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

Samantha Morton in 2073.
Neon Entertainment

After a slow start to April, it’s… still a little slow on our list of the best movies to stream on Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video, Max (HBO), and other services. After a March that saw a slew of Oscar winners arrive on streaming platforms (including Anora, A Complete Unknown, and Wicked), April’s biggest highlight to date is the SZA and Keke Palmer comedy, One of Them Days.

Nonetheless, we soldier on with four new additions to the list this week across three services. Headlined by a dystopian documentary on Max, check out this week’s best new movies to stream.

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+.

Watch the latest movies and TV shows via Sling. Score your first 3 months for $99.99, $140 off. Channels available include ABC, NBC, and Fox as well as ESPN, Bravo, FX, National Geographic, and even TNT.

New movies to stream at a glance

Max (formerly HBO and HBO Max)

2073 (2024)

2073
52%
R
83m
Genre
Thriller, Documentary, Science Fiction
Stars
Samantha Morton, Naomi Ackie, Hector Hewer
Directed by
Asif Kapadia
Watch on max

This documentary-style sci-fi thriller is inspired by Chris Marker’s 1962 featurette La Jetée and takes place in the dystopian New San Francisco in 2073. In this tech-dominant police state, democracy and personal freedoms have been completely obliterated, along with all signs of ecology and natural life.

A survivor besieged by nightmares of the past struggles to build a life in this authoritarian future.

Y2K (2024)

Y2K
49%
R
92m
Genre
Comedy, Horror, Science Fiction
Stars
Jaeden Martell, Rachel Zegler, Julian Dennison
Directed by
Kyle Mooney
Watch on max

Rachel Zegler (Snow White) stars in this horror-comedy about a couple of high school nobodies who decide to crash the ultimate New Year’s Eve party in 1999.

Playing on some of the sensationalist fears that gripped the nation before the turn of the millennium, Y2K ratchets up into an overdrive of zaniness when the clock strikes midnight. And all with a couple of stars at its center who weren’t even born at the time.

Queer (2024)

Queer
72%
r
136m
Genre
Drama, Romance
Stars
Daniel Craig, Drew Starkey, Jason Schwartzman
Directed by
Luca Guadagnino
Watch on max

Daniel Craig takes on a decidedly different role than James Bond in Luca Guadagnino’s (Call Me By Your NameQueer. In 1950s Mexico City, American expat William Lee (Craig) leads a quiet, solitary life within a small American community.

But when a young student, Eugene Allerton (Drew Starkey), arrives, William finds himself drawn to the intriguing young man. For the first time in his life, he begins to establish a meaningful connection with another person.

Sing Sing (2024)

Sing Sing
83%
r
107m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Colman Domingo, Clarence Maclin, Sean San Jose
Directed by
Greg Kwedar
Watch on max

Another 2024 Oscar nominee, Sing Sing is an A24 summer release that went somewhat under the radar. Colman Domingo stars as Divine G, a man imprisoned at Sing Sing Prison for a crime he didn’t commit.

Feeling defeated, he finds purpose by acting in a theatre group composed of other inmates. Together, they find a greater purpose and a spirit of resilience despite the soul-crushing monotony of prison life.  Sing Sing‘s ensemble is special because it’s entirely comprised of formerly incarcerated actors.

The Parenting (2025)

The Parenting
r
100m
Genre
Horror, Comedy
Stars
Nik Dodani, Brandon Flynn, Brian Cox
Directed by
Craig Johnson
Watch on HBO Max

Craig Johnson (The Skeleton Twins) directs this tongue-in-cheek horror original on Max about a young couple planning the perfect getaway to introduce their parents to one another. But the traditional Sharon and Frank (Edie Falco and Brian Cox) do not vibe with the laid-back Liddy and Cliff (Lisa Kudrow and Dean Norris), leading to some incredibly awkward tensions.

Fortunately, their rental is haunted by a 400-year-old poltergeist, and, as everyone knows, nothing brings families together like being haunted by a 400-year-old poltergeist.

Hulu

Small Things Like These (2024)

Small Things Like These
82%
PG-13
99m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Cillian Murphy, Emily Watson, Michelle Fairley
Directed by
Tim Mielants
Watch on Hulu

Cillian Murphy stars in this quiet Christmas drama based on Claire Keegan’s novel set in County Wexford, Ireland in 1985. Bill Furlong (Murphy) leads a difficult life as a coal merchant trying to support his wife and five daughters.

