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The 100 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now

Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction. Photo: Miramax

This post is updated regularly to reflect the latest movies to leave and enter Netflix. *New additions are indicated by an asterisk.

With thousands of movies to choose from, and a navigation system and algorithm that don’t always make the right choice easy to find, it can be difficult to know what to watch on Netflix. That’s why we’re here, breaking down the 100 best movies on the service at this minute, with regular updates for titles that have been removed and when new ones are added. We’ve done the hard work, so now the only thing you have to do is sit back and, uh, watch all 100 movies. (And if you’re more of a TV person, check out the 50 best TV shows on Netflix.)

13th
Ava DuVernay’s documentary is named after the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which ended slavery. Her brilliant nonfiction work outlines the way that slavery has simply been reshaped and reformed into other societal elements, particularly imbalanced prison sentences and enforcement of laws that more directly impact minorities. It’s a searing, powerful piece of work.

The 40-Year-Old Virgin
Judd Apatow’s hit comedy helped turn Steve Carell into a household name and really reformed a brand of dad-bod comedy that is still influencing movies to this day (for better and for worse). As with all Apatovian productions, there are certainly elements here one could quibble with, but it remains rewatchable thanks to Carell’s genuinely sweet performance and memorable supporting turns from Paul Rudd, Seth Rogen, and Catherine Keener.

A Separation
Asghar Farhadi’s Oscar winner is one of the best films of the 2010s, a powerful examination of the impact of one couple’s separation on those around them, including their daughter and a caregiver hired by the man to watch over his father. It’s the first Iranian film to win the Oscar for Foreign Language Film, and a great introduction to that country’s excellent film industry.

About a Boy
Containing possibly Hugh Grant’s best performance, this delicate adaptation of the Nick Hornby novel tells the story of a grown man who learns how to behave in life through his friendship with a young boy. With great performances by Nicholas Hoult and Toni Collette, along with a script nominated for an Oscar, this is a movie that young viewers may not have caught up with yet but shouldn’t miss.

Across the Universe
Love it or hate it, you really need to see Julie Taymor’s romantic drama inspired by the music of the Beatles. There aren’t many big-screen musicals out there quite like this trippy, dreamy flick starring Jim Sturgess and Westworld’s Evan Rachel Wood, and Taymor’s theatrical background gives the whole film a larger-than-life magical quality, especially if you’re a fan of Paul, John, George, and Ringo.

All the President’s Men
Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford star in this retelling of the chain of events that led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon through the vantage point of the journalists who broke the story. More of an ode to the importance of journalism than anything else, this movie cast reporters in a light that made them feel like pioneers of justice. Think of the number of people who enrolled in journalism school because of it. And you have to love the tagline: “The most devastating detective story of this century.”

American Honey
Andrea Arnold’s 2016 teen epic about a runaway (Sasha Lane) who finds herself a part of a crew of young people bouncing their way across the country — including Shia LaBeouf and Riley Keough — is the best movie on Netflix that you probably haven’t seen. With propulsive energy, an amazing soundtrack, and beautiful cinematography of the heart of America, this is a fascinating movie that deserves a look.

Amy

The Oscar-winning documentary about Amy Winehouse not only details the rise and early death of its subject but confronts viewers with the way that tabloid culture impacts celebrities who may be prone to addiction. Winehouse was a generational talent, but this is a must-watch not only for chronicling her ability but also asking who let her down, depriving the music world of that talent today.

Annie Hall
The public opinion of Woody Allen has certainly changed over the years, but this 1977 romantic comedy remains one of the most essential American films of its era, winning Oscars for Best Picture, Actress, Director, and Screenplay.

Apocalypse Now
One of the most important war movies of all time, Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam-set riff on Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness changed cinema and stands as one of the most stunning examples of cinematic obsession ever made. Coppola went into the jungle with Martin Sheen and Marlon Brando and came back with a classic.

Apollo 13
Just as First Man is celebrating an Oscar win and Apollo 11 is hitting theaters, Netflix drops the Best Picture–nominated Ron Howard movie about the harrowing Apollo 13 mission, starring Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon, Gary Sinise, and Ed Harris. It’s Howard’s best movie, a solid tale of the heroism required to do the seemingly impossible.

