
5 Hidden Gems On Netflix, According To Rotten Tomatoes
Helena Zengel and Albrecht Schuch star in the 2019 film 'System Crasher.'
I have spent a lot of time highlighting the best movies on Netflix, as well as the most highly rated movies on Netflix according to Rotten Tomatoes. But there are so many more movies that fly under the radar that don't receive the recognition and attention they deserve. Even a service like Rotten Tomatoes can only do so much - even if a movie achieves a score over 90%, the highest achievement a film can achieve in the critical community, they often dissipate like dust in the wind as larger films with bigger budgets (and even bigger narrative issues) receive five times as many reviews. These are the kinds of movies that can change someone's life, that can expose a whole new line of thinking, that can alter our very perception of the world. These movies have gone beyond the 90% barrier - we just didn't hear about it.
Well, now that can change - for seven movies in particular, anyway. I scoured the Netflix movie database to find lesser-known films that have achieved critical success. All of the movies below, which were largely released in the past ten years, have scored at least 90% on Rotten Tomatoes, and have been waiting for a wider audience to find them. If you're a Netflix subscriber, you likely didn't even known these movies were available to you - so don't waste anymore time and get to it.
59 reviews — 97% approval rating
You don't expect to find the most heartfelt of stories born from games like World of Warcraft. But then again, you probably don't know Mats Steen, Norwegian man who lived with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and passed away at 25. His physical world might have be restrained, but his imagination and ability to connect with others knew no bounds - Mats found freedom and kinship in the online realm of World of Warcraft, a massive role-playing game that currently hosts over 7 million players. In The Remarkable Life of Ibelin, director Benjamin Ree blends together home video footage with animated recreations of Mats' in-game experiences (Ree had access to approximately 42,000 pages of Mats' in-game chat logs), where he embodied the charismatic character of Ibelin Redmoore. After Mats' death, his parents were overwhelmed by messages from his online friends, revealing the profound impact he had on their lives - a facet of Mats they had been unaware of. From the very beginning, the film has enjoyed great success with both critics and audiences - the film premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival, winning both the Audience Award and the Directing Award in the World Cinema Documentary category.
56 reviews — 93% approval rating
The act of revolution, of fighting for what's right at any cost, is a rich subject for cinema, and has been since its early days, tracing all the way back to Abel Gance in the 1910s or Sergei Eisenstein in the 1920s or - and perhaps this is most apropos for Güeros - Fernando de Fuentes Carrau in the 1930s. Carrau, a Mexican filmmaker, crafted the Revolution Trilogy between 1933-1936, a series of movies about the Mexican Revolution. Eighty years later, director Alonso Ruizpalacios used black-and-white cinematography to tell a new story of Mexican rebellion involving three teenagers searching for a folk singer during the bloody 1999-2000 strike at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (the largest university in Latin America). The film deftly recreates many of the issues facing Mexican society at the time, evoking themes like student activism, class disparities and the search for identity in a quickly changing cultural landscape. Güeros garnered widespread critical acclaim upon its release just over 10 years ago, winning five Ariel Awards, including Best Picture, and earning accolades at international festivals like Berlin and Tribeca.
48 reviews — 98% approval rating
I already highlighted this movie in a recent article, but it feels wrong to ignore it for this particular article - it's rare for a modern movie to come this close to achieving a perfect 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes (there is currently only one negative review) and still be relatively unknown. But hopefully that can change as How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies gains exposure to a wider audience on Netflix, and possibly recreate the massive success the film found overseas (produced on a modest $1 million budget, the film grossed approximately $73.8 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing Thai film of all time). This Thai dramedy follows the character of M (Putthipong 'Billkin' Assaratanakul), a 26-year-old university dropout who attempts to secure his dying grandmother's inheritance by becoming her primary caregiver. But before long, he develops a deep, life-changing relationship with Amah (Usha Seamkhum), forcing M to reevaluate his intentions and understanding of family bonds. Thailand selected the film as its official submission for the Best International Feature Film category at the Oscars, where it made the shortlist.