But when he’s out delivering coal at the local convent one morning, he discovers something that challenges his faith and forces him to confront his past. The Catholic Church controls this little hamlet, and Bill’s sudden unwillingness to stay silent rattles the community to its core.

Magpie (2024)

Magpie
69%
R
90m
Genre
Thriller, Drama
Stars
Daisy Ridley, Shazad Latif, Matilda Lutz
Directed by
Sam Yates
Watch on Hulu
Anette (Daisy Ridley) and Ben (Shazad Latif) lead a happy enough marriage, but when their daughter is cast in a film alongside a famous movie star (Matilda Lutz), their relationship begins to fracture.
As their daughter grows closer to the star and Anette suspects Ben of harboring a secret infatuation with her, all of their secrets and lies begin to bubble to the surface and risk exposure.

A Complete Unknown (2024)

A Complete Unknown
70%
r
140m
Genre
Drama, Music
Stars
Timothée Chalamet, Edward Norton, Elle Fanning
Directed by
James Mangold
Watch on Hulu

Although it was shut out from the podium at the 2025 Oscars, A Complete Unknown did earn eight nominations, including Best Picture and acting nods for Timothée Chalamet, Edward Norton, and Monica Barbaro. The Bob Dylan biopic follows 19-year-old Dylan as an unknown Minnesota musician trying to make a splash on the New York music scene in the early 1960s.

The film follows his meteoric rise from folk singer to the top of the charts and the demands put upon him by such a sudden burst of fame. Just as his style becomes unique and inimitable, Dylan refuses to be pigeonholeed, picking up an electric guitar at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965.

The Line (2024)

The Line
74%
r
100m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Alex Wolff, Lewis Pullman, Bo Mitchell
Directed by
Ethan Berger
Watch on Hulu

Alex Wolff stars in this college drama as Tom, a working-class student on a scholarship who is immediately drawn to the prestigious KNA fraternity. The frat is the playpen of wealthy scions and alumni connections that can open a pathway out of the lower classes.

When he meets Annabelle (Halle Bailey), a woman outside of his social circle, he soon finds himself embroiled in a manipulative game of ambition and loyalty, with the string pulled by his sadistic fraternity president (Lewis Pullman).

Anora (2024)

Anora
91%
r
139m
Genre
Drama, Comedy, Romance
Stars
Mikey Madison, Mark Eydelshteyn, Yura Borisov
Directed by
Sean Baker
Watch on Hulu

The biggest winner at this year’s OscarsAnora took home five statues, including wins for Best Picture and Best Actress for debut star, Mikey Madison.

In this heartfelt dramedy, Madison stars as Anora, a young sex worker from Brooklyn who gets her chance at a Cinderella story when she captures the heart of an oligarch’s son. Getting married on a lark, the news soon reaches Russia, and Anora’s new in-laws head to New York to get the marriage annulled by any means necessary.

Amazon Prime Video

G20 (2025)

G20
R
108m
Genre
Action, Mystery, Drama
Stars
Viola Davis, Anthony Anderson, Marsai Martin
Directed by
Patricia Riggen
Watch on Amazon

Viola Davis and Anthony Anderson star in this action-packed Amazon original G20. When the G20 summit comes under siege, the number one target is U.S. President Danielle Sutton (Davis).

Sutton has a few tricks up her sleeve, and when she evades capture in the moment, she works to outsmart the enemy to protect her family, global leaders, and the entire country.

Holland (2025)

Holland
44%
r
108m
Genre
Drama, Thriller
Stars
Nicole Kidman, Gael García Bernal, Matthew Macfadyen
Directed by
Mimi Cave
Watch on Amazon
Set in picturesque, tulip-filled Holland, Michigan, Holland follows Nancy Vandergroot (Nicole Kidman), a teacher leading the picture-perfect life with her community pillar husband (Matthew Macfadyen) and son. But when she and her colleague (Gael García Bernal) become suspicious of a secret that impacts several people in the community, they can’t let it go. Pulling at the threads, they soon discover nothing in their picture-perfect lives is quite as it seems.

Broken Rage (2024)

Broken Rage
62m
Genre
Crime, Drama, Comedy
Stars
Takeshi Kitano, Tadanobu Asano, Nao Ômori
Directed by
Takeshi Kitano
Watch on Amazon

Director Takeshi Kitano has dropped on Prime Video the first part of his two-part saga into the Japanese underworld, Broken Rage. Seemingly unremarkable, “Mouse” (Kitano) is actually a prolific hitman.