As Good As It Gets
Very few films have won Oscars for both Best Actor and Best Actress. In fact, this romantic comedy, for which stars Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt both took home the big trophies, is the last time it happened. It’s a great example of a film that plays perfectly to the strengths of both of its stars.

The Aviator
Netflix is clearly prepping subscribers for Martin Scorcese’s upcoming Netflix-exclusive film The Irishman by including several of his most beloved films (see: The Departed, also on this list). This one has slid a bit under the history’s radar, not being talked about as much as it should. It’s a technical marvel for the plane-crash scene alone and includes one of Scorsese’s best ensembles, including his old pal Leo alongside Cate Blanchett, Kate Beckinsale, and Jude Law, just to name a few.

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
Joel and Ethan Coen’s Western anthology series was a part of Netflix’s brand-redefining 2018. Sure, Netflix still has a bunch of junk, but it also landed the latest from Alfonso Cuaron, the Coens, and even Orson Welles. This brilliant Western works as comedy, drama, and even a commentary on the Coens themselves. Don’t miss it.

*Black Panther
Take advantage of this opportunity before Disney+ guts all the Marvel and Disney movie options from every streaming service on the planet. The first MCU movie to win an Oscar is one of the best superhero movies of all time, and a movie that holds up incredibly well on repeat viewing. This isn’t just an action movie, it’s a cultural event — something that redefined and reshaped the superhero genre for the rest of time.

Bonnie and Clyde
Forget the bland Netflix Original The Highwaymen and go back to Arthur Penn’s 1967 masterpiece that helped define the legend of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. One of the most important films of its generation, this telling of one of crime’s most infamous duos stars Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. It was landmark in its violence in 1967 and it’s still powerful five decades later.

Boyhood
Filmed in pieces over a 12-year span, Boyhood is one of the most ambitious films of the ‘10s, and one of the few films to notch an almost-impossible 100 on Metacritic. When people start listing the essential films of the decade in a few months, this will be on it. Make sure you’ve seen it.

Brother’s Keeper
Joe Berlinger has been buzzed-about lately thanks to his Ted Bundy docuseries (Conversations With a Killer) and upcoming Netflix-obtained movie (Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile), but fans of his recent work should check out his brilliant 1992 feature debut, a true-crime hit from Sundance about the murder trial of Delbert Ward. If you’re a true-crime fan — and it feels like most Netflix subscribers are — don’t miss this one.

Bull Durham
Sometimes a movie comes along that just catches its cast at precisely the right moment to capitalize on their charisma, and that’s the case with Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon, and Tim Robbins in this baseball comedy classic. It’s one of the best sports movies ever made.

*Burning
The best foreign-language film of 2018 is already on Netflix, hopefully indicating a deeper commitment by the company to present the best of international cinema to American audiences. Lee Chang-dong adapts a novella by Haruki Murakami into a riveting dissection of class and gender in modern Korea. Steven Yeun is mesmerizing as the mysterious Ben, someone who our protagonist starts to think might be a killer. Don’t miss this one.

Carol
Todd Haynes’s heartrending romance is one of the most lusciously beautiful films of the ‘10s, anchored by a pair of perfect performances from Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. Whether or not you are drawn to the doomed love affair at its center, this is a gorgeous film on a technical level. Watch it in HD and turn up that perfect score.

Coco
There aren’t a lot of Oscar-winning animated movies on Netflix. Sure, there are hours of options in the kids’ section of Netflix, but most of it is mindless garbage. So if you’re tired of letting your little ones watch nonsense, sit them down in front of one of the best animated movies of the last few years. This is a delicate, sweet, heartfelt movie about love and ancestry that would also be on a list of surefire tearjerkers now on Netflix.

The Conjuring
The most notable horror franchise of the ‘10s (if you include massive spin-offs like Annabelle and The Nun) started here with the story of Ed and Lorraine Warren and a very haunted house. James Wan’s brilliant use of space and a great ensemble would really change the horror genre in ways reflected all across movies today.

