Do you ever find yourself spending so long flicking through Netflix's vast library that you run out of time to actually watch a movie after all? Are you stuck in a cycle of rewatching the same fistful of films because there are simply too many titles to choose from? Are you tired of saying Nope as you scroll on through when all you're really looking for is the next unskippable "yes"? Well fear not, friends! Your friendly neighbourhood Empire have crunched the numbers (and the popcorn), watched the movies, and are here to help. There’s a whole wide world of underrated gems, perennial comfort watches, and all-time canonical bangers out there in the streamer's library just waiting to be explored — and our list of the best movies on Netflix UK has been carefully curated to help you make the most of your precious movie-watching time.
And so, from cracking comedies and banging blockbusters to cerebral crime thrillers and feel-good shots of pure serotonin, heart-stopping horrors to bold new Netflix originals and the cream of the foreign film crop, look no further — we’ve got you covered. So what are you waiting for? Feast your eyes on our list of Netflix UK finest features (presented in no particular order), and get your next big night in sorted.
Once you've watched all the movies the platform has to offer, why not check out our rundown of the best TV shows on Netflix? Or, for your factual fix, perhaps the best documentaries on Netflix?
Godzilla Minus One
For lovers of Kaiju cinema, Godzilla’s cinematic resurgence over the past decade — first in 2014’s Godzilla, then in 2016’s Shin Godzilla, and several times since in Legendary’s Monsterverse sequels — has been a glorious thing to behold. But not since Ishirō Honda’s original 1954 masterpiece has there been a movie that understands the cultural resonance and power of the monstrous Titan as well as Godzilla Minus One. Japanese-made and post-war set, Takashi Yamazaki’s heartfelt melodrama restores Gojira’s status as a potent symbol of the death, destruction, and sheer devastation wrought upon Japan by the nation’s nuclear bombardment at the end of WWII, framing the irradiated lizard’s reign of terror around a poignant tale of survivor’s guilt. Striking an impeccable balance between tenderly constructed human drama and jaw-slackening Kaiju action (somehow achieved on a meagre $10 million budget), Yamazaki's Oscar-winning creature feature is everything a great Godzilla movie should be. Believe the hype — behold GOJIRAAAAA! (Now also available in monstrously gorgeous monochrome, too...)
Read the Empire review here.
Nope
Doing for the sky what Jaws did for the sea, Nope sees Jordan Peele give Steven Spielberg a run for his money with a go-for-broke blockbuster that mercurially blends nightmare fuel horror with out-and-out sci-fi spectacle. Driven by a trifecta of star turns from Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, and Steven Yeun, Peele's third feature sees the Get Out filmmaker simultaneously indulging and indicting our compulsion towards the grotesque and the horrific with a bold new take on the old-school alien-invasion formula. And the key to Peele's success in landing his meditation on the cost of pleasing a crowd? How damn hard he makes it to look away. From the opening savage (and thematically instrumental) 'Gordy's Home' attack, to the mid-movie claret downpour upon Haywood Hollywood Horses’ family ranch, to *that* horse riding, Akira sliding climactic encounter with the movie's Giger-esque extraterrestrial, Peele's thematically weighty picture is kinetically charged by a slew of showstopping setpieces. That it's all so impossible to say, well, nope to is the whole point. Another bona fide Peele banger.
Read the Empire review here.
Hit Man
Having proven his leading man potential with star turns in Top Gun: Maverick and Anyone But You, Glen Powell goes full movie star with a magnetic turn — or, more accurately, turns — in Richard Linklater’s true story inspired Hit Man, a smoking hot rom-com with an intoxicating noir edge. Here, Powell plays philosophy-lecturer-turned-fake-assassin Gary Johnson, whose unlikely side-hustle gets complicated when — whilst disguised as smooth talking contract killer Ron — he meets Madison (Adria Arjona), a woman trying to escape an abusive marriage, during a set-up. Sparks fly between the pair, the sting collapses, and a whirlwind romance ensues. From there, the heat turns up in every possible way as Gary attempts to keep up his double-life without rousing the suspicions of the feds — or his new girlfriend. Smart, sexy, slick, and quick-witted, this is fiercely original filmmaking that grabs you from minute one and never lets go. What else can we say? It’s a hit, man!
Read the Empire review here.
Emily The Criminal
Aubrey Plaza is nothing short of a revelation in Emily The Criminal, a propulsive (almost) tight 90 minute thriller from first-time filmmaker John Patton Ford. Subverting her status as the queen of deadpan delivery to magnetic effect, Plaza disappears into the role of Emily, a cash-strapped college grad whose overwhelming student debt drives her to commit credit card fraud for a band of black-market baddies. As Emily is drawn ever deeper into LA’s criminal underworld though, she — and by extension Plaza — really comes into her own, leaning into her systemic disillusionment and hardening up to become a truly formidable anti-hero. Recalling the Safdies’ similarly anxiety inducing and morally grey crime-thriller Good Time, Ford’s is a film with a lot to say about the dog-eat-dog struggle of the working class within modern America’s gig economy. And with Plaza front and centre, it finds a hell of a way to say it.
Read the Empire review here.
