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3 best action adventure movies on Netflix you (probably) haven't seen

3 best action adventure movies on Netflix you (probably) haven't seen

Tom's Guide14 hours ago
Few film genres are as exciting as an action-adventure movie — packed with explosions, car chases and sword fights galore, a fast-paced, fistfight-fueled movie night is sometimes exactly what you need to turn off your brain for approximately two-plus hours. (Hey, it's something!)
Thankfully, Netflix — one of the best streaming services around — has quite the stacked action-movie selection to get your pulse pumping and your energy up. That wealth of options, however, can make it difficult to narrow down exactly which action-adventure you want to immerse yourself in. Tom's Guide has made things a little easier for you by spotlighting three underrated titles that you might have missed the first time around.
These watch-worthy Netflix titles include an Indonesian action-comedy centered on retired assassins who are forced back into guns-blazing action; a cyberpunk action-thriller that's especially topical in this era of AI; and an extreme documentary following a mountaineer attempting to summit all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks in a matter of months.
Here are three Netflix action-adventure movies you (probably) haven't seen yet but definitely should.
Written and directed by Timo Tjahjanto, 2022's "The Big 4" tells the story of four retired assassins–played by Abimana Aryasatya, Lutesha, Arie Kriting, and Kristo Immanuel–who have hung up their swords but are forced to return to the game when they cross paths with a straight-arrow cop (Putri Marino) who is determined to track down an elusive murderer.
When the acclaimed action flick — which has a stellar 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with Brian Tallerico for RogerEbert.com calling it "'The Three Stooges' with bazookas ... you feel its impact when it explodes" — premiered, it made the Netflix top 10 in 53 countries, including Argentina, Finland, South Korea, Mexico and more, but it didn't break into the American rankings. Consider now your time to change that!
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Directed by Leigh Whannell and led by Logan Marshall-Green, this 2018 high-tech ride centers on Grey Trace, an auto mechanic living in 2046. After a brutal mugging leaves him paralyzed and his wife dead, Grey opts for an experimental AI chip implant called STEM that will allow him to walk again. It also leaves him with superhuman strength and a powerful voice in his head, both of which he uses to track down the criminals behind the attack to exact his revenge.
The movie boasts a solid 88% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, where the site's critical consensus reads: "Like its augmented protagonist, 'Upgrade's' old-fashioned innards get a high-tech boost—one made even more powerful thanks to sharp humor and a solidly well-told story."
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The majority of us will never get to see the world from its highest peaks, but you can feel like you did with this 2021 action documentary, which follows Nepali mountaineer Nirmal "Nimsdai" Purja, a Nepali mountaineer, as he attempts to summit all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks in a then-record-breaking seven months.
Most of the high-altitude footage was taken directly by the expedition team, offering a staggering and stirring depiction of all of the people and perseverance it takes for one man to achieve the seemingly impossible. With a 90% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, critics praised the doc for expanding "a genre often focused on the feats of individuals to celebrate lessons about vast dreams and communal bonds."
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'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults
'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults

Time​ Magazine

time7 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults

When it comes to youth culture, nothing is more mainstream right now than outcasts. This is not an anecdotal observation—it's a fact, borne out by the immense popularity of the teen-focused Addams Family spinoff Wednesday, whose first season tops Netflix's list of its most-watched English-language shows of all time, with more than 250 million views. (The next two titles, Adolescence and Stranger Things 4, lag by over 100 million views apiece.) Melding horror and mystery with YA drama, it has made a global star of its 22-year-old lead, Jenna Ortega, whose cannily placed dance scene immediately broke TikTok. Wednesday Addams cracked the top 10 kids' Halloween costumes the year after it debuted, second only to Barbie among name-brand female characters. All of which might suggest to adults that Wednesday is strictly for Gen Z. Its first season certainly supported that impression. The setting—Nevermore Academy, a boarding school for paranormally gifted misfits—recalled Harry Potter's Hogwarts. The plot put a dark but too rarely novel spin on standard coming-of-age tropes, as Ortega's icy, psychic Wednesday navigated roommate troubles and a supernatural love triangle (see also: Buffy, Twilight, The Vampire Diaries). While those elements remain in Season 2, Wednesday, having saturated the Gen Z market, now feels like it's working harder to entertain older viewers—particularly those of us who fondly remember '90s pop culture. Well, it worked on this elder millennial. Parents, don't tell your tweens, but the new episodes of Wednesday are secretly a gift to weird adults. After a speed run through Wednesday's summer vacation, which she naturally spent taking out a creepy serial killer played by Y2K spooky-kid icon Haley Joel Osment, Season 2 (whose first four episodes are now streaming, with the last four to follow on Sept. 3) opens with her return to Nevermore. Having vanquished the murderous alliance of her love interest Tyler (Hunter Doohan) and teacher Marilyn Thornhill (Christina Ricci), who had been conspiring against the school's outcast denizens, she's hailed as a hero. Which only makes her grumpier than usual. Adding to Wednesday's foul mood is her family's increased presence on campus. Her little brother, Pugsley (Isaac Ordonez), has matriculated as an awkward underclassman. And Addams matriarch Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones) has been recruited to raise funds for the academy—meaning, of course, that Morticia's adoring husband, Gomez (Luis Guzmán), won't be far away. Eventually there's a spectacular grandmother in the mix. More on her later. 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Gough and Millar have moved to liberate the show from teen-drama clichés by expanding its world beyond the dating woes and questionable authority figures of Nevermore. Tyler's imprisonment at the nearby Willow Hill Psychiatric Facility—whose grimy environs recall Batman's Arkham Asylum, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and so many other fictional houses of psychological horrors—is the site of a promising new (but easily spoiled) subplot. There, Wednesday meets the unorthodox doctor overseeing his treatment, Rachael Fairburn, played by Westworld standout Thandiwe Newton. Appearing as Dr. Fairburn's officious assistant, Judi, is none other than Heather Matarazzo, who entered the oddball hall of fame in 1995 with her portrayal of Welcome to the Dollhouse's middle-school reject Dawn Wiener. It's all pretty delightful for those of us who are old enough to appreciate not just the referential casting, but also the just-campy-enough performances that Buscemi, Matarazzo, and the rest deliver. 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Riffing on Wednesday and Pugsley's gloriously destructive journey to sleepaway camp in that 1993 movie, 'Call of the Woe' sees Principal Dort shepherd his students to an overnight wilderness retreat he dubs Camp Outcast. (Gomez and Morticia are also present, as chaperones. You have never seen a tent like the one they construct.) The Nevermore kids soon encounter their ideal nemeses in a troop of normie paramilitary Boy Scout types who've reserved the camp for the same days. The only possible resolution to the double booking—because the two groups have no intention of sharing space—will be obvious to anyone who's ever seen a summer-camp movie from the late 20th century: a color war. I have no doubt that plenty of Gen Z Wednesday viewers have already devoured Addams Family Values and its predecessor and will get the callback. I'm sure they'll also eat up all the new characters and settings, whether they recognize them or not. 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The Wait for 'Wednesday' Season 2, Part 2 Isn't as Long as You Think It Is
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Elle

time34 minutes ago

  • Elle

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Spoilers below. When the credits roll at the end of Wednesday season 2, episode 4, the fate of Jenna Ortega's titular heroine is unclear. After coming face-to-face with Tyler Galpin (Hunter Doohan) in Hyde form in Willow Hill Hospital, the pigtailed icon gets thrown out the window and police cars swarm the scene. There's still a lot more to explore in this chapter of Wednesday Addams's story, from her terrifying vision about Enid to her fraught relationship with her mom. Oh yeah, and isn't there still a zombie on the loose? Here's what to know about the rest of Wednesday's second season. The second half of the season—four more episodes—premieres on Wednesday, September 3. Like most Netflix titles, they will begin streaming at 3 A.M. ET. Only four more weeks of woe before the show returns. We'll likely see many of the part 1 stars, along with a few additions. Lady Gaga is expected to arrive in part 2 in a yet-undisclosed role, and so is Mansfield Park star Frances O'Connor. Otherwise, we'll probably see more of Ortega, Steve Buscemi (Barry Dort), Catherine Zeta-Jones (Morticia Addams), Emma Myers (Enid), Joy Sunday (Bianca), Luis Guzmán (Gomez Addams), Hunter Doohan (Tyler), Billie Piper (Capri), Isaac Ordonez (Pugsley Addams), Victor Dorobantu (Thing), Georgie Farmer (Ajax), Moosa Mostafa (Eugene Ottinger), Evie Templeton (Agnes Demille), Owen Painter (Slurp), Noah Taylor (Bruno), and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo (Sheriff Santiago). Additional guest stars include Joanna Lumley (Grandmama), Thandiwe Newton (Dr. Fairburn), Haley Joel Osment (Kansas City Scalper), Heather Matarazzo (Judi), Joonas Suotamo, Fred Armisen (Uncle Fester), and Christopher Lloyd (Professor Orloff). Plus—surprise!—Christina Ricci has returned as Marilyn Thornhill. Season 2, part 1, episode 4 saw her in a violent confrontation with Tyler, but we still don't know for sure if she's dead. We'll have to wait and see if she comes back (again) for season 2, part 2.

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