The Constant Gardener
Fernando Meirelles’s adaptation of John le Carré’s novel won Rachel Weisz an Oscar as an activist murdered in Northern Kenya. Ralph Fiennes plays her husband, a man who learns more about his wife after her death than he did while she was alive and gets to the bottom of a deep political conspiracy.

Cool Hand Luke

There aren’t a lot of movies on Netflix made before 1970 but you’ll find a few bona fide American classics on this list — films that used to be on Filmstruck before it tragically rode off into the digital sunset. This is a perfect example, a movie that helped define the legacy of one of the best American actors of all time, Paul Newman.

Coraline
We don’t deserve Laika. The company behind Kubo and the Two Strings and ParaNorman has never made a bad movie, but this is the only one on Netflix as of right now, a beautifully refined adaptation of a Neil Gaiman book. Lyrical, scary, and unforgettable, this is stop-motion animation for the whole family.

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Ang Lee’s martial arts epic was an absolute phenomenon when it came out, domestically grossing more than any foreign language film in history on its way to ten Academy Award nominations. It’s held up marvelously, a cinematic explosion of color and passion for filmmaking. If you haven’t seen it since it took the world by storm, it’s time for a rewatch.

Deliverance
Some of the elements of this American classic have been diluted through parody in the years since its release but don’t let that dissuade those of you who haven’t seen it. Burt Reynolds does arguably his best film work as one of four men assaulted and traumatized by mountain men in a film that truly went places that major movies hadn’t done before. It’s a powerful, harrowing piece of work.

District 9
Sharlto Copley stars in Neill Blomkamp’s wildly successful sleeper hit, a movie that really came out of nowhere to become one of the biggest film stories of 2009. Sci-fi movies with no stars from debut directors don’t usually go on to become Best Picture nominees, but District 9 is not your typical sci-fi movie.

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Julian Schnabel’s heartbreaking drama tells the true story of Jean-Dominique Bauby, a magazine editor who suffered a stroke that was so debilitating that he could only move his left eye. He then wrote an entire book about being locked in his own body, using only eye movement on a screen to form the words. It’s a beautiful, poetic piece of work about the triumph of the human spirit.

East of Eden
Look, another classic! Elia Kazan’s 1955 adaptation of the John Steinbeck classic stars James Dean in a performance for which he was posthumously nominated for an Oscar. The Dean legend may center more on his persona from Rebel Without a Cause, but his work here displays the range that we never got to see fulfilled.

Ex Machina
Alex Garland’s sci-fi masterpiece already feels like a classic. Alicia Vikander, Domhnall Gleeson, and Oscar Isaac star in an examination of the future of artificial intelligence, what it means to be a human being, and how often men seek to control that which they create. It’s a movie that gets better every time you see it.

The Fighter
David O. Russell’s dramatization of the true story of boxer Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg) won Oscars for both of its supporting players — Melissa Leo and a transformed Christian Bale. It’s got some beats that already make it feel older than just 2010 but the great cast holds it together.

The Fifth Element
There’s not a lot of great sci-fi on Netflix, but you should fire this one up if you’re jonesing for something set in a different time and place in space. And make sure you fire it up on the biggest TV in your house and with the volume at a level to wake the neighbors. Luc Besson’s vision isn’t exactly a great piece of storytelling, but this Bruce Willis vehicle is a perfect example of the director’s skill with world-building and technical elements.

Frances Ha

Before there was Lady Bird, there was Frances Ha, another semi-autobiographical comedy starring and co-written by Greta Gerwig. The delightful actress plays a woman dealing with a quarter-life crisis in NYC in one of Noah Baumbach’s best films.

Gerald’s Game
The Vulture choice for the Best Netflix Original Horror Movie has to be on this list too, right? Especially viewed in the wake of the phenomenon that was The Haunting of Hill House, this movie really works. It’s one of the best Stephen King adaptations on any platform, anchored by a phenomenal Carla Gugino performance.