Top Gun: Maverick
The original Top Gun, released in 1986, defined a decade and made Tom Cruise an icon, wooing cinemagoers with its high-octane action, (b)romance, and superlative soundtrack. It’s fair to say then that the idea of Cruise and producer Jerry Bruckheimer bringing Maverick back to the Danger Zone over three decades later, coming off the back of a global pandemic, represented a huge risk. But with director Joseph Kosinski at the helm, Cruise in control at the heart of it all, and a crack team of screenwriters – including Cruise’s Mission: Impossible wingman Christopher McQuarrie – piloting the script, the crazy cats’ gamble paid off and then some. Top Gun: Maverick is deeply heartfelt, contains some of the most thrilling action sequences in cinema history, and boasts cracking chemistry all-round – from Maverick’s tête-à-têtes with his gruff superiors, to Rooster (Miles Teller) and Hangman’s (Glen Powell) fractious squabbling. And don’t even get us started on that Val Kilmer return. The whole thing just, er, takes our breath away (sorry not sorry.) Roll on Top Gun 3.
Read the Empire review here.
Past Lives
Topping Empire’s list of the best films of 2023, Celine Song’s feature directorial debut is a stunningly subtle, profoundly moving piece of cinema. This decades-spanning story follows young Korean Canadian immigrant Nora (Greta Lee), who leaves her home as a child, and with it a version of herself childhood sweetheart Hae Sung (Teo Yoo) grows up longing to reconnect with. The presence of Nora’s writer husband Arthur (John Magaro) in the present day may suggest things will eventually head down familiar love triangle territory – especially when Hae Sung comes to visit — but this isn’t that film. Instead, Song uses the set-up to stage a beautifully shot, gorgeously acted, and poetically written semi-autobiographical exploration of the messiness of love, longing, regret, and contemplating, well, past lives. The In-Yun runs deep with this one, so don’t leave yourself wondering what could’ve been — watch it!
Read the Empire review here.
Spaceman
The elevator pitch for Chernobyl director Johan Renck’s latest endeavour reads like an ill-fated Happy Madison comedy: Adam Sandler plays an astronaut befriended by a Paul Dano-voiced, Nutella-addicted extraterrestrial spider whilst on a mission to Jupiter. In actuality though, this adaptation of Jaroslav Kalfař’s Spaceman Of Bohemia is our latest reminder that The Sandman is actually one of his generation’s most mercurial actors. Equal parts Solaris-style existentialist sci-fi and probing relationship drama, it’s more likely to make you cry than laugh. Here, Sandler brings real introspective nuance to spaceman Jakub, whose trauma-rooted physical and emotional distance from pregnant wife Lenka (Carey Mulligan) is delicately unpacked through a series of philosophical dialogues with Dano’s aforementioned hairy wallcrawler Hanuš. It is a bizarre cinematic brew, admittedly. But it’s also strangely cathartic in a “Why am I crying at Adam Sandler hugging a CG spider?” sort of way.
Read the Empire review here.
Femme
Nathan Stewart-Jarrett (Candyman) and George MacKay (1917) share incredible, incendiary chemistry in writer-directors Sam H. Freeman and Ng Choon Ping’s erotically charged, noir-inflected queer revenge thriller. Here we follow Jules (Stewart-Jarrett), a drag performer who — months after being viciously beaten in a homophobic assault — plots revenge when he sees his attacker, closeted hothead Preston (MacKay), in a gay sauna. What starts as an act of narrative reclamation and role-reversal on Jules’ part however complicates as lines — between sex and violence, submission and domination, erotic fantasy and lived reality, victim and abuser even — dangerously start to blur. Sharp in its assessment of the way entrenched societal homophobia continues to corrode and encourage the cannibalisation of queer hearts and bodies, this is a difficult but ultimately necessary watch, assembled with real care and great craftsmanship by everyone involved.
Read the Empire review here.
The Kitchen
The list of British social-realist sci-fi films may be short, but this promising co-directorial debut from actor-turned-filmmaker Daniel Kaluuya and architect-turned-filmmaker Kibwe Tavares compellingly makes the case that there should be more. Presenting a bracing, all-too-believable vision of a near-future London that's equal parts Mike Leigh, Syd Mead, and Attack The Block, Kaluuya and Tavares' barely dystopian film dextrously tackles gang culture, the trials of parenthood, and the inadequacies of the British social housing system. Most impressively though, it juggles these commentaries whilst still managing to tell an emotionally engaging story about two wayward souls (Kane Robinson and newcomer Jedaiah Bannerman — both captivating) drawn together on the last council estate left in town. That the movie also just so happens to boast a genuinely blinding performance by Gooners legend Ian 'Wrighty' Wright as the pirate DJ at the heart of the titular community is just a bonus, really.
Read the Empire review here.
Society Of The Snow
The sensational true story of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 is one that has been told many times before – on page, stage, screen, podcasts, even experimental punk rock singles. Its latest telling however, from survival genre veteran J.A. Bayona (The Impossible, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom), feels like the definitive account of what happened when a plane carrying a team of Uruguyan rugby players and their families crashed over the Andes in October 1972. Based on journalist Pablo Vierci’s exhaustive 2009 book of the same name, Bayona’s film – notably the first Spanish-language telling of this tale on-screen – seamlessly blends epic location work and pulsating set pieces with intimate, character-driven storytelling to honour both the flight’s victims and its survivors. Survival is as much about choosing to live as it is refusing to die, and with Society Of The Snow, Bayona and his across-the-board brilliant ensemble stage a powerful reckoning with the cost of that decision.
