
A carrot and a stalk of broccoli prepare to do battle in Daddy Day Care.

The countdown to the holiday season has begun, and now's the time to get the best kids movies on Netflix on deck to keep your kids entertained throughout the long holiday break. Whether you're hosting or going somewhere else for the holidays, it's always good to have some quality entertainment for the kids to fall back on. That's why we scour the streamer's extensive collection every month to highlight the best options for your kids.

December, somewhat surprisingly, is another slow month for kids' movies on Netflix. There's just one addition to the list this month: Daddy Day Care. Read on for the rest of our picks of the best kids movies on Netflix now.

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The anthropomorphic wolf Legoshi in Beastars.

Netflix remains an excellent platform for streaming the best anime. Its live-action originals will continue to dominate the limelight, including adaptations like One Piece, but the service features a well-rounded anime library too. With anime TV shows and movies spanning every genre and multiple franchises, veteran fans and newcomers alike have plenty to choose from.

This impressive catalog helps boost the genre's mainstream appeal, bringing new fans in on the fun. However, all these options can overwhelm newbies. Thankfully, this guide simplifies things, and is updated monthly to spotlight some of the best anime on Netflix right now.
If you want more options, check out our other guides to the best anime on Hulu and the best anime available on Amazon Prime Video. Plus, read about the best new shows to stream and the best shows on Netflix.

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Santa Claus hangs upside down in That Christmas.

On any given week, the list of the 10 most popular movies on Netflix typically includes two or more animated films. This week, one of those films is a newly released Netflix original animated Christmas movie, That Christmas, a holiday hit for the streamer. It's not the only original that was added to the best animated movies on Netflix either. The Pixar-esque film Spellbound also recently debuted on Netflix, and it may give you some déjà vu if you've ever seen Brave.

Netflix is losing titles like Kung Fu Panda, Shark Tale, and Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken at the end of December. However, it still has a stranglehold on non-Disney hits, including Illumination's The Secret Life of Pets and last year's Oscar-nominated Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. You can find all of these films among the best animated movies on Netflix right now.

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