When he’s caught by police, Mouse is given a deal to go undercover and infiltrate the yakuza. If he refuses, he will go to jail. Tapping into all of his cunning, Mouse struggles to stay a step ahead of both organizations, orchestrating a delicate plan while using just a little bit of violence when needed.

You're Cordially Invited (2025)

You're Cordially Invited
56%
r
109m
Genre
Comedy
Stars
Reese Witherspoon, Will Ferrell, Geraldine Viswanathan
Directed by
Nicholas Stoller
Watch on Amazon

They don’t make many pure R-rated comedies anymore, so that in its own right makes You’re Cordially Invited something of a breath of fresh air. Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon star as antagonists in this flick about an accidental double-booking at the same wedding venue.

Each bridal party is determined to make the most of the situation and preserve their family’s special moment despite the tight quarters. Yet the father of one bride (Ferrell) and the sister of the other (Witherspoon) are motivated to make the day even more memorable for their special people.

Unstoppable (2024)

Unstoppable
68%
pg-13
123m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Jharrel Jerome, Jennifer Lopez, Don Cheadle
Directed by
William Goldenberg
Watch on Amazon

Anthony Robles (Jharrel Jerome) was born with one leg, but through his indomitable spirit and the support of his devoted mother, Judy (Jennifer Lopez), and his high school coaches, he fought to earn a spot on the Arizona State Division 1 wrestling team.

But at a new level, it takes absolutely everything he has to achieve his ultimate goal to become an NCAA Champion. This Amazon Prime original is based on a true story.

Netflix

One of Them Days (2025)

One of Them Days
71%
R
97m
Genre
Comedy
Stars
Keke Palmer, SZA, Joshua David Neal
Directed by
Lawrence Lamont
Watch on Netflix

One of 2025’s earliest hits, One of Them Days has made a quick arrival to Netflix. Keke Palmer and SZA play best friends and roommates in this comedy about, you know, one of them days.

When they realize that Alyssa’s (SZA) boyfriend blew their rent money, they’re up against the clock to avoid eviction. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg, as the women’s issues keep compounding to the point that their friendship is stressed to the limit.

Den of Thieves 2: Pantera (2025)

Den of Thieves 2: Pantera
60%
r
144m
Genre
Action, Crime, Thriller
Stars
Gerard Butler, O'Shea Jackson Jr., Evin Ahmad
Directed by
Christian Gudegast
Watch on Netflix

After a largely lackluster theatrical release, 2018’s Den of Thieves gained a second life after hitting streaming services. Enough so that, seven years later, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera sees Gerard Butler return as Big Nick, hunting for diamond thief Donnie (O’Shea Jackson) in Europe.

Embroiled in the treacherous world of the Panther mafia, the two men join forces once again to plot a massive heist of the world’s largest diamond exchange.

The Outrun (2024)

The Outrun
72%
r
118m
Genre
Drama
Stars
Saoirse Ronan, Paapa Essiedu, Nabil Elouahabi
Directed by
Nora Fingscheidt
Watch on Netflix

Oscar-nominee Saoirse Ronan plays a troubled woman fresh out of rehab in this emotional drama. Rona (Ronan) returns to her home on the Orkney Islands, off the Scottish coast, after her most recent rehab stint and more than a decade of living life on the edge in London.

Reconnecting with the dramatic landscape of her home, she’s haunted by memories of a traumatic childhood and met with new challenges on her road to recovery.

Kraven the Hunter (2024)

Kraven the Hunter
35%
r
127m
Genre
Action, Adventure, Thriller
Stars
Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ariana DeBose, Fred Hechinger
Directed by
J.C. Chandor
Watch on Netflix

Sony’s Marvel-adjacent universe has not gone particularly well. The Venom franchise has been okay, but between Morbius, Madame Web, and now Kraven the Hunter, Sony has somehow continually lowered the bar on how bad superhero movies can be.

Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who is suddenly in everything these days, plays Kraven Kravinoff, a ruthless hunter with a complicated relationship with his gangster father, Nikolai (Russell Crowe). That relationship puts him on a path of vengeance that soon has brutal consequences.

The Electric State (2025)

The Electric State
32%
pg-13
128m
Genre
Science Fiction, Adventure, Drama
Stars
Millie Bobby Brown, Chris Pratt, Woody Harrelson
Directed by
Joe Russo, Anthony Russo
Watch on Netflix

The Russo brothers (Ant-Man) team up The Electric State, a PG-13 sci-fi original set in a world in which sentient robots once peacefully lived among humans but are now in exile after a failed uprising. But when Michelle (Millie Bobby Brown) is visited by a sweet robot called Cosmo, who seems to be controlled by her thought-to-be-deceased brother, Christopher, she soon finds her whole world turned upside down.