Read the Empire review here.
Maestro
Confidently proving that 2018’s A Star Is Born was no mere fluke, Bradley Cooper’s sophomore directorial effort Maestro is every bit as technically remarkable and emotionally resonant as his first feature. Here, Cooper puts down the guitar and picks up the conducting baton of Leonard Bernstein, vividly bringing the legendary West Side Story composer’s tale – as artist, husband, and father – to life both behind and in front of the camera. The first half of the film is a lavishly staged if somewhat standard issue biopic, DoP Matthew Libatique’s evocative black and white lensing and dynamic camerawork sumptuously framing Bernstein’s rise to musical prominence and courtship of wife Felicia Montealegre (an astounding Carey Mulligan). The back half however, which strays from the genre playbook to zero in on moments shared between Leonard, Felicia, and their family as tragedy looms, is where Cooper’s command of his craft really approaches the virtuosic. And that recreation of the ‘Resurrection’ at Ely Cathedral? Instant chills.
Read the Empire review here.
Dune
The way the ornithopters caress the spice-strewn sands of Arrakis in Denis Villeneuve’s Dune (DUUUUUUUNE!) is stunning. Amidst the grander designs of the Quebecois filmmaker’s awe-inspiring adaptation of Frank Herbert’s supposedly “unfilmable” opus, their existence may be missed – the sheer density of dazzling stars (Chalamet! Isaac! Ferguson! Zendaya!), big ideas, and even bigger spectacle on offer here is a lot to process. But these dragonfly-like vehicles – a sublime fusion of impeccable craftsmanship and divine inspiration – actually sum up the first part of Villeneuve’s sci-fi epic perfectly. Dune is both a supremely well-oiled machine – a meticulously detailed, technically flawless piece of cinematic engineering that dazzles the senses and blows the mind repeatedly over its 150 minutes – and a product of palpable love and pure imagination on its creator’s part. It’s a behemothic blockbuster that, like those buggish ‘thopters, makes transcendent realities of our wildest dreams. Bring on Dune Part Two!
Read the Empire review of Dune here.
The Killer (2023)
If 2020’s Mank represented David Fincher taking an earnest directorial diversion onto Passion Project Lane, paying homage to his late father with a black-and-white Golden Age Hollywood biopic that split critical opinion, then consider this cerebral thriller a sublimely self-aware bit of course correction. Making his first screen appearance since 2019, Michael Fassbender is impossibly chill as the eponymous assassin, a Smiths loving, bunless McMuffin eating contract killer who embarks on a globetrotting quest for bloody retribution after a hit goes wrong. Hypnotic in tone and formal presentation, Fincher’s film - a masterclass in sound design, framing, and sustained tension - sees the Fight Club filmmaker continue his enquiry into our world’s oddballs and loners whilst reflecting on his own (in)famously meticulous movie making method. The result is Fincher’s most Fincher-esque film in years. And *THAT* fight sequence? Brutal!
Read the Empire review here.
Talk To Me (2023)
With A24 possession chiller Talk To Me, filmmaking twins Danny and Michael Philippou - better known to many as YouTube duo RackaRacka - add another soon-to-be-classic to the illustrious canon of great Australian horrors. Newcomer Sophie Wilde is captivating as Mia, a grief-stricken teen who finds herself caught up in a viral trend that has teens holding an embalmed hand and getting high off of 90 second sojourns into the spirit world. Needless to say, not all involved in this possession-based pursuit can expect to live to TikTok their tale. As much a bleak meditation on the all-consuming nature of addiction as it is a jumpscare-laden Gen Z riff on Flatliners, Talk To Me - which already has a sequel on the way - breathes new life into a genre long since thought (un)dead.
Read the Empire review here.
Judas & The Black Messiah (2021)
Shaka King’s sophomore feature is a tragic drama of biblical proportions. It tells the jaw-slackening true story of how small-time criminal William O’Neal (LaKeith Stanfield) became an FBI informant in late 60s Chicago, infiltrating a local chapter of the Black Panther Party and befriending its charismatic young leader Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya) before ultimately betraying him. The basic undercover set-up and Sean Bobbitt’s lithe camerawork invariably invite comparisons between this and Martin Scorsese’s The Departed, but King - working with two leads on incendiary form - ensures Hampton and O’Neal’s story is never lost in homage. Instead, the director uses the machinations of a thriller to craft a soul-stirring elegy to one of the civil rights movement’s most vital voices, offering a scathing condemnation of systemic racism whilst refusing to reduce this fascinating, knotty chapter in history to simple moral binaries.
Read the Empire review here.
Parasite (2019)
When Parasite won Best Picture at the Oscars back in 2020, it became the first non-English language movie to have done so – and it’s hard to imagine a more deserving first. A genre-defying, propulsive work of technical brilliance and conceptual genius, this South Korean juggernaut is a masterclass in suspense and release with more twists than a French pastry, brought to vivid life by a family of excellent performances from Song Kang-ho, Park So-dam, Choi Woo-shik and many more besides. Satirically razor sharp, blackly comic, and meticulously designed in every department, this (occasionally all too literal) skewering of the divide between the haves and have-nots is cinema at its purest and most powerful. In his Oscar acceptance speech, director Bong Joon-ho talked about the “one inch barrier” of subtitles that has historically so often stood between cinemagoers and exceptional international filmmaking. With Parasite, that barrier is comprehensively demolished.
