Film Lists

The 10 Best Movies to Stream on Netflix While You're Quarantined

Quarantine is many things, but it's definitely a good time to catch up on movies.

Frances Ha

So you're technically "working from home" right now, but we know that really means lying in front of your TV with Slack open on your laptop.

If you're going to give yourself over to the gods of streaming while you avoid COVID-19, you may as well watch something worthwhile. Here are 10 movies that you need to see before you die, and since they're available on Netflix right now and you don't have anything better to do, you really have no excuse not to watch them.

A Quiet Place

While the apocalyptic themes of this movie may hit a little close to home right now, it's a gripping enough film to distract you from how tired you are of the person you're stuck in quarantine with. Written, directed, and starring John Krasinski, A Quiet Place explores a world that's been overrun by monsters with super-sensitive hearing. The few people left on earth are forced to exist and communicate in almost total silence in order to stay alive.

Watch on Netflix

Jaws

Now's the perfect time to revisit this thrilling classic. No matter how tired you get of staying indoors, at least you aren't being stalked by a massive shark like the characters in this Spielberg masterpiece.

Watch on Netflix

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs

If you like the Coen Brothers, you'll love this quirky, episodic Western. If you don't like the Coen Brothers, you ought to watch this anyway, because it's so completely different than any other movie, you're sure to feel strongly one way or another. This anthology style film has no problem breaking the fourth wall and forcing you to reconsider everything you thought you knew about the Western genre.

Watch on Netflix

Roma

Winner of three Oscars, this movie from director Alfonso Cuarón will stick with you long after the closing credits. The story follows a maid working for an upper-middle class family in Mexico City in the 1970s, and it's sure to put your personal struggles into perspective.

Watch on Netflix

Ex Machina

This mind-bending thriller will have you on the edge of your seat (even if that seat is the sofa you've been sitting on for days now). Ex Machina follows a computer programmer named Domhnall Gleeson who wins the opportunity to spend a week with the enigmatic creator of the world's leading AI technology. Soon, Gleeson finds out that all is not as it seems in the high-tech mansion.

Watch on Netflix

Ghost

Is there any scene in the history of cinema that's more iconic than the pottery scene in this classic movie? Patrick Swayze plays the ghost of a banker seeking to warn girlfriend Demi Moore she's in danger via psychic Whoopi Goldberg. This film is as cheesy as it is excellent, and you really have to see it given its lasting cultural impact.

Watch on Netflix

Coraline

This stunning animated adaptation of a Neil Gaiman book is an absolute treat. This film from Laika, the company behind Kubo and the Two Strings and ParaNorman, is as visually appealing as it is creepy. If this isn't the kind of film you'd normally watch, maybe now is the perfect time to branch out.

Watch on Netflix

Frances Ha

There's nothing like Greta Gerwig's and Noah Baumbach's cutting wit and moving observations about life and friendship to help you forget about a building global pandemic. This semi-autobiographical film has become a cult classic and has arguably one of the best scripts of all time.

Watch on Netflix

The Irishman

Honestly, we wouldn't normally recommend you spend 3 hours of your one short life on this movie, but what else do you have to do right now? Settle in, pop some popcorn, and prepare to squint at the special effects that only do an okay job at making Robert De Niro look younger. If you can stick it out, it really is an excellent film.

Watch on Netflix

12 Years a Slave

This Oscar-winning historical drama, based on Solomon Northup's autobiographical book, stars Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Benedict Cumberbatch and Brad Pitt. It follows the life of a free black man living in pre-Civil War America who is abducted and sold into slavery. It's a searing portrait of the brutality of slave life, and it should be mandatory viewing for everyone.

Watch on Netflix

Parasite press conference - Seoul, Korea - (Front L-R) South Korean actors Lee Sun-gyun, Jang Hye-jin, Park So-dam, producer Kwak Sin-ae, South Korean actors Cho Yeo-jeong, Lee Jung-eun, Park Myung-hoon, (Back L-R) Editorial director Yang Jin-mo, South Korean actor Song Kang-ho, South Korean director Bong Joon-ho, screenwriter Han Jin-won, Art director Lee Ha-jun -- Parasite is the first foreign-language movie to win an Academy Award for Best Picture.

Photo by KIM HEE-CHUL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

In most regards, the 2020 Oscars are already a disappointment.

In a year full of cinematic diversity, from Lulu Wang's brilliant The Farewell and Greta Gerwig's revitalization of Little Women to Lupita Nyong'o's haunting turn in Us, the major category Oscar nominations are all too blatantly white and male.

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Top Stories

Three Underrated Netflix Foreign-Films Worth Watching

The success of Roma should bring attention to the seriously underrated selection of foreign-language Netflix original films. Here are three other foreign films worth watching.

