Watching: The best things to stream
On Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, Amazon and more
Watching
May 30, 2026

By The Watching Team

The weekend is here! If you’re looking for something to watch, we can help. We’ve dug through Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, HBO Max and Disney+ to find some of the best titles on each service.

STREAMING ON NETFLIX

‘13 Going on 30’

A woman in a nightgown and an eye-mask that's pulled onto her forehead stands in a room looking shocked.
Jennifer Garner in “13 Going on 30.” Internet Video Archive

This likably goofy and endlessly charming romantic comedy is, essentially, a gender-swapped remake of the beloved “Big,” this time with Jennifer Garner as a 13-year-old whose birthday wish to be “30 and flirty and thriving” unexpectedly comes true. Garner is warm and endearing, a loose-limbed wonder at capturing the awkward gawkiness of a teen trapped in an ill-fitting body, while the recent Oscar nominee Mark Ruffalo finds just the right mixture of confusion and sweetness as her childhood friend who’s become quite the babe.

These are the 50 best movies on Netflix.

STREAMING ON NETFLIX

‘Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen’

A young woman and man sit a candlelit dinner table with fire blazing in a fireplace behind them.
Camila Morrone and Adam DiMarco play a couple on the cusp of marriage in “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen” — as long as the young lovers can survive that pesky family curse. Netflix

A bride-to-be’s anxieties become a waking nightmare in this horror series, produced by the “Stranger Things” creators Matt and Ross Duffer and created by Haley Z. Boston. Camila Morrone plays Rachel, a fiercely independent woman who reluctantly agrees to marry her mild-mannered boyfriend Nicky (Adam DiMarco) at a remote vacation home belonging to her future in-laws. The eccentricities of Nicky’s family, coupled with a creeping suspicion that this union might be literally cursed, leaves Rachel wondering if she has ordinary premarital jitters or if there is something sinister looming. An article about Boston in the The Times noted the show’s “omens of the emotional creepy crawlies and ‘Twin Peaks’-style surrealism.”

Here are 30 great TV shows on Netflix.

STREAMING ON HULU

‘Only Lovers Left Alive’

A chic blonde woman in dark sunglasses and a beige leather jacket looks ahead as a man with long dark hair and dark sunglasses embraces her. They are in a dim room with darkened windows behind them.
Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston and “Only Lovers Left Alive.” Gordon A Timpen/Sony Pictures Classics

Plenty of authors and filmmakers have explored the day-to-day logistics of living one’s life as a vampire, but perhaps only Jim Jarmusch could’ve looked at the undead and marveled at how much more time they’d have to read great books, watch wonderful movies and listen to cool albums. In his film “Only Lovers Left Alive,” the chic bloodsuckers Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston find this elegant existence erupted by her wild-child sister (a potent Mia Wasikowska). But mostly, it’s a vibe, a mood, a breezy hangout movie that also spills gallons of blood.

Here are Hulu’s best movies and TV shows.

STREAMING ON AMAZON PRIME VIDEO

‘Ford v Ferrari’

Two mane stand over the hood of car.
Christian Bale and Matt Damon in “Ford v Ferrari.” Merrick Morton/20th Century Fox

Matt Damon and Christian Bale star as Carroll Shelby and Ken Miles, the car designer and driver who took on the seemingly impossible task of a Le Mans-winning racecar for the Ford Motor Company in the mid-1960s, a period when the Italian Ferrari team seemed unstoppable. The director James Mangold (“Logan,” “A Complete Unknown”) directs with smooth professionalism, wisely choosing to use the conflicts between these mavericks and the suits at Ford as a stand-in for creative versus business battles. Damon and Bale are both at their movie-star best, but the most memorable performer is Tracy Letts, who steals every scene with his nuanced and frequently funny portrayal of Henry Ford II.

Here are a bunch of great movies on Amazon.

STREAMING ON HBO MAX

‘Happy Together’

In the back seat of a cab, two men sit next to one another. The man on the left, whose eyes are closed, rests his head on the shoulder of the man on the right.
Leslie Cheung, left, and Tony Leung in “Happy Together.” Kino International

It’s a trick of fiction, and certainly film, that doomed relationships tend to be far more romantic than happily-ever-after scenarios, but Wong Kar-wai’s “Happy Together” is the rare film where the sparks that fly between a fractious couple are swooned upon like fireworks. Tony Leung and Leslie Cheung play queer lovers who arrive in Buenos Aires from Hong Kong in search of a more fulfilling life, but the city, gorgeously rendered by the cinematographer Christopher Doyle, catalyzes the tension in their on-again/off-again relationship, which answers moments of transcendence with a suffocating pattern of codependency and betrayal. There are times when the walls of their tiny apartment seem to close in, yet Wong has a flair for capturing the elegance of Buenos Aires and the seductive music tells a different story. Stephen Holden called the film “powerfully moody.”

See more great movies streaming on HBO Max.

STREAMING ON DISNEY+

‘The Mandalorian’

A man stands in the Mandalorian outfit.
Pedro Pascal in “The Mandalorian.” Lucasfilm/Disney

Although “The Mandalorian” takes place between the events of “Return of the Jedi” and “The Force Awakens,” this thrilling sci-fi-adventure series makes a virtue of simplicity, casting off the dense mythology that has burdened the “Star Wars” brand. Most of the blessedly short episodes are about a Clint Eastwood-like bounty hunter (Pedro Pascal) and his precious charge — popularly known as Baby Yoda but officially known as the Child — who square off against various galactic beasts and cutthroats. Mike Hale called it “well paced and reasonably clever, with enough style and visual panache to keep your eyes engaged.”

The 50 best things to watch on Disney+ right now.

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