Riffing on the Saturday afternoon serials that thrilled them as children, director Spielberg and producer George Lucas packed a full series of heroes, villains, cliffhangers and fisticuffs into a single crowd-pleasing feature. ", The computer-generated Okja, left, and An Seo Hyun in “Okja.”, Christopher Lloyd, left, and Michael J. “In this world, there are no families without problems,” she is told, and the conflicts of the script by Nana Ekvtimishvili (who also directed, with Simon Gross) are a sharp reminder that while the cultural specifics may vary, familial guilt and passive aggression are bound by no language. )Watch it on Netflix, Martin Scorsese re-teams with Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci for the first time since “Casino” (1995), itself a return to the organized crime territory of their earlier 1990 collaboration “Goodfellas” — and then adds Al Pacino as Jimmy Hoffa. (Note: Streaming services sometimes remove titles or change starting dates without giving notice.). Our critics called it “a wintry pop song of a film, one you want to play on repeat”; achingly melancholy yet riotously funny, it’s one of the great romances of our scrambled age. Focusing on a closed GM plant in Dayton, Ohio, that’s taken over by a Chinese auto glass company, Bognar and Reichert thoughtfully, sensitively (and often humorously) explore how cultures — both corporate and general — clash. Handsome: A Netflix Mystery Movie is a 2017 American comedy film directed by Jeff Garlin and... Everybody Knows is a 2018 Spanish-French-Italian psychological thriller film directed by... Secret in Their Eyes is a 2015 American psychological thriller film directed by Billy Ray, and... "A bicycle found in a wheat field. (Scorsese recently returned to the Dylan story with the playful Netflix original “Rolling Thunder Revue”; music doc fans will also love “What Happened, Miss Simone?”)Watch it on Netflix, “This camp changed the world,” we’re told, in the early moments of James LeBrecht and Nicole Newnham’s documentary, “and nobody knew about it.” The most refreshing and surprising element of this moving chronicle is that, title notwithstanding, the subject is not Camp Jened, the Catskills getaway that offered disabled kids and teens a “normal” summer camp experience. Scott raved, “Mr. Kahlo’s was no ordinary life, and, luckily, “Frida” is no ordinary biopic — the director is the groundbreaking stage artist Julie Taymor, who adds enough flashes of surrealism and bursts of theatricality to shake up the conventions of the biographical drama. The pairing of director and subject is unexpected, but Demme is up to the job; as in his Talking Heads film “Stop Making Sense,” he deftly captures the energy, electricity and playfulness of a live concert performance, a directorial feat that is harder than it looks. Scott wrote, as Baumbach dissects this family’s woes and drama with knowing precision. Younger viewers will treasure its inventive (and convincing) special effects, as well as the empathetic protagonist, a recent orphan whose grandmother helps him sniff out a society of witches. )Watch it on Netflix, Few fictional characters have embedded themselves in the pop culture consciousness as firmly as Dr. Hannibal Lecter, the brilliant monster brought to bone-chilling life by an Oscar-winning Anthony Hopkins in Jonathan Demme’s 1991 adaptation of the Thomas Harris best seller. Fox mines endless laughs from the character’s confusion and desperation, while Crispin Glover and Lea Thompson are marvelously eccentric as his mother- and father-to-be. Justin Timberlake in “Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids.”, Alex Hibbert, left, and Mahershala Ali in “Moonlight.”, Doug Jones, left, and Ivana Baquero in “Pan’s Labyrinth.”, From left, Greta Gerwig, Elle Fanning and Annette Bening in “20th Century Women.”, From left, Eric Idle, John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Terry Jones and Michael Palin in “Monty Python and the Holy Grail.”, Gael García Bernal and Maribel Verdu in the film “Y Tu Mamá También.”, From left, Adam Rodriguez, Kevin Nash, Channing Tatum and Matt Bomer in "Magic Mike. The Greatest Movies About CIA Agents & Operatives. Vote up the top mystery movies below, so this list can become the best source for whodunits on Netflix. (Fans of misanthropic comedy may also enjoy “The Death of Stalin or “The Lobster.”)Watch it on Netflix, The fashion designer turned filmmaker Tom Ford made his feature directorial debut with this moving, melancholy (and, unsurprisingly, aesthetically stunning) adaptation of the novel by Christopher Isherwood. Our critic called it a work of “disquieting, illuminating force.”Watch it on Netflix, Channing Tatum stars in this “funny, enjoyable romp” (per our Manohla Dargis), based on his own early-career exploits as a stripper — or, as the film puts it, a “male entertainer.” The director Steven Soderbergh offers a fairly traditional story about a young performer who must learn the ropes of show business, but he adds a few twists: a preoccupation with economic systems, for one, and a convincing portrayal of feminine lust — rare for a mainstream movie, particularly one directed by a man.