Gone Baby Gone

Ben Affleck’s adaptation of a great Dennis Lehane thriller stars the actor/director’s brother as a Boston detective investigating the disappearance of a little girl. Affleck’s greatest gift as a filmmaker is with ensemble and this is arguably his best, with Casey, Morgan Freeman, Ed Harris, Michelle Monaghan, and the Oscar-nominated Amy Ryan filling out an amazing cast in a riveting thriller. It’s great.

Good Will Hunting
See where the mythos of Affleck and Damon began in the film that won them both an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. Matt Damon stars as Will, a janitor at M.I.T. who discovers that he’s smarter than most of the students there but needs to overcome the hurdle of trauma — with the assistance of a therapist played by an Oscar-winning Robin Williams. How you like them apples?

The Graduate
Certain films transcend mere celluloid to become cultural benchmarks and Mike Nichols’s beloved 1967 sophomore outing is certainly one such film. It hasn’t held up as well as some of the works of its era, but few films are still as influential today as the story of a college graduate lost in life and love. You need to see it just so you can pick out its fingerprints on the half-century of comedies that followed.

The Hateful Eight
Debate among yourselves if this should be on the movie or TV list, but it’s still basically the same venture that was released in theaters, only slightly reedited by Quentin Tarantino into episodes, so we say it’s a movie. And it’s an underrated one, overshadowed by the way it deals with race and gender when it was released. Just a few years later, it looks almost prescient about how divided the country would become, and it contains some of the best performances in Q.T.’s entire filmography.

Heathers
It may look quainter today than it did in the late ‘80s, but Michael Lehmann’s dark comedy felt revolutionary 30 years ago. Winona Ryder stars as a student at a school full of awful people who use their social status to bully those beneath them. Christian Slater does his best Jack Nicholson impression as the loner who teaches her how to kill them.

Hellboy
Before the reboot hits screens, go back to the source in Guillermo del Toro’s 2004 action classic, starring Ron Perlman, John Hurt, Selma Blair, and Rupert Evans. Before GdT was winning Oscars and rocking Twitter, he brought Mike Mignola’s most famous comic character to the screen and lost none of his irascible charm along the way. You got big red shoes to fill, David Harbour.

Her
Spike Jonze’s Oscar winner stars Joaquin Phoenix as a writer who falls in love with a daring new A.I., voiced by Scarlett Johansson. This is not only one of the best films on Netflix, but one of the best films of the ‘10s. Just see it.

High Flying Bird
Steven Soderbergh very rarely makes bad movies and he’s not about to start with Andre Holland and Zazie Beetz in his court. The two star in the first excellent Netflix movie of 2019, an analysis of the game on top of the game that makes the NBA work. The man who almost directed Moneyball crafts a razor-sharp, incredibly entertaining, and humane basketball/corporate-media/labor drama that will appeal to hoops fanatics and the sports-averse alike. And the entire thing was shot on an iPhone!

Hot Fuzz

One of the best comedies of the ‘00s works so well because it both satirizes and adores action-movie clichés at the same time. Before Edgar Wright made Baby Driver, he directed Simon Pegg and Nick Frost in this perfect comedy about a small British town with a deep secret. And a love for Point Break and Bad Boys.

Howards End
Young film lovers may not know why Sir Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson are so beloved in the film community. This is a good place to start. Both are at the top of their game (Thompson won an Oscar, as did Ruth Prawer Jhabvala for her screenplay) in this gorgeous Merchant/Ivory adaptation of the E.M. Forster classic.

The Hurt Locker
It’s hard to believe it’s already been a decade since Kathryn Bigelow’s already-classic war film, a movie that feels both intimate and universal at the same time. Jeremy Renner does his career-best work as the new leader of an Explosive Ordinance Disposal team during the Iraq War. Bigelow won the Oscar for Best Director, the only woman to ever take that prize, and this is arguably still the best film made to date about the Iraq War.

The Immigrant
One of the last films mishandled by Harvey Weinstein, this excellent James Gray drama stars Marion Cotillard, Joaquin Phoenix, and Jeremy Renner. Cotillard plays an immigrant in 1921 embroiled in a love triangle. It’s gorgeous and unforgettable.

Incredibles 2
While Disney works to get its upcoming streaming service off the ground, it’s still regularly releasing new hits to Netflix, including the beloved sequel to one of the most popular Pixar films of all time. Brad Bird’s long-awaited sequel is one of the top films of 2018, and arguably its best animated film (at least that’s not about Spider-man).

Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark
There’s a lot of Steven Spielberg on Netflix, but this is one of the best choices you could make from the filmography of one the best American filmmakers. Maybe you’ve heard of it? All four Indy films are actually still on Netflix. Do a marathon while you still can. Yes, you can skip the last one if you want.

The Informant!
Matt Damon stars in Steven Soderbergh’s telling of the true story of Mark Whitacre, a relatively mediocre employee who ended up being a spy for the FBI when his company started illegally price-fixing. It’s a quirky, odd, unforgettable movie with one of Damon’s best performances.

The Invitation
Ever been to a dinner party that just didn’t feel right? We all have. But there’s something even more sinister lurking in Karyn Kusama’s tense thriller starring Logan Marshall-Green, Tammy Blanchard, and John Carroll Lynch.

Kill Bill
Both parts of one of Quentin Tarantino’s best works are available on Netflix, a service that really knows how to play to the fan base of beloved American filmmakers like QT, Spielberg, Scorsese, et al. Tarantino has teased a third volume in this series someday, but the story of the Bride’s revenge will have to do for now.

Lincoln
It’s not surprising that Netflix plays to Spielberg fans, but it’s nice to see that it includes more than the crowd-pleasing blockbusters, also occasionally diving a bit deeper and adding his historical dramas. This is one of his best from that category, featuring an Oscar-winning performance from Daniel Day-Lewis.

Little Women
There have been a dozen or so versions of the Louisa May Alcott classic novel that you probably read in high school, but this 1994 adaptation is easily one of the best, starring Winona Ryder, Claire Danes, Kirsten Dunst, and Susan Sarandon. Ignore the others, just watch this one.

The Lives of Others
Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s 2006 film may have been released 16 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, but it was actually one of the first films from Germany to really deal with that subject matter. It’s a detailed, fascinating look at the monitoring of East Berlin residents by the secret police. The winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, it’s a complex, challenging look at how spying on your neighbors changes a society, and it may be about Germany in the ‘80s but feels relevant to governments around the world today.

The Magnificent Ambersons
Perhaps to accompany the Netflix presentation of the completed version of one of the most infamously uncompleted films of all time, in Orson Welles’s The Other Side of the Wind, the company has added a few other beloved Welles films, including another one with a notorious production. This one was taken away from Welles and heavily edited, but remains a masterpiece nonetheless.

The Master
P.T. Anderson’s drama about an outsider who finds connection under the wing of a mysterious religious leader features two of the best performances from Joaquin Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman. We still miss him every day. And he may never have been better than he is here.

*The Matrix
It’s hard to overstate the impact that the Wachowskis’ masterpiece made when it was released in 1999. Certain movies feel like seismic shifts in the culture, and the journey of Neo was absolutely that, influencing filmmaking for the next two decades. You’ve certainly seen it, but maybe not in a long time. You’ll be amazed at how well it’s held up. The fact that it looks like it could be released today without much changed is indicative of how many films have copied it since it came out.

The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)
Noah Baumbach’s latest didn’t premiere in theaters, going the Netflix route in 2017. Adam Sandler does arguably the best work of his career in this drama about how family can both connect and divide us, sometimes in the same moment. Sandler is joined by Ben Stiller, Dustin Hoffman, and Emma Thompson in this must-see dramedy. Forget the Sandler Netflix Originals — watch this one instead.

Miami Vice
Probably the most divisive choice on this list, Michael Mann’s adaptation of his TV hit may be too stylish for some, but that’s the exact reason so many people love it. Jamie Foxx and Colin Farrell star in the only film version of Crockett and Tubbs that we’re likely to ever see.

Milk
Sean Penn’s last Oscar came for his portrayal of Harvey Milk, the slain activist for gay rights and California’s first openly gay elected official. It’s a movie that has lost none of its dramatic power a decade after its release.

