
It is the truth: Hulu was one of the most desirable platforms to get the latest episodes of prime-time sitcoms or watch The Office for the hundredth time, by far. But it didn’t stop turning into a pure film-oriented platform, where you can find all kinds of movies with Oscar winners, indie gems, and cult classics. Life could be much better if you were a fan of great cinema, a casual browser, or just someone who is looking for a film that everyone can agree on. So, it’s time to bring your snacks and make yourself comfortable. Counting down the 15 best movies to watch on Hulu right now, in reverse order (because suspense makes everything more fun).

15. Rye Lane (2023)
How could a romantic comedy possibly be dead? Rye Lane is a production that demonstrates this genre is still very much alive and well in South London. Yas and Dom are two young adults in their twenties who happen to meet and get through a day that’s completely topsy-turvy but charming as well with each other. The brilliance of the joint work with Vivian Oparah and David Jonsson is quite magical, as well as the brilliance of the film that really makes the visual part come through. Indeed, it’s a fairly modern, lively one, and it’s really one of the just few that get their genre right in years.

14. The Monkey (2025)
Just like the toy monkey of Stephen King’s eerie imagination haunts its new owners in this fictional account of a macabre past, The Monkey is the lethal coming of Stephen King’s toy in this wicked horror-comedy, complete with pitch-black humor by Oz Perkins. The charmed duo of Theo James, who plays two very different characters in the same film, ingeniously pulls off a work that adeptly finds the right balance between scaring and making people laugh with black humor. In a very funny way, the horror that The Monkey will make you look at every “innocent” childhood toy gathering dust in your attic with suspicion.

13. Thelma (2024)
One funny and touching action-comedy about a grandmother of ninety-four years who, after being scammed, decides to go after the bad guys herself, and June Squibb proves once again that there is no such thing as too old. On a motorized scooter, she makes her escape, and Richard Roundtree, in his last role, plays a helping hand. Thelma is as delightful as it is empowering, a surprise of heartfelt homage to stubbornness and tenacity.

12. A Complete Unknown (2024)
Timothée Chalamet interprets Bob Dylan in this vibrant biographical film by James Mangold. Instead of simply going over the “becoming famous” story, the movie focuses on the singer’s arrival in New York’s folk scene. With Elle Fanning and Edward Norton as his backup, A Complete Unknown gets the amazement as well as the mess of coming artistic rebirth right.

11. Alien: Romulus (2024)
Director Fede Álvarez brings new life to the Alien franchise with this horror-filled midquel between Alien and Aliens. A bunch of scavengers salvage a derelict ship, and, of course, let something hungry out. Cruel, cramped, and tense, it’s a return to form for one of the most iconic horror monsters of the sci-fi genre.

10. The Order (2024)
Jude Law plays an FBI agent tracking down a dangerous white supremacist gang controlled by a creepy Nicholas Hoult. Based on true events, The Order is gripping and unsettling, a thriller that slices close to the bone with real-world terror. It’s tough to watch, but it’s compelling and haunting.

9. The John Wick Series (2014–2023)
Few action franchises have done it like John Wick. Keanu Reeves’ canine-vengeance assassin kicked off a whole subgenre of over-the-top gun-fu. With all four movies currently streaming, never has the time been right to visit the Continental, the stunts defying physics, and the never-ending tides of very unfortunate bad people.

8. A Real Pain (2024)
Jesse Eisenberg directed and starred in this dramedy along with Kieran Culkin. It narrates the story of two estranged cousins who travel through Poland to visit their grandmother, who had passed away recently. Filled with rough patches and very touching at the same time, the movie deals with the themes of loss, relatives, and what it is like to re-establish the connection. Culkin gives a sensational portrayal that is both disheveled and tear-inducing.

7. Anora (2024)
Sean Baker’s newest release is a messy, lovely victory. In the film, Mikey Madison plays the role of Ani, a Brooklyn escort who, out of nowhere, ties the knot with a Russian oligarch’s son and finds herself plunged into a world of chaos and luxury. The film is very funny and sad at the same time, and it really gets life’s contradictions right. Besides that, it also won several awards and honors.

6. The Abyss (1989)
The underwater James Cameron film is still stunning to the eye. The team sent down to recover a lost submarine stumbles upon something alien under the ocean. Even years later, the restored cut on Hulu still manages to amaze as if it were a blend of sci-fi magic and human emotions made only by Cameron.

5. Ghostlight (2024)
This delicate gem is about the journey of a grieving building worker who joins a community theater group and, consequently, unwittingly experiences the healing process during the time of Romeo and Juliet. Starring the energetic performances of Keith Kupferer and Tara Mallen, Ghostlight slowly gets inside your feelings; it is one of the most heartening, funny, and very human films.

4. Sisu (2023)
If John Wick and Inglourious Basterds got married and had a Finnish child, then it would be Sisu. Set during World War II, this film revolves around a lone gold prospector who ends up fighting a Nazi squad to regain his treasure. Bloody, flashy, and ambitiously over-the-top, it is 90 minutes of pure pulp paradise.

3. Anatomy of a Fall (2023)
This court procedural thriller, which bagged an Oscar, would never stop baffling you till the very last scene. Sandra Hüller shines as a fiction author charged with killing her husband, and the movie’s frigid ambiguity makes it difficult to avert your gaze. More than a puzzling deed, Anatomy of a Fall is about truth, matrimony, and the lies we weave to continue living.

2. Boyhood (2014)
Richard Linklater’s coming-of-age saga, recorded over 12 years, is life depicted as it happens. To watch Mason (Ellar Coltrane) mature right before your very eyes is a visual art that only comes around once. The film is tender, genuine, and saturated with nostalgia, and it is a nod to the fact that it is the simple things that count the most in life.

1. Perfect Days (2023)
Wim Wenders’s introspective melodrama follows the janitor Hirayama, who discovers beauty in the smallest things of his work routine. The film, with the restrained yet stunning portrayal by Koji Yakusho, is one about silence, gratitude, and the art of living in the now. The movie doesn’t burst out—it just lingers.

So there you have it: 15 reasons to make Hulu your next night in. From tear-jerking gut punches to adrenaline-fueled thrill rides, the streamer’s catalog never needed to be better. Whatever your mood, Hulu’s got the ideal pick waiting.