Joining Cosmo, Michelle sets out across a futuristic American southwest to find Christopher, forced to join up with a smuggler (Chris Pratt) and his robot sidekick (Anthony Mackie) along the way. Venturing into the Exclusion Zone where robots have been banished, the squad uncovers a sinister cospiracy.

Peacock

Girl You Know It's True (2023)

Girl You Know It's True
PG-13
124m
Genre
Drama, History, Music
Stars
Elan Ben Ali, Tijan Njie, Matthias Schweighöfer
Directed by
Simon Verhoeven
Watch on Peacock

When dancers Rob Pilatus and Fab Morvan joined forces in the 1980s as the pop duo Milli Vanilli, they quickly climbed the charts and won a Grammy. However, their fame quickly turned to infamy when it was discovered that the duo never sang a single word in any of their songs.

They simply stole the voices of other singers and represented them as their own, spurring one of the biggest scandals in music history. This documentary explores the rise and fall of Milli Vanilli.

Wicked (2024)

Wicked
73%
pg
162m
Genre
Drama, Romance, Fantasy
Stars
Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, Jeff Goldblum
Directed by
Jon M. Chu
Watch on Peacock

2024’s biggest family-friendly movie became one of the year’s biggest cultural phenomena. The film adaptation of the first half of the beloved Broadway musical stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande. Elphaba (Erivo) is misunderstood due to her green skin. Glinda (Grande) is a popular girl, possessed by ambition.

Both students at Shiz University, they form an unlikely odd-couple friendship that leads them on diverging paths towards their destinies to become Glinda the Good and the Wicked Witch of the West. Nominated for ten Oscars, Wicked won Best Costume Design and Best Production Design.

The Killer (2024)

The Killer
60%
r
126m
Genre
Action, Thriller, Crime
Stars
Nathalie Emmanuel, Omar Sy, Sam Worthington
Directed by
John Woo
Watch on Peacock

John Woo directs The Killer, a Peacock original about a mysterious assassin known in the Parisian underworld as the Queen of the Dead. Zee (Nathalie Emmanuel) is a brutal killer, but when she refuses to kill a young blind woman in a Paris nightclub, her shadowy mentor and handler (Sam Worthington) turns against her, along with the rest of her alliances.

As the underworld upheaval catches the attention of a dogged police investigator (Omar Sy), Zee soon finds herself at the center of a sinister criminal conspiracy.

Shudder

825 Forest Road (2025)

825 Forest Road
Genre
Horror
Stars
Brian Anthony Wilson, Mike Sutton, Lorenzo Beronilla
Directed by
Stephen Cognetti
Watch on Shudder
This Shudder original stars Brian Anthony Wilson as a family man hoping to start a new life in the woods with his wife after a family tragedy. But what is supposed to be a relaxing, rejuvenating life change quickly turns terrifying when he discovers that the town has a dark secret.

Bloody Axe Wound (2024)

Bloody Axe Wound
83m
Genre
Horror, Comedy
Stars
Sari Arambulo, Molly Brown, Eddie Leavy
Directed by
Matthew John Lawrence
Watch on Shudder

Abbie Bladecut (Sari Arambulo) was born into a family with a macabre tradition of creating snuff films. Expected to step into the family business, Abbie finds herself less motivated to kill after developing her first crush.

As Abbie delves further into the family business and feels the tender stirrings of love even more, she wonders if it’s time to find a new direction for the family business.

Disney+

Mufasa: The Lion King (2024)

Mufasa: The Lion King
56%
pg-13
118m
Genre
Adventure, Family, Animation
Stars
Aaron Pierre, Kelvin Harrison, Jr., Tiffany Boone
Directed by
Barry Jenkins
Watch on Disney+

Mufasa is one of the most iconic characters in the Disney Vault, so why not do a live-action/CGI prequel to The Lion King that tells his story? Right? Naturally, Disney ties in the classic characters by using Rafiki to tell the story of young Mufasa to Simba and Nala’s daughter, as well as Timon and Pumbaa.

The tale follows Mufasa as an orphaned cub, alone and close to death when he’s found by Taka, who just happens to be heir to a royal bloodline. Suddenly, destiny is rewritten.