Happy as Lazarro | Official Trailer [HD] | Netflix

Roma has been quite the cinematic achievement for Netflix.

After a series of flops (think Bright and The CloverfieldParadox), Alfonso Cuarón's film represents an exciting step forward for the platform's original content. Roma's success should also bring attention to the seriously underrated selection of fascinating and impactful foreign language Netflix originals.

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Film News

Yalitza Aparicio, the First Indigenous Woman Nominated for an Oscar, Speaks Out

Aparicio, an aspiring teacher nominated for an Oscar for her starring role in Roma, may have found her largest classroom yet.

Yalitza Aparicio

Photo by Victor Chavez/Shutterstock

Yalitza Aparicio didn't mean for any of this to happen.

When she auditioned for Alfonso Cuarón's Roma on a whim—mostly to appease her pregnant sister, who insisted she go to the open casting call in her place—she never imagined it would launch her into the jet-setting life of a social media star, a press junket darling, and an Oscar nominee.

"There has never been a casting before in our hometown," Aparicio told Deadline in December. "I thought that it could be related to human trafficking, because they never do castings in Oaxaca." But she went anyway, and the rest is history.

When he first saw Aparicio, Cuarón knew instantly that she was his star. Things were less clear to her, an aspiring school teacher with no acting experience; she told the Times that she originally turned Cuarón's offer down, wanting to focus on teaching. But she had some time before application season, and after consulting with her family, she told Cuaron, "Well, I think I can do it. I have nothing better to do."

Flash forward to today, and now she is the first indigenous woman to ever garner an Oscar nomination. Before the nomination was announced, the New York Times asked Aparicio what an Oscar might mean to her. "I'd be breaking the stereotype that because we're Indigenous we can't do certain things because of our skin color," she said. "Receiving that nomination would be a break from so many ideas. It would open doors to other people—to everyone—and deepen our conviction that we can do these things now."

Certainly the Oscar nod, coupled with Aparicio's presence on the cover of Vogue and on the red carpet, will light the way for new faces who might not otherwise be able to entertain Hollywood dreams. Of course, indoctrination into Hollywood may not be the key to healing the disadvantages that violent colonization has always caused Indigenous peoples—changes to the structural forces that keep Indigenous people in poverty could do the trick—but Aparicio's emergence as a voice for her culture is at the very least a move towards counteracting traditional, constrictive beauty standards.

Roma, on the whole, operates in a tenuous duality; it is an indictment of stereotypes about indigenous people, but it also remains true to them. Aparicio's character spends the majority of her time picking up after the Spanish-speaking family whom she works for; her role is less of a tale of female empowerment than a document of the real. Her ascension to the limelight belies a similar underlying complexity, as her elevation to press and Instagram darling could be read as both a triumph of diversity in media and a tokenization of the Indigenous identity.

The film addresses the complexities of this issue by both addressing and not addressing it, portraying Aparicio's character Cleo as a three-dimensional but reserved and withdrawn character. It treats politics this way, too. Roma takes place against a backdrop of violence in the 1970s, which it shows only in short glimpses, mostly focusing instead on the minutiae of its characters' domestic lives.

But violence was very much present in Mexico of the 1970s—a fact that remains true of much of Mexico today. Aparicio is acutely aware of the tensions currently overwhelming much of her country. "Think about just the disappearance of students in Ayotzinapa [in 2014]—it's very recent," she told Vox of one of the recent acts of violence that has plagued Mexico, forcing many to flee to the U.S.'s borders in search of asylum. Ironically, one of Roma's stars, Jorge Antonio Guerro, has been denied a visa to the U.S. despite submitting letters of proofs to immigration services three separate times, according to Newsweek. He still hopes to be able to enter in time for the Oscars, as Roma itself took 10 nominations overall.

As for Aparicio, she still harbors dreams of being a schoolteacher. But she does see a correlation between teaching and acting, telling Deadline that "as a teacher, you educate. And films educate too, but they do it in a massive way."

Her performance in Roma is a master class of its own. She works the camera with such a natural elegance that it's easy to forget the learning curve she was up against. Not only has she never been on film before; she also had to master Mixtec, one of the Indigenous languages of the Oaxaca region that her character speaks on and off, and she had to learn to swim for the film's final beach scene.

In a way, with Roma she's just stepped into a much larger classroom, and she has plenty of words of wisdom and hope to share with the world. "I'm not the face of Mexico," Aparicio told The Times. "It shouldn't matter what you're into, how you look—you can achieve whatever you aspire to."


Eden Arielle Gordon is a writer and musician from New York City. She loves coffee, electric guitars, and subway rides to Coney Island.


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