Miracle
There are so few great sports movies that audiences really embrace the ones that do come along like this underrated 2004 film from Gavin O’Connor. Kurt Russell gives a truly fantastic performance as Herb Brooks, the coach of the U.S. Men’s Hockey team that made everyone believe in miracles when they defeated their heavily favored Russian counterparts.

Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Movies don’t get much funnier than the best offering from the Monty Python troupe, a comedy that spawned a quoting fandom that still roams the hills saying, “Not dead yet,” and, “I fart in your general direction.” It’s possible there’s a young generation yet to appreciate the comedic brilliance of the men of Monty Python. Start here and then move on to the sketches and other movies, some of which are also on Netflix.

A Most Violent Year
One of the most underrated flicks of the ‘10s, J.C. Chandor’s period crime drama stars Oscar Isaac, Jessica Chastain, and David Oyelowo. Awash in the dread surrounding the most violent year in New York history, this is a crime epic for viewers who like characters more than action in their sagas of men who work both sides of the law.

Mudbound
Arguably Netflix’s first masterpiece, Dee Rees’s period drama is an epic portrait of racism, trauma, and injustice in the post-WWII South. You won’t find a better ensemble in a Netflix Original, anchored by Jason Mitchell, Carey Mulligan, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Clarke, and the amazing Dee Rees.

Mustang
Netflix isn’t exactly great at showcasing the best cinema from around the world (oh, they have a lot of foreign films, but most of them are bad) as those were once the territory of FilmStruck and likely will be on the Criterion Channel. So take this chance to watch one of the best non-English films of the decade, Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s poignant look at repressed youth in northern Turkey.

No Country for Old Men

Joel and Ethan Coen’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s crime novel is one of their best movies, and won them three Oscars — directing, writing, and Best Picture — during arguably the best movie year of the ‘00s. If you haven’t seen it since 2007, you may be surprised at how well it’s held up. The exact same film could be released today and it would have the same cultural impact. It already feels timeless.

Obvious Child
If you’re not a fan of Jenny Slate, you probably have yet to see how charming and relatable she is in this Sundance comedy hit. She plays a stand-up comedian whose life is rattled by an unplanned pregnancy. It’s a great comedy — funny, empathetic, and daring.

Okja
God bless Bong Joon-ho. The director of The Host, The Mother, and Snowpiercer — all of which you owe it to yourself to see — brought arguably his weirdest movie yet to Netflix in this sci-fi dramedy about a giant pig. Say what you will about the film’s flights of fancy — or Jake Gyllenhaal’s truly committed performance — there ain’t nothing else like it on Netflix.

The Other Side of the Wind
It took almost a half-century to complete Orson Welles’s final film, this meta work that blends documentary style, fictional filmmaking, and even the reputation and life of its own creator into something that feels defiantly new — even though most of it was shot before you were born. It took the efforts of dozens over decades to get this out. You can spare two hours to see what all the work was for.

Pan’s Labyrinth
Still the best film from one our best filmmakers, Guillermo del Toro’s fairy tale for adults is a striking example of a visual master working at the top of his form. What more can we say? This is one of the most essential films of the last two decades. See it.

Personal Shopper
Olivier Assayas’s ghost story is not your typical tale of the supernatural. The French filmmaker, working in perfect conjunction with star Kristen Stewart, who has never been better, crafts a film about loss, fear, and longing. It’s not an easy film to dissect or understand, but you won’t forget it.

The Pianist
Roman Polanski’s Holocaust drama won the director and star Adrien Brody Oscars. Brody plays Wladyslaw Szpilman, an unforgettable Polish-Jewish survivor of World War II. Polanski’s film plays out like a piece of music itself, lyrically moving through the major events in Szpilman’s life as he hid to survive the Nazi occupation of Warsaw.

Poltergeist
There are so many truly awful horror films on Netflix that you really should take any opportunity to watch the greats buried in the endless stream of straight-to-streaming junk. Tobe Hooper’s story of an average suburban family who moved into the wrongest home possible holds up almost four decades after its release. (Crazy trivia: This movie is rated PG! You’d think the bathroom face-ripping scene alone would make that illegal.)