Read the Empire review here.
Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2018)
A sensuous, smouldering period romance from French auteur Céline Sciamma, Portrait Of A Lady On Fire’s debut in the top 30 of Sight & Sound’s most recent 100 Greatest Films Of All Time listcame as no surprise. An achingly beautiful and gently melancholic tale of forbidden love set in 18th century France, Sciamma’s film sees a burning desire kindled when painter Marianne (Noémie Merlant) is commissioned by a countess to secretly create a wedding portrait of her daughter, Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), whilst posing as her companion. Lensed with a painterly sensibility by DoP Claire Mathon (Saint Omer, Spencer), this is a lyrically written, masterfully directed reminder that though love’s touch can be fleeting, its presence in the art, memories, looks, and feelings it inspires springs eternal.
Read the Empire review here.
All Quiet on the Western Front (2022)
The third cinematic adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque’s seminal pacifist screed, Edward Berger’s Oscar and BAFTA award-winning All Quiet On The Western Front - a film sixteen years in the making - is no less bone-rattling nor soul-shaking than any of its forebears. The bleak tone of Berger’s film is set during a harrowing prologue, which sees a young German recruit shot by a French bullet. From there, we follow his uniform’s journey as it is cleaned, recycled, and readied to meet its next victim, bright-eyed teen recruit Paul Bäumer (Felix Kammerer). From there, we’re viscerally thrust into the abyssal maw of war as Paul and his friends each in turn lose their minds - and, for many, eventually their lives. Volker Bertelmann’s doomful death knell of a score, the film’s awful, awe-inspiring framing and production design, and Kammerer’s shattering central turn result in an unforgettable, brutal cinematic experience.
Read the Empire review here.
Nimona (2023)
Having survived studio closures and cancellation before finally being resurrected by Netflix, the fact that Nimona exists at all is cause for celebration. That Nick Bruno and Troy Quane’s adaptation of ND Stevenson’s beloved graphic novel also happens to be a visually inventive, very witty, subversive and diverse animation that feels wholly original is a testament to the resilience and belief in the story shared by its makers. This revisionist fairytale stars Riz Ahmedand Chloë Grace Moretz as outlawed knight Ballister “Bal” Blackheart and shapeshifting agent of chaos Nimona, misunderstood malcontents who form an unlikely bond as they try to prove Bal’s innocence. Gorgeously rendered in eye-popping 2.5D animation, and increasingly bold in its narrative choices, Nimona’s is a story that refused to go unheard, and rightly so. TL;DR version - it’s all chaos, destruction, something-something-something. And we win.
Read the Empire review here.
Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022)
A long-gestating passion project for its eponymous maker, who lost both of the parents who inspired his love for this story before the film’s release, Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio departs from past tellings of Carlo Collodi’s classic tale to celebrate disobedience, confront fascism head-on, and greet death like an old friend. From the tragedy that befalls David Bradley’s Geppetto in the film’s Up-rivalling opening minutes, to cricket narrator Sebastian’s (Ewan McGregor) simply spoken closing words – “What happens happens, and then we’re gone” – del Toro takes us on the kind of darkly wonderful odyssey only the great Mexican fabulist could’ve helmed (there’s a reason his name’s in the title). This, his first animated feature, is a delicately hand-crafted, spellbinding affair – an all-singing, all-dancing, all-sobbing-by-the-end tale “of imperfect fathers, imperfect sons, love, and loss”. Pure poetry in (stop-)motion.
Read the Empire review here.
Fall (2022)
Scott Mann’s 2022 schlockbuster Fall follows in the great tradition of single word title does-what-it-says-on-the-tin thrillers like Buried, Frozen (not that one!), and Crawl by reeling you in with a simple hook - here, two trauma-stricken pals trapped up a 2,000ft TV tower - and then going to town on your nerves. And boy, oh boy, does this one succeed in leaving you a fraught wreck. As besties Becky (Grace Caroline Currey) and Shiloh (Virginia Gardner) make their ill-advised ascent, loose nuts, stray backpacks, lost signal, and even having a wee become scenes fraught with tension. And that’s before we even get to the vultures! Pairing spectacularly vertiginous camerawork with sweaty-palm inducing sound design and very ‘understood the assignment’ lead performances, this is a technically accomplished and ruthlessly efficient genre exercise.
Read the Empire review here.
The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (2022)
Tom Gormican’s The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent - a meta-comic love letter to nouveau shamanic thespian Nicolas Cage - is a doozy! Cage stars as a version of himself whose career’s on the skids and is contemplating retirement - but not before banking himself a cool $1 million for going to wealthy mega-fan Javi’s (Pedro Pascal) birthday party. Haunted by visions of his younger, _Wild At Hear_t-era self and embroiled in a kidnapping plot, a CIA investigation, and a bizarrely wholesome bromance with Pascal’s Paddington 2 loving superfan Javi, Cage fully cuts loose here - and the results are glorious! Packed to the gills with lovingly placed easter eggs and homages to Cage’s illustrious career (those ARE the golden guns from Face/Off, and that IS the Mandy chainsaw), Gormican has made a film every bit as unpredictable, unhinged, and unforgettable as the great man himself. Nick Cage is back! Not that he went anywhere…
Read the Empire review here.