Moana 2 (2024)

Moana 2
58%
pg
99m
Genre
Animation, Adventure, Family, Comedy
Stars
Auliʻi Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson, Hualālai Chung
Directed by
David G. Derrick Jr., Jason Hand, Dana Ledoux Miller
Watch on Disney+

Moana 2 was a box office success, but there’s no argument that it falls well short of the outstanding original. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s influence is noticeably absent on the disappointingly forgettable soundtrack, but at least the adventure and humor are present.

After an unexpected call from her wayfinding ancestors, Moana (Auli’i Cravalho) returns to the sea with Maui (Dwayne Johnson) and a new crew to seek out a mythical island that once served as a waypoint for voyaging cultures around the world and establish relations once again.

MGM+

The Fire Inside (2024)

The Fire Inside
76%
pg-13
109m
Genre
History, Drama
Stars
Ryan Destiny, Brian Tyree Henry, Oluniké Adeliyi
Directed by
Rachel Morrison
Watch on Amazon

This historical drama tells the story of Claressa Shields (Ryan Destiny), a young woman from Flint, Michigan, who would become the first American woman to win an Olympic gold medal in boxing.

Motivated by her tough-love coach, Jason Crutchfield (Brian Tyree Henry), Claressa pushes to reach the pinnacle of her sport. But even when she arrives, she discovers that as a Black woman in boxing, her fight has only just begun.

Paramount+

Better Man (2024)

Better Man
77%
r
135m
Genre
Music, Drama
Stars
Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton
Directed by
Michael Gracey
Watch on Paramount+

The biggest box office flop of the year and one of the biggest ever, Better Man, grossed just over $20 million worldwide against a $110 million budget. The extraordinary loss is much more on marketing failures, however, than on the actual quality of the movie, which has received good reviews. Based on British pop star Robbie Williams’ rise, fall, and resurgence, Williams made the somewhat bizarre call to cast himself as a CGI monkey in the largely autobiographical film.

While the film is about the challenges of fame and success, the greatest irony is that Williams was nowhere near a big enough star to make a film like this in the first place.

September 5 (2024)

September 5
76%
r
95m
Genre
Thriller, Drama, History
Stars
John Magaro, Leonie Benesch, Peter Sarsgaard
Directed by
Tim Fehlbaum
Watch on Paramount+

After Israeli athletes are taken hostage during the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, the world’s sports broadcasters had to learn a new style on the fly. September 5 follows a team of American sports broadcasters as they take over live coverage of one of the world’s most significant political events in the post-war world.

Ambitious producer Geoff (John Magaro) strives to prove himself to his boss, TV executive Roone Arledge (Peter Sarsgaard), with help from German interpreter Marianne (Leonie Benesch) and mentor Marvin Bader (Ben Chaplin).

Apple TV+

The Gorge (2025)

The Gorge
pg-13
127m
Genre
Action, Romance, Horror
Stars
Anya Taylor-Joy, Miles Teller, Sigourney Weaver
Directed by
Scott Derrickson
Watch on Apple TV+

Anya Taylor-Joy and Miles Teller star in The Gorge, a sci-fi dystopian thriller. Appointed to posts in guard towers on opposite sides of a vast, highly classified gorge, two operatives grow close to one another as they protect the planet from an undisclosed, mysterious evil lurking within the gorge.

After bonding from a distance, their connection is tested when a cataclysmic event finally rattles the gorge and threatens to release the evil upon the world.

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.

Movie images and data from:
Nick Perry
Former Digital Trends Contributor

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.

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If it's a rainy April, you'll be happy to have our list of the best kids movies on Netflix bookmarked. We keep this list updated rain or shine, so if you need to keep the kids occupied while you're working or busy, there's always something new to hold their interest. Naturally, you want to know what your kids are watching; however, that is why we scour the collection every month to highlight the best kid-friendly movies and choose-your-own-adventure content available on the platform now.

This month, we add two new movies to the list: The Croods and Rise of the Guardians. Read on for the best kids movies on Netflix now.

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The landscape of fantasy movies on Netflix is so bleak that it doesn't have have its own tab under the movie section. You'll have to do a manual search if you want fantasy films, and there just aren't that many to be found. The good news is that Netflix has added a genuinely great fantasy movie this month called Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. Unfortunately, it didn't do big numbers at the box office and a sequel for this terrific movie is unlikely to come together.

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Netflix continues to back its status as the ideal mainstream platform for watching the best anime. Subscribers will find plenty to watch among its live-action originals, including adaptations of anime like One Piece, but the service's anime library has depth. It has more than enough anime TV series and movies to keep every type of fan entertained, especially with the many franchises and genres covered.

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