What to Stream: Twenty-Two of the Best Movies on Hulu – The New Yorker

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Barry Jenkins’s “If Beale Street Could Talk,” a masterwork of intimate and historical portraiture, is one of many great movies available to stream on Hulu.Photograph from Annapurna Pictures / Alamy
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Read Richard Brody’s lists of the best films on Amazon Prime and Netflix, and of twenty-three short films to stream.

Disney took over Hulu last year, and since then the platform has been expanding its subscriber base rapidly, in part because of its emphasis on the streaming of TV series. Nonetheless, Hulu does also feature movies, and, though it tends to dig deeper into the past than Netflix does, its emphasis is on the recent past, especially the first decade of this century. A careful cull yields enough cinematic treasures, and also some pleasant surprises. (It also features, for no additional cost, some wonderful movies that are on other services for a per-view fee—notably, Anthony Mann’s Western melodrama “The Furies,” starring Barbara Stanwyck; Claire Denis’s screwball melodrama “Let the Sunshine In,” starring Juliette Binoche; and Albert Maysles’s documentary “Iris,” a portrait of the nonagenarian style icon Iris Apfel.)

What to stream during the quarantine: classics for comfort.

  1. Amazing
    Grace

    Aretha Franklin’s 1972 performances for the “Amazing Grace” album
    were filmed under the aegis of the director Sydney Pollack, whose
    technical errors led to the movie remaining unfinished for decades;
    its tight close-ups and panoramic views of Franklin with her
    fellow-musicians display the glory of her art.

  2. Beach
    Rats

    Eliza Hittman’s second feature, the drama of a young man who’s
    enduring the homophobic prejudices of his Brooklyn milieu, is a
    finely detailed view of the tight fabric of family and neighborhood
    relations and the disruptive intensity of desire.

“The Bellboy.”Photograph from Everett

  1. The
    Bellboy

    The first feature that Jerry Lewis, already an international
    celebrity, directed (with himself as star) is also a daring work of
    comedic and technical imagination—a tribute to the great silent-film
    comedians that’s also a lampooning of his own fame.

  2. “The Bridges of Madison County”

    Beside the pull of romance and the pleasure of acting alongside
    Meryl Streep, it’s clear what attracted Clint Eastwood to this
    adaptation, which brings to light two themes that are constants in
    his work. First, it’s a story of the vast but necessary division
    between what’s kept secret and what’s made public, the high price of
    public life and self-revelation; second, it’s a story of the needful
    tragedy of discipline, renunciation, and sacrifice.

  3. C.S.A.: The Confederate States of
    America

    Kevin Willmott’s ingenious and agonized counter-historical
    fantasy—done as a documentary about what today’s America would be
    like had the South won the Civil War—is an incisive critique of
    actual life in the modern United States.

  4. Digging for
    Fire

    Joe Swanberg gathers an extraordinary cast—including Jake Johnson,
    Rosemarie DeWitt, Melanie Lynskey, Anna Kendrick, Judith Light, Sam
    Elliott, Brie Larson, Mike Birbiglia, and Orlando Bloom—for this
    freewheeling domestic thriller, about the discovery, in a backyard,
    of evidence that points to a murder.

  5. Embrace of the
    Serpent

    This work of anthropological surrealism, by the Colombian director
    Ciro Guerra, is based on the travel diaries of
    early-twentieth-century European explorers in the Amazon region; he
    dramatizes a shaman’s encounters with them, in the course of
    decades, with a meticulous eye for detail and unsparing attention to
    colonial horrors.

  6. Fast
    Color

    This wondrously original science-fiction twist on superheroic
    themes, directed by Julia Hart, stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw as a woman who
    struggles to control her miraculous powers while being pursued by
    the government.

  7. Golden
    Exits

    Young and not-so-young artistic aspirants in Brooklyn reach a fever
    pitch of familial and romantic tensions in this Bergmaniacal
    melodrama, directed by Alex Ross Perry and starring Emily Browning,
    Adam Horovitz, Chloë Sevigny, Analeigh Tipton, and Jason
    Schwartzman.