46 reviews — 100% approval rating
I gotta say: this one took me by surprise. As someone who doesn't watch very much anime, it was a shock for me to discover that a film based upon a 1990s manga series had produced one of the rare 100%-approved flicks on Rotten Tomatoes - so I knew I had to check out The First Slam Dunk. Takehiko Inoue, the original creator of the Slam Dunk manga, took on the roles of writer and director for the film, marking his first time directing an animated feature - and boy did he knock it out of the park. His story centers on Ryota Miyagi (Shugo Nakamura), the quick and determined point guard of Shohoku High School's basketball team - he mourns the tragic death of his brother, Sota, who inspired his passion for the sport, and fights to honor his legacy by winning the Inter-High School National Championship. Such a simple story propels to unbelievably heights thanks to the eye-popping blend of 3D CGI for basketball scenes and hand-drawn 2D animation for everyday moments. Believe it or not, The First Slam Dunk became the highest-grossing basketball film of all time, grossing over $279 million worldwide (it also ranks among the top Japanese films in global box office history), while also winning the Japan Academy Prize for Animation of the Year
142 reviews — 96% approval rating
Director Joshua Oppenheimer is undoubtedly best known for his transfixing 2012 documentary The Act of Killing (another movie available on Netflix, by the way), which told the story of those who participated in the Indonesian mass killings between 1965-1966, deepening our understanding of those horrific events and the West's involvement. But slightly lesser known is that film's sort-of sequel, The Look of Silence, in which tells the stories of victims of such atrocities. Specifically, the film centers on Adi Rukun, a middle-aged optometrist who confronts the men responsible for his brother Ramli's brutal murder during the anti-communist purges. Through a series of interviews conducted under the guise of eye examinations, Adi seeks to break the decades-long silence surrounding said barbarity and challenges the perpetrators to acknowledge their crimes - this lends to Oppenheimer's signature approach, which emphasizes authenticity and avoids clichés that might offer false reassurance. The film received widespread recognition upon its release, including a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and winning the Grand Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival. Despite challenges, the film has been screened over 3,500 times to more than 300,000 people in Indonesia, reflecting its profound resonance and the growing demand for truth and reconciliation.
92 reviews — 91% approval rating
Alice Rohrwacher might just be the most celebrated modern filmmaker you've never heard of, winning the Grand Prix for her 2014 film (The Wonders), directing one of the top five international films of 2023 by the National Board of Review (La chimera), and being nominated for Best Live Action Short Film at the Academy Awards (Le pupille). She also won Best Screenplay at the Cannes Film Festival for a transfixing film you can find on Netflix, Happy as Lazzaro. Set in the isolated rural estate of Inviolata, the story follows Lazzaro (Adriano Tardiolo), a kind-hearted and naive young peasant who, along with fellow laborers, is exploited under a feudal sharecropping system by the aristocratic Marchesa Alfonsina De Luna (Nicoletta Braschi). Lazzaro forms a bond with her rebellious son, Tancredi (Luca Chikovani), who enlists him in a scheme to fake his own kidnapping. Then, a sudden twist propels the narrative into a surreal exploration of time, as Lazzaro awakens years later, unchanged, and ventures into a modern world where the injustices of the past persist in new forms. This genre-defying Italian film mixes magical realism and neorealism to create a story that is both grounded and otherworldly in its social commentary, making for an incisive, enlightening experience you've likely never encountered before.
35 reviews — 94% approval rating
I have to admit, I'm always a bit hesitant when it comes to dramas starring children as the main characters. It's not that I don't believe they can be great - after all, I love movies like The 400 Blows, Where is the Friend's House? and George Washington - but it always seems the hard-hitting reality of their worlds is lost to the conventions of the coming-of-age formula, which stifles a young actor who cannot break beyond such boundaries. But that certainly was not the case with System Crasher, an unflinching portrayal of childhood trauma that was captured beautifully by the film's star, Helena Zengel. This German drama directed by Nora Fingscheidt follows the nine-year-old Bernadette (Zengel), whose explosive outbursts and violent tendencies make her a 'system crasher,' a term used in Germany for children who defy placement in civilized society. Desperate to reunite with a mother unable to care for her, Benni drifts from home to home, constantly defying the efforts of her dedicated social worker Frau Bafané (Gabriela Maria Schmeide) and school escort Micha (Albrecht Schuch), making for a narrative that's just as much of an exploration of childhood trauma as it is a piercing commentary on the system that fails such children. System Crasher was Germany's official submission for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards and won multiple German Film Awards, including Best Feature Film and Best Actress.