Pretty in Pink
Netflix programmers are keenly aware that most of their subscribers are children of the ‘80s, which is why you get so much Steven Spielberg and John Hughes at any given moment. Here’s a film written by Hughes that you may have to stretch to call “great” but it is “iconic,” a great snapshot of ‘80s fashion and suburban adolescence.

Private Life
Tamara Jenkins returned to filmmaking for the first time since The Savages with this personal portrait of the struggle faced by people going through fertility procedures. With an amazingly truthful performance by Kathryn Hahn, this is the kind of film that feels both delicately specific and universal to the struggle of so many couples.

Pulp Fiction
There are certain tentpoles of American film history that changed the form forever, and this is undeniably one. Heck, we’re still getting Tarantino riffs over 20 years later, as everyone wants to make a movie as effortlessly cool as his masterpiece.

Punch-Drunk Love
Look, another Adam Sandler movie on this list that’s not one of his Netflix Originals! P.T. Anderson’s delicate Sandler vehicle could kind of be called a rom-com, but it’s not like any rom-com you’ve ever seen. It’s one of PTA’s best movies, a funny, strange, unforgettable story of two outsiders finding a way to be inside together.

Quiz Show

Robert Redford’s best film as a director is the story of the investigation by a young attorney (Rob Morrow) into the possibility that the country’s most popular quiz-show winner, Charles Van Doren (Ralph Fiennes), cheated. It’s a fantastic drama with a razor-sharp script by Paul Attanasio and a true story that you probably didn’t know much about beforehand.

Roma
Alfonso Cuaron’s deeply personal story of the domestic worker who really helped raise him is Netflix’s first nominee for Best Picture and a movie that has really altered the way the streaming service will be seen on the film landscape. It’s also a masterpiece, a heartbreaking, mesmerizing piece of filmmaking that really operates on Roger Ebert’s belief that great cinema is an “empathy machine,” a way to experience lives that you otherwise never would.

Scarface
Brian De Palma’s 1983 remake of the 1932 classic became more of a cultural phenomenon than even writer Oliver Stone or star Al Pacino could have predicted. They couldn’t have known how many Scarface posters would adorn college dorm walls or how many people would still be quoting the movies almost four decades later. It’s an imperfect movie made classic by the complete commitment to it from De Palma and Pacino, two men near the peak of their powers when they collaborated on this drug epic.

Schindler’s List
More Spielberg! Arguably his best historical drama, this Best Picture winner stars Liam Neeson as Oskar Schindler, a man who saved numerous Jewish lives during World War II. Everyone here is working at the top of their game, including Spielberg, Neeson, Ben Kingsley, and Ralph Fiennes. It’s the kind of movie you see once and never forget.

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Sure, we all know how much fun Edgar Wright’s adaptation of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s graphic novels is, but has anyone else noticed how many careers this movie helped launch? It’s amazing to watch it nearly a decade after it was released and consider how much people like Anna Kendrick, Alison Pill, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Evans, Brie Larson, Mae Whitman, and Jason Schwartzman have done since then.

Serenity
No, not the wacky Matthew McConaughey movie — the sci-fi one. It’s clear now that we’re never gonna get a return of Fox’s brilliant-but-canceled Firefly, but at least we got this cinematic piece of closure to make the pain hurt a little less. A little.

A Serious Man
More Coen brothers! When Netflix added Buster Scruggs, they dropped a few earlier films as well, including this underrated comedy about a man dealing with the inequity of life after his wife leaves him. With a great performance by Michael Stuhlbarg, this one has some of the Coens’ best darkly comic bits in the back half of their career.

She’s Gotta Have It
Spike Lee had “it” from the beginning, as you can see in his 1986 debut comedy, recently loosely adapted into a Netflix Original series. It’s incredible to see how much of Lee’s voice as a filmmaker was already there in this passionate, daring independent flick that really announced one of American cinema’s most important filmmakers.