Extraction 2 (2023)
Howard Hawks once said a great movie is “three great scenes and no bad ones”. Sam Hargrave’s Extraction 2, which sees Chris Hemsworth back in action as black market merc Tyler Rake after all but dying first time out, is a great movie. It’s so good in fact that it pretty much does all three great scenes in its breathless opening, which takes in an infernal prison escape, a forest-set car chase, and a helicopter-besieged train sequence all over the course of one of the craziest oners you’ll ever see. From there, the action rarely relents as Rake overcomes hell and high water to keep his ex-sister-in-law and her children safe. Packing bone-crunching foley work and some surprisingly emotional character beats, sold deftly by natural-born action man Hemsworth, this one’s a real action filmmaking tour de force.
Read the Empire review here.
Four Lions (2010)
Co-written by none other than Succession supremo Jesse Armstrong, Four Lions is the first - and remains perhaps the only - suicide bomber comedy (why that sub-genre never took off we’ll never know!). In lesser hands, this could’ve been little more than a button-pushing bit of edgelord controversy courting. But, under the writing and direction of maverick satirist Chris Morris, the film - which sees Riz Ahmed, Kayvan Novak, Adeel Akhtar, and Nigel Lindsay bungling preparations for a bombing - instead poses a thought-provoking, oftentimes profoundly melancholic assessment of the lethal combination of peer pressure, pride, confusion and idiocy that makes martyrs of deeply misguided men. It just also happens to be very, very, very funny, proving that you can in fact joke about anything, so long as you do it well. Rubber dinghy rapids, bro!
Read the Empire review here.
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022)
Ever since we first met Daniel Craig’s passive observer of the truth, Benoit Blanc, in 2019’s subversive sleutherKnives Out, we’ve been slightly obsessed with Rian Johnson’s Foghorn Leghorn-accented gentleman detective. That obsession ratcheted up several notches with last year’s follow-up Glass Onion, which makes Blanc an active player in the game as he sets out to catch a killer during a murder-mystery weekend on oddball billionaire Miles Bron’s (Edward Norton) private island. As gleefully self-aware as its predecessor and just as satirically sharp (no prizes for guessing who the tech billionaire buffoon with no people skills and a God complex could be), Johnson’s sequel adopts a bigger equals better philosophy and applies it perfectly. Among a starry ensemble - Dave Bautista! Kathryn Hahn! Kate Hudson! Hugh Grant! - special props have got to go to Janelle Monáe, whose standout performance as the enigmatic Andi Brand is as layered and eye-catching as the titular vitreous veggie.
Read the Empire review here.
Submarine (2010)
From the angsty Alex Turner soundtrack to the Wes Anderson aesthetic hat-tips and an inimitable vein of dry, subversive humour, Richard Ayoade’s Submarine is a hell of a directorial debut. Based on Joe Dunthorne’s off-kilter coming-of-age book, this cinematic adaptation sees Craig Roberts (Phantom Of The Open) step into the shoes of Oliver Tate, an awkward 15-year-old whose only dreams are to lose his virginity and stop his mum (Sally Hawkins) from cheating on his old man (Noah Taylor) with Paddy Considine. As a balloon static buzz builds between Oliver and the enigmatic Jordana (Yasmin Paige), Ayoade takes viewers on a singularly strange yet relentlessly charming journey through the growing pains of adolescence, the intensity of young love, and the realisation that everything eventually gets committed to the Super-8 footage of memory.
Read the Empire review here.
Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse (2018)
Web-slinging wonder Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse’s showstopping centrepiece sees Brooklyn teen Miles Morales (Shameik Moore), Spider-suited and Air Jordan booted, take a leap of faith. Glass shatters, the world turns upside down, and our hero ascends where others would fall. It’s not only a stunning scene in a film that marks animation’s biggest jump since Pixar sphered the circle with Toy Story, but a ripe metaphor for the movie itself. The Phil Lord and Christopher Miller production shatters the ceiling for the form with its gorgeous, Day dotted pop art blend of 2D and 3D animation, and in turning our understanding of superhero cinema on its head tells an emotionally rich, narratively daring coming of age story. By creating a multiverse where anyone can wear the mask, be they badass drumming ballerina, Nazi-punching Nicolas Cage, mech-wearing tween, slimy toon pig, or simply a kid trying their best, Into The Spider-Verse changed the game in animation forever.
Read the Empire review here.
They Cloned Tyrone (2023)
Call us crazy, but we’re pretty confident that They Cloned Tyrone is the best satirical Blaxploitation sci-fi mystery action thriller you’ll ever see. Juel Taylor’s directorial debut is an oodles-of-style, bags-of-substance joint that retrofits a cutting edge contemporary story of identity displacement and racial discrimination into a gleefully pulpy exploitation flick decked out in furs and set to the sounds of hip-hop, soul, and disco. Jamie Foxx, Teyonah Parris, and in particular a dynamite John Boyega shine as the wisecracking pimp, savvy sex-worker, and existentially anguished drug dealer respectively who pull back the curtain on their neighbourhood’s suspiciously seasoned chicken cottage of Oz. The jokes land, the gut punches punch the gut, and the politics and social commentary underpinning the whole thing are clear, righteous, and leave a smarting mark. Just remember, respect the cuticle!