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Geek Girl Authority
3 hours ago
- Geek Girl Authority
New TV Shows This Week (June 8 - 14)
Welcome to another edition of New TV Shows. This week, a father-daughter spy duo returns to Netflix. Mexican singer Lucero stars in Our Times , Nick Mohammed joins two Hollywood stars in a Prime Video movie and the continuation of To Barcelona, With Love comes to Hallmark Channel. Some exciting series, including one about journalists and exposure, are premiering this week. Get ready because things are about to get good. Here's what's new on TV for June 8-14. NEW ON TV, JUNE 8-14 June 10 – The Kollective After a plane crash, a group of young citizen journalists known as The Kollective get together to uncover what truly happened. The group believes the crash wasn't an accident, so they decide to investigate and discover a global conspiracy that includes government corruption. Hulu's newest series, The Kollective , stars Natascha McElhone, Celine Buckens, Felix Mayr, Grégory Montel, Karel Roden, Cassiopée Mayance, Martha Canga Antonio and Ralph Amoussou. The Kollective premieres Tuesday, June 10 at Midnight/11c on Hulu. RELATED: The Premise and How Star Trek Fans Created Fanfic as We Know It June 11 – Our Times Mexican singer Lucero stars in Netflix's newest Spanish-speaking movie, Our Times . The film tells the story of two physicists who, in 1966, discover time-travel and land in 2025. While Nora is happy because she can thrive in a world that celebrates women, Héctor can't find himself in this new reality. Now, Nora must decide if she goes back in time with the man she loves or stays in a time that empowers her. Our Times premieres Wednesday, June 11 at 3/2 am on Netflix. June 12 – Deep Cover Prime Video is releasing a new movie that includes Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom and Nick Mohammed. The film, written by Derek Connolly, Colin Trevorrow and Ben Ashenden, follows three improv actors who are asked to go undercover in London's criminal underworld. Can they complete the task? Deep Cover premieres Thursday, June 12 at 3/2 am on Prime Video. RELATED: On Location: Es Saadi Marrakesh Resort on The Night Manager Season 1 June 12 – FUBAR Arnold Schwarzenegger and Monica Barbaro are back for FUBAR Season 2. After the ending of Season 1, Luke and his team will have to figure out who the rat is among them since their identities have been exposed. The cast still includes Travis Van Winkle, Fortune Feimster, Milan Carter, Scott Thompson, Fabiana Udenio, Andy Buckley, Jay Baruchel, Adam Pally, Tom Arnold, Aparna Brielle and Barbara Eve Harris. FUBAR Season 2 premieres Thursday, June 12 at 3/2 am on Netflix. June 13 – Echo Valley Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney star in Apple TV+'s newest film, Echo Valley . The movie tells the story of a mother and daughter with a complicated relationship. Things get more tense when Claire shows up at her mother's house covered in someone else's blood. As a mother, Kate pushes the limits to find out how far one can go to protect their child. Echo Valley premieres Friday, June 13 on Apple TV+. RELATED: Stranger Things : Netflix Announces Premiere Dates for Epic Final Season June 14 – To Barcelona, Forever If you enjoyed Hallmark's To Barcelona, With Love , you are bound to love its sequel, To Barcelona, Forever . This new film finds Anna traveling back to Barcelona to celebrate Erica and Nico's engagement. That is where she meets a farmer and ends up in a complicated engagement herself to save his family legacy. Alison Sweeney and Ashley Williams return for this movie. To Barcelona, Forever premieres Saturday, June 14 at 8/7c on Hallmark Channel. Check back next week for What's New on TV for June 15-21. Natasha Romanoff vs. Yelena Belova: The Value of Well-Written Women Characters By day, Lara Rosales (she/her) is a solo mom by choice and a bilingual writer with a BA in Latin-American Literature who works in PR. By night, she is a TV enjoyer who used to host a podcast (Cats, Milfs & Lesbian Things). You can find her work published on Tell-Tale TV, Eulalie Magazine, Collider, USA Wire, Mentors Collective, Instelite, Noodle, Dear Movies, Nicki Swift, and Flip Screened.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
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You Probably Hate This Masterpiece Sci-Fi Show. Here's Why You Need to Rewatch It in 2025