Shirkers
Documentaries that aren’t about serial killers can be a tough sell to a Netflix audience, but just trust us on this one. Sandi Tan’s story of a film she made with some friends in Singapore back in the ‘90s seems at first like just another document of creative young people but becomes something much more complicated as it comments on ownership, toxic masculinity, and the need for closure.

Silence of the Lambs
Movies don’t get much better than Jonathan Demme’s adaptation of Thomas Harris’ chilling thriller about Clarice Starling and Dr. Hannibal Lecter. With career-defining performances from Jodie Foster and Sir Anthony Hopkins, this movie still absolutely slays a quarter-century after it was released.

Strangers on a Train
You can pretty much count on most Alfred Hitchcock films that are added to Netflix finding their way to this list, and they just added one of his most purely enjoyable thrillers. The plot is so devilishly simple that it’s been copied 100 times: two men decide to solve each other’s problems with murder. There aren’t enough classic thrillers on Netflix, so watch the ones that are.

Street Fight
As Cory Booker prepares his run for the White House, take a look at this fascinating documentary about his run for mayor in Newark, New Jersey, way back in 2002. It’s an insightful piece about how politics were already shifting and changing at the turn of the millennium, and, who knows, it may be the prologue to a presidency.

Synecdoche, New York
Charlie Kaufman’s dramedy is an impossible film to sum up in a brief entry, which is one of the reasons a lot of people still haven’t seen it. Philip Seymour Hoffman stars as a theatre director working on his most ambitious project to date, which then blurs with his reality and the film itself. It’s daring, moving, and like nothing else you could watch on Netflix.

The Terminator
James Cameron’s 1984 classic is still a pop-culture reference point, and for more than just, “I’ll be back.” If you somehow haven’t seen it, you need to correct this hole in your ‘80s canon. If you have seen it, you may be surprised at how well it holds up.

Under the Skin
A trippy, sci-fi masterpiece, this flick stars Scarlett Johansson as an alien being exploring the world around her and, well, doing some terrifying things to the men she comes into contact with. Although that only scratches the surface of why this is a special movie, a terrifying tone piece that has more in common with Twin Peaks than Species. It’s unforgettable and brilliant.

We the Animals
Jeremiah Zagar’s adaptation of the hit Justin Torres book is a major player at the 2019 Independent Spirit Awards and the kind of film that a streaming service like Netflix could really help bring to a wider audience. It’s a story of adolescence, a tough upbringing through the eyes of three brothers. It’s somehow poetic and genuine at the same time.

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Mike Nichols’s 1966 adaptation of the brilliant Edward Albee play is an amazing drama that plays even more powerfully if one knows the story of stars Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, a real-life couple that could politely be called tumultuous. They give two of the best performances of their careers in this story of a married couple that has moved past bitterness and resentment to outright hatred. It’s a master class in acting, right there on Netflix.

The Wild Bunch
You may have seen a lot of Westerns, but you haven’t seen anything much like Sam Peckinpah’s ultra-violent tale of a group of over-the-hill outlaws looking for one final score. Peckinpah’s look at a dying West would forever change the genre, impacting everyone from Clint Eastwood to Quentin Tarantino. It’s an essential American film.

West Side Story
As the high-profile remake of this gets into production, do yourself a favor and check out one of the most beloved musicals of all time. The 1961 adaptation of the 1957 Broadway hit won an amazing 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture. A riff on Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet, this is a joyous, vibrant film that really helped shape the form of the movie musical in the ‘60s and ‘70s. It’s a must-see.

Y Tu Mama Tambien
Likely added to accompany Roma, this is a great piece of work to watch after that one as it’s another obviously personal film from Alfonso Cuaron. Two teenage boys – Gael Garcia Bernal & Diego Luna – fall for an older woman who has a secret. It’s a sweet, moving film from a modern master.

Zodiac
Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr., and Mark Ruffalo star in David Fincher’s 2007 masterpiece about the search for the infamous Zodiac killer who terrorized San Francisco. However, this is no mere murder mystery. It’s more about the price we pay for obsession, and it’s one of the most chilling, unforgettable films of the ‘00s. Fincher’s craftsman level of detail turns out to be the perfect partner for a film about trying to grab something that is always just out of reach.

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