Read the Empire review here.
The Harry Potter Series (2001-2011)
There isn’t a child (or indeed adult) alive who doesn’t know the name of Warner Bros. behemothic blockbuster series of Wizarding World adventures. The Harry Potter franchise, which follows Daniel Radcliffe’s eponymous lightning bolt scarred boy wizard and his pals’ adventures at Hogwarts School Of Witchcraft And Wizardry, is the perfect example of a page-to-screen adaptation done right. Helmed by four distinctive filmmakers, each of whom offer their own unique yet faithful take on this beloved universe over its eight chapters, to watch this franchise and its stars grow and evolve before our very eyes is… well… magical. Even after all this time? Always.
Read our ranking of all the Harry Potter (and Fantastic Beasts) movies here.
How To Blow Up A Pipeline (2023)
As the world’s climate crisis rages on, Daniel Goldhaber’s urgent eco-thriller How To Blow Up A Pipeline - adapted from Andreas Malm’s same-named non-fiction book - swerves sermonising and political point-scoring to remind us that actions speak louder than words. Here, said action comes in the shape of a gang, led by the righteously indignant Xochitl (Ariela Barer, also co-writer), setting out to sabotage a Texan oil pipeline. Telling the deeply personal stories of what drove our young heroes to activism while capturing their explosive endeavours on intense 16mm film, Goldhaber manages to concoct a call for revolutionary change that balances a globalist sense of urgency with a steadfast commitment to personal, intimate storytelling. It’s a bit like Uncut Gems for anyone who finds the realisation that unyielding capitalist expansion is shepherding us all towards an irreversible environmental apocalypse a bit terrifying.
Read the Empire review here.
Uncut Gems (2020)
The first 10 minutes of Uncut Gems is one of the wildest openings to a movie you'll ever see. To spell it out would be to spoil it, but it's a none-more-head-spinning way in to this palpitation-inducingly stressful thriller. Filmmaking duo the Safdie Brothers are on killer form with the story of jeweller Howard Ratner (a never-better Adam Sandler) who is in a constant world of trouble – always one big score away from safety, and one terrible decision away from catastrophe. Uncut Gems is a two-plus-hour shakedown, as Ratner tries to stop his world falling apart. You'll thrill at his near-misses, shout out loud at his dire judgment, and find yourself rooting for him nonetheless. Small-scale but utterly pulse-pounding.
Read the Empire review here.
Jaws (1975)
The original summer blockbuster still has serious teeth. Back in '75, Steven Spielbergunleashed his mighty shark thriller on an unsuspecting world – teaching generations of swimmers to be afraid of the water. If the shark animatronic is a tad clumsy, the filmmaking of Jaws remains ultra-sharp, as does the impeccable script and trio of stellar performances. Roy Scheider is utterly believable as police chief Brody, suddenly out of his depth when shark attack victims start washing up – while Richard Dreyfuss and Robert Shaw are brilliantly bickersome as marine expert Hooper and salty seadog Quint, forced to co-operate in order to bring the great white down. From the ultra-famous dolly zoom, to the head-in-the-boat jump scare, to that final line, it remains a masterpiece.
Read the Empire review here.
My Neighbour Totoro (1988)
Hayao Miyazaki's beloved animation couldn't be gentler – it's an utterly charming ode to childhood and the natural beauty of rural Japan. Packed with cute creatures and gorgeous, lush-green visuals (the big grey Totoro forest spirit looks ludicrously huggable), My Neighbour Totoro is a film almost entirely without conflict, a steady stream of joy, wonder and serenity to ease any troubled mind. All darkness – the mother of central sisters Satsuki and Mei, recently relocated to an old house in the countryside, is in hospital throughout the film – exists firmly on the fringes, and the effect of this creative choice is sheer bliss. Whether you're discovering the films of Studio Ghibli for the first time on Netflix, or preparing for Miyazaki’s final bow with the upcoming The Boy & The Heron, you’ll never go wrong with Totoro.
Read the Empire review here.
The Fear Street Trilogy (2021)
The Fear Street trilogy is one of the coolest horror experiments in years. Across the summer of 2021, director Leigh Janiak dropped three brand new scary movies on Netflix, each arriving a week apart with their own distinct look and feel, but telling an interconnected story spanning hundreds of years. Part One: 1994 pays significant homage to Scream and establishes the rival towns of Shadyside (where townsfolk regularly go murder-happy for no apparent reason) and Sunnyvale (where people, er, don't) as a playground for serial killers. Part Two: 1978 goes full Camp Crystal Lake as the bodies pile up at a summer camp. And Part Three: 1666 delivers a witch-hunt horror full of secrets. All in, it's a slick, smart, funny treat – and whilst primarily playing with teen characters, it goes hard on the gore for a well-earned 18 rating. Set three nights aside, and begin your binge now.