You may be thinking, "Really, Macy? You're going to the mat over a show that came out over 20 years ago?" Well, yes. Because it simply isn't given the respect it deserves. Like many Americans, my family and I loved our nights huddled around the TV to watch our favorite TV shows live. For us, that meant American Idol, Dexter and, of course, ABC's network hit Lost. There's a good chance you watched Lost in the early 2000s, too. And there's an even better chance you think it got bad. Or you have some sort of perspective that it started strong but went off the rails after the first three seasons. Somewhere along the way -- maybe when the flash-sideways began, or when a smoke monster turned into a man, or when you realized there wasn't going to be a clear-cut answer to every mystery -- you bailed. Maybe you saw the finale and thought it ruined the whole show. (More on that later.) I watched Lost when I was a kid, but hadn't revisited it for close to a decade. Until it came to streaming services, first Hulu and now Netflix and Disney Plus. One day, I decided to replay the pilot episode and, well, it transformed me into the person writing this 1,500-word defense. I binged the show and then immediately turned around and binged it again. I'm truly mad at myself for wasting so much time thinking this show was a disappointment. In truth, it's a glorious, ambitious near-masterpiece. It's my favorite show. That's why I'm writing this. I'm here to ask you to do something radical: Rewatch Lost in 2025. Yes, all of it. And this time, go in with fresh eyes -- see it not as a weekly network drama, but as a serialized, character-driven odyssey that, along with The Sopranos and Mad Men, paved the way for the prestige genre TV we obsess over now. Because the truth is, Lost wasn't a failure. It was just ahead of its time. Here's why. Looking for more streaming recommendations? You should also watch my favorite movie, a historical drama packed with modern themes, for free now. The last thing I want to do is spoil the ending of a show I'm trying to get you to rewatch. But I feel like I need to address this early since one of the main reasons audiences ultimately turned on the show was a misconception about the ending. I'll tell you right now, spoilers be damned. They. Were. Not. All. Dead. The. Whole. Time. The idea that the characters were really all dead the whole series and that the island was just a purgatory-like state is completely untrue. It's been debunked by the creators of the show, the actors who starred in the show and the dialogue in the series finale itself. A twist ending like that -- revealing they had all died in the plane crash right at the start -- would be a horrible one. It would retroactively reduce the entire plot of the show to meaningless, empty nothingness. So, thankfully, that's not how it actually ended. Now, you can just enjoy the show knowing that it all matters. When Lost premiered in 2004, there was nothing like it on network television. A lush, cinematic sci-fi mystery shot on 35mm film, with a massive ensemble cast of mostly unknown actors and an evolving mythology? On ABC, of all places? In the era of CSI, Desperate Housewives, and the dozens of other cop shows and formulaic TV, Lost was a risk. Lost is a sci-fi show (I think a lot of people forget that) with horror and supernatural elements. It's serialized, meaning you must see each episode to understand the next one, unlike so many shows that were airing on network TV at the time. The show follows a group of drastically different people who have just survived a plane crash on a remote, tropical island that seems to harbor deep, dark mysteries. But each survivor has secrets of their own. And they must live together in order to survive. (I can vividly remember hearing protagonist Jack Shepard say, "If we don't learn to live together… we're gonna die alone.") These characters come together with their differences, their pasts (beautifully depicted in flashback scenes), their traumas, their hopes and their desires, to collectively navigate this horrible situation. What unfolds is six seasons of intense, heart-wrenching plot points that subvert expectations and are rich with themes of faith, spirituality, dualism, philosophy and the mystical. It's pretty normal for TV shows now to be cinematic. Shows like The Last of Us, Succession, Stranger Things and Severance all make use of big budgets, high-quality production, engrossing performances and teams of insanely talented writers. But Lost was doing that in 2004 on ABC, which means the showrunners were dealing with the many obstacles and restrictions of network television. For instance, the show's creators -- J.J. Abrams, Jeffrey Lieber and Damon Lindelof -- wanted Lost to only be three seasons, but ABC said no, and pushed them to do 10 seasons when they saw what a hit the show had become. They eventually negotiated down to the six seasons we have today. But that's twice the amount of runtime the original creators intended. Despite this, the writers crafted compelling story lines and introduced some of the most intriguing characters (Ben, Juliet, Jacob, Penny, Miles) into the later seasons. It's easy to forget that Lost was doing time jumps, shifting perspectives and emotional bottle episodes long before The Leftovers, Dark or Severance existed. It experimented with structure constantly: a flashback here, a flash-forward there, a time loop in season 5. Entire episodes would focus on side characters you hadn't seen in weeks. It was complicated, sure, but thrillingly so. The show trusted its audience to keep up, even when it was confusing. 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Even though this was a cast of mostly unknown actors at the time, they all, guest actors included, reached a caliber of performance that is still so rare to witness in a TV series. And the music is absolutely remarkable. