
It often happens that people, though being fully aware of the tragic consequences, just cannot take their eyes off the spectacle of total anarchy unfolding, cities melting down, or oceans rising and swallowing the skyscrapers, or even the earth going into an ice age. Somehow, they find it satisfying. Disaster and apocalypse movies have been found to hit that very spot in the brain that these people have; thus, they give them a mix of adrenaline-filled spectacle and content in terms of survival and humanity. If you need a disaster thriller to keep you entertained on Netflix, then I am the right person for you. There are ten best apocalyptic and disaster movies that you can watch anytime as a stream, and I have them listed here, starting with the newest ones and going back to the older ones.

10. Society of the Snow (2023)
This is a harsh one, though, that you can’t ignore, from the gory real-life 1972 Andes plane crash story. The movie doesn’t shy away from depicting the murder of the survivors and the torture of their minds due to the lack of food and air. It’s not really a disaster flick, but a raw and straightforward survival story with human characters getting to the extreme as if forced by a tightrope walk.

9. Deep Impact (1998)
Before the asteroid cinema genre was flooded with numerous identical copies, Deep Impact was the very first and treated the doom of the Earth by a comet not just with spectacle, but also with a sensitive human drama. So it plays well the brilliant destruction with real human drama, and the role of Morgan Freeman as the president is very distinguished. This film is one of the most thoughtful, sentimental, and, today, still among the best in the subgenre.

8. The Day After Tomorrow (2004)
Roland Emmerich gives you his familiar but spectacular show of superstorms, frozen streets, and disasters affecting the whole planet. Dennis Quaid and Jake Gyllenhaal’s acting adds to the warmth of the plot, but to be quite honest, you probably came for the stunning extremes of the Manhattan skyline getting an icy makeover. It is a blockbuster disaster that works well.

7. Twister (1996)
Flying cows, storm chasers, thundering tornadoes, Twister is pure ’90s popcorn heaven. Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton are sweet and chemistry-soaked, and the sound and sight are so real that all the funnel clouds look frighteningly authentic. It’s heart-thudding, a little cheesy, and eternally re-watchable.

6. The Impossible (2012)
If I remember correctly, the cast of the first tells that it is the first-ever story about a family who survived the tidal wave of 2004 that caused the Pacific Rim to be destroyed. This movie really knocked me out of my seat. Naomi Watts could win an Oscar, no doubt, and as for Tom Holland, he was simply terrific. I have to admit that the tsunami scenes are quite frightening, but it is the emotional aspect that really hits home – the force exerted by family and the goodwill of the strangers.

5. The Wave (2015)
It is a Norwegian disaster picture that definitely shows us that you do not necessarily need a major Hollywood budget to produce an adrenaline-inducing thriller. Upon discovering the colossal tidal wave is going to hit the place they live, a geologist basically goes into rescue mode, getting his family out to safety and informing the town. The story is predominantly about the characters and the writer’s attempt at realism, which makes it both suspenseful and emotional to the core.

4. San Andreas (2015)
In short, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is battling earthquakes, and that should be enough for you. Well, the San Andreas is spectacular, loud, and packed with moments where you will be surprised and amazed. When you really think about it, the storyline is quite predictable, yet the overall grandeur paired with The Rock’s magnetism is enough to keep you glued to your chair.

3. 2012 (2009)
It is Roland Emmerich’s work without borders. Earthquakes bring down continents, tsunamis are there to clash with mountains, and the Earth basically melts in all sorts of ways. Beyond logic, it is still quite entertaining. John Cusack and Chiwetel Ejiofor provide just enough sanity amidst chaos to keep your focus.

2. Don’t Look Up (2021)
This one is a mix of horror and comedy. The satire is so sharp that it can really cut the viewer. Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence play the part of astronomers who are eagerly trying to alert the world about the comet that is about to hit Earth; however, they face rejection, politics, and media hype. The film is funny, maddening, and a bit too realistic.

1. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
One could say that it is not a doomsday lineup without it. George Miller’s Fury Road keeps you on the edge of your seat the whole time with its desolation, where survival can only be achieved through fire, water, and pure determination. The tumult is tamed by Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron’s stellar acting, and the usage of only practical effects and crazy action sequences makes it one of the finest in its category.

Whether you want to watch natural disasters, icy doomsdays, or dystopian wastelands, Netflix provides plenty of chaos to stream. But never forget that if it is really bad, you can always stop the play.