Annihilation (2018)
Alex Garland followed up the excellent Ex Machina with this similarly smart sci-fi brimming with beautiful visuals and compelling questions. Natalie Portman's Lena joins an expedition into 'The Shimmer', a mysterious 'infected' zone on the American coast where her husband and his troops went missing on a mission. A very loose adaptation of Jeff Vandermeer's extraordinary novel, Garland's film nods to genre classics but feels striking and original, boasting an elliptical final half hour that's bound to be talked about for decades to come.
Read the Empire review here.
Cam (2018)
Partially inspired by screenwriter Isa Mazzei's own experiences working in the bizarro corners of the online sex industry, Cam is a Blumhouse horror thriller focusing on "cam girl" Alice Ackerman (The Handmaid's Tale's Madeline Brewer). Going by the model moniker of Lola, Alice makes a modest living catering to the fetishes of her viewers (and, more disturbingly, staging the occasional spectacular fake suicide – a deftly sketched subtext is that of the internet's desire to see violence against women). But then, weirdly, Lola starts broadcasting when Alice isn't online. It's a creepy mystery, but what impresses most is its matter-of-fact and non-judgmental depiction of its unusual world, and the fully fleshed-out character of Alice herself. One of the best horror films of 2018.
Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Sure, Quentin Tarantino's opening gambit of Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction is pretty much insurmountable – but Inglourious Basterds deserves to go down as one of his greatest achievements. His history-altering World War II epic is jam-packed with iconic characters, nerve-shredding setpieces, and all-out filmic nerdery, as a troop of Jewish soldiers and French cineastes lay waste to the Nazis. The titular Basterds – led by Brad Pitt's southern-drawling Aldo Raine – are absent for much of the runtime, meaning Mélanie Laurent's Shosanna is the the real lead, escaping an opening massacre by Christoph Waltz's terrifying SS officer Hans Landa (an all-time-great Tarantino character) before plotting her revenge against Hitler's regime. The results are brash, poignant, squirmingly tense, funny, and irreverent, all set to a killer soundtrack – a Tarantino movie, in other words.
Read the Empire review here.
Da 5 Bloods (2020)
Spike Lee followed up BlacKkKlansman with another film that blends a pulpy adventure story with a righteous anger about the African-American experience. Here, it's looking at the role that Black American soldiers played in the Vietnam war, how that intersects with forces of Capitalism, and how its legacy plays out in future generations today. Delroy Lindo, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis and Isaiah Whitlock Jr. play four Vietnam veterans returning to Ho Chi Minh City in order to recover a cache of hidden gold, and find the body of their fallen leader Stormin' Norman, played by Chadwick Boseman in one of his final performances, who died in the field. The result is part buddy film, part Shakespearean tragedy, part war movie, part history lesson – sprawling and captivating, with stellar performances all round, especially from Lindo's MAGA hat-wearing Paul.
Read the Empire review here.
The Irishman (2019)
Netflix's most high-profile original movie is a stellar coup – reuniting legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese with Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci and Harvey Keitel for another gangster epic. If that's not enough, The Irishman also marked the first time Scorsese worked with Al Pacino. In short, it's mobster heaven – or, mobster purgatory, as De Niro's aged hitman Frank 'The Irishman' Sheeran reflects on his life of violence as he approaches the grave. Think Goodfellas meets Silence – a 210-minute late-career masterpiece that more than deserves your time.
Read the Empire review here.
The Mitchells Vs The Machines (2021)
Even the bonkers trailer for The Mitchells Vs. The Machines didn't completely sell how crazy and wonderful this animated adventure turned out to be. Featuring a similarly frenetic, switching-styles technique to the Spider-Verse films (both those and this are produced by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller), the visual pizazz is matched by a massive heart and the ability to turn a story of family bonding in the midst of a robot apocalypse into something fresh. Just try not to crack up at the marauding Furby sequence. LET THE DARK HARVEST BEGIN!
Read the Empire review here.
Princess Mononoke (1997)
On the darker end of Studio Ghibli's output lies its all-out epic Princess Mononoke, a medieval fantasy saga bursting with imagination, rooted in Japanese folklore, and boasting astonishing visuals imbued with that rarified Ghibli magic. There's little cutesiness here – instead it's all ancient curses, eerie forest gods, and the encroach of war as a human mining colony battles with supernatural spirits as it engulfs natural resources. Like all of Hayao Miyazaki's work, Princess Mononoke's morality isn't black-and-white – seeing value in humanity and the natural world living side-by-side rather than a more binary good-evil dynamic. It's a stunning piece of work, and the very good English-language dub was adapted by none other than Neil Gaiman.
Read the Empire review here.
Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (2020)
Based on August Wilson's play of the same name, George C. Wolfe's simmering drama of blues, cultural exploitation and Black artistry dials up the tension and incisive power across its 94-minute runtime. Viola Davis is exceptional as the titular Ma Rainey, playing the real-life 'Mother Of The Blues' as she assembles her band for a recording session in 1927 Chicago – unrelenting in her demands from the studio, and aware exactly of her real value within a system intent on reducing it. But it's Chadwick Boseman who steals the show as trumpeter Levee, whose burgeoning talent and ambition for his own musical career pushes him towards tragedy. It's a powerhouse performance of an iconic character, sure to garner awards attention – but it cuts deep as Boseman's final film role, released a few short months after his death in August 2020. Ma Rainey's Black Bottom makes it all too clear how much his presence on our screens will be missed.