“Hail Satan?”Photograph from Magnolia Pictures / Everett

  1. Hail
    Satan?

    This startling documentary by Penny Lane, about the activism and the
    background of the Satanic Temple, considers the group’s efforts to
    maintain the constitutionally mandated separation of church and
    state.

  2. If Beale Street Could
    Talk

    Barry Jenkins’s adaptation of James Baldwin’s
    novel
    ,
    starring KiKi Layne and Stephan James, is a masterwork of intimate
    and historical portraiture, a passionate restoration of shared
    experience and individual memory.

  3. Johnny
    Guitar

    Joan Crawford and Sterling Hayden give two of the greatest
    performances in all Hollywood—hers, as a saloon owner, is scathing
    and operatic, and his, as a gunman, is hip and tormented—in Nicholas
    Ray’s 1954 Western, co-starring Mercedes McCambridge, as a combatant
    in business and love.

  4. “Paranoid Park”

    The director Gus Van Sant brings energized curiosity to this
    fragmented and subjective murder mystery, set in Portland, about a
    teen-age skater’s confusion—familial, romantic, and moral.

  5. Portrait of a Lady on
    Fire

    Céline Sciamma’s historical drama, set in eighteenth-century
    Brittany, about an artist (Noémie Merlant) and the subject of a
    portrait (Adèle Haenel), finds ingenious stylistic correlates for
    the intersections of personal relationships, artistic
    collaborations, and the essence of art.

  6. “Sands of Iwo Jima”

    Made in 1949, only four years after the end of the Second World War,
    this fierce drama—starring John Wayne and directed by Allan
    Dwan
    ,
    whose first movie is from 1911—depicts bitter relationships,
    political tensions, false bravado, and personal failings within the
    ranks of the Marines, and the terrifying sacrifices on which the
    battle and the war depended.

  7. Seymour: An
    Introduction

    A chance encounter led Ethan Hawke to befriend Seymour Bernstein, a
    remarkable concert pianist living in New York who has long stayed
    off the concert circuit. Hawke directs this warmhearted and
    musically enthralling documentary portrait.

  8. Sorry to Bother
    You

    This grand political fantasy, directed by Boots Riley—amazingly, his
    first feature—depicts workplace relations and economic exploitation
    with an overwhelming outpouring of imaginative energy.

  9. The Spy Who Dumped
    Me

    Susanna Fogel’s secret-agent spoof, starring Kate McKinnon and Mila
    Kunis, has some of the most ingeniously designed and precisely
    staged physical comedy in recent cinema.

  10. Support the
    Girls

    Andrew Bujalski’s hearty comedic drama, about the intersection of
    personal and professional lives in and around a Texas sports bar,
    is also a showcase of subtle and stylish performances by a teeming
    cast headed by Regina Hall, Haley Lu Richardson, and Shayna
    McHayle.

“The Treasure.”Photograph from 42 Km Film / Alamy

  1. The
    Treasure

    The Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu is the most original of the new wave of Romanian filmmakers, and simply one of the best
    directors working now. His wry 2015 drama is the multilayered and
    ironic tale of a literal excavation in quest of buried loot—and of a
    metaphorical excavation of Romanian history. (Porumboiu’s most
    recent film, the intricate thriller “The
    Whistlers
    ,”
    has shifted to an online release. I discussed it recently on Zoom
    with Miriam Bale
    , the
    artistic director of the Indie Memphis Film Festival.)

  2. We Have a
    Pope

    In Nanni Moretti’s exuberant and critical comedy about Vatican politics and the burden of power, the grand French actor Michel
    Piccoli plays the newly chosen pontiff—and Moretti plays his
    psychiatrist.

  3. “Whose Streets?”

    This analytical and impassioned documentary, by Sabaah Folayan and
    Damon Davis, about the residents of Ferguson, Missouri, reveals the
    political inequities that led to the police killing of Michael
    Brown, the inadequate official response to it, and the efforts to
    repress protest against it.

Bonus: For those with ESPN+, too (also a Disney service, which is bundled along with Disney+ and Hulu), there’s “Subject to Review,” Theo Anthony’s probingly philosophical and detective-like inquiry into the technology of video review in professional tennis.

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