Read the Empire review here.
Marriage Story (2019)
How many divorce movies can claim to be as love-fuelled as Marriage Story? There's an understandable level of pain to be found in Noah Baumbach's Netflix movie, but also a surprising amount of comedy and lightness to balance it out, as Scarlett Johansson's Nicole and Adam Driver's Charlie navigate the breakdown of their relationship. It's a screwball-tinged fallout that only makes the sadness hit harder, the heartbreaking central performances bolstered by supporting performances by Laura Dern andRay Liotta – the two lawyers orchestrating the divorce. An empathetic portrait of a split that avoids taking sides.
Read the Empire review here.
Roma (2018)
Alfonso Cuarón's beautifully human drama may be shot in black and white, but it's a vibrant and evocative work brimming with heart and emotion. A partial paean to the director's own childhood, Roma follows the housekeeper of a middle-class Mexican family through a tumultuous year in the early 70s, depicting the moments both big and small that change and define lives. With stunning cinematography from Cuarón himself, and a compelling, soulful performance from Yalitza Aparicio, it ranks highly among the director's own impeccable output – and could be a frontrunner at the 2019 Oscars. Stick it right to the top of your watchlist.
Read the Empire review here.
Paddington (2014)
Anyone who has read Empire or listened to the podcast knows how much we love Paddington, the adaptation of the beloved children's stories. An exceedingly family-friendly film about an exceedingly friendly family, Paul King's movie is a Pixar-level delight that's whimsically, quirkily British – a pure, pleasant surprise. Ben Whishaw, in a role at one point remarkably set for Colin Firth, brings guileless charm to the Peruvian marmalade lover, whilst the human characters offer abundantly warm support. The sequel, boasting a sublimely self-deprecating star turn from Hugh Grant (who’s set to collaborate with King once more as an Oompa Loompa in the upcoming Wonka), is just as good - as sweet and sharp as marmalade.
Read the Empire review here.
Little Women (2019)
After seeing phenomenal success with her directorial debut Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig turned her attention to Louisa May Alcott's classic novel Little Women. The result is a refreshing update on the story of the March sisters told via one of the best young ensemble casts in recent memory – including repeat collaborator Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Florence Pugh as Amy, Timothée Chalamet as Laurie and Emma Watson as Meg, alongside matriarchs Meryl Streep and Laura Dern. Gerwig manages to match the quaint, sincere romanticism of the period setting with her signature smart writing, hopping between timelines for maximum emotional impact. Chemistry crackles between Chalamet and Ronan, then Chalamet and Pugh, and the sisterly bond between the four titular females make Gerwig’s film a warm, wintry delight.
Read the Empire review here.
Nightcrawler (2014)
No, not a solo outing for everyone's favourite teleporting X-Man, but a thriller seeped in pitch-black comedy starring Jake Gyllenhaal as Lou Bloom, a freelance photographer who thrives on filming the aftermath of violent accidents and crimes in LA and selling the footage to news networks. Bloom is a nightmarish creation that Gyllenhaal imbues with a wild-eyed intensity, with top supporting performances from Riz Ahmed, Rene Russo and Bill Paxton in one of his final roles. A searing character piece and gripping psychological noir all in one, director Dan Gilroy gave viewers one of the defining indictments of our ravenous media and consumer culture with this one.
Read the Empire review here.
Creep (2014)
Yes, it's found-footage, but this psychological ordeal from co-writers, directors and stars Mark Duplass and Patrick Brice is more than worth its unassuming 77 minutes of your time. Brice is the videographer who answers Duplass' advertisement for a documentarian to chronicle a day in his life. But as we get past the initial 24 hours it becomes clear that the real agenda is something altogether different. A masterclass in WTF-is-going-on tension, Creep also somehow manages to be extremely funny. Be sure to catch Creep 2 on Netflix too, which continues in equally captivating style.
Gerald’s Game (2017)
Director Mike Flanagan manages the near-impossible task of making Stephen King's (almost) single-setting survival thriller Gerald's Game impressively cinematic. Carla Gugino's Jessie is left fighting for her life when her husband has a heart attack in the middle of a sex game, leaving her handcuffed to a bed in a secluded house. Outside, a wild dog starts to sniff out fresh meat, while Jessie's grip on sanity starts to slip. It's a thriller set-up with true horror execution — including an astonishingly gory finale just waiting to burn itself into impressionable minds.
Okja (2017)
Enjoyed the wild swings of Parasite? Check out Bong Joon Ho's darkly satirical girl-meets-genetically-modified-super-pig story. Okja is an environmental fable, and a fantastical story of friendship between a young girl (Ahn Seo-hyun) and a strange, shy and introverted animal on a long journey together. Okja itself is a sort of hippo-pig, created for its meat by Tilda Swinton's shady multinational company. It's not often you get dystopian sci-fi and wide-eyed Spielbergian movie magic in the same stew, but director Bong and writer Jon Ronson somehow mix the disparate ingredients perfectly.
Read the Empire review here.
Once you’ve caught all of these, why not check out our hand-picked selection of what to watch on Disney+? We also have a comprehensive rundown of all the must-see movies and TV shows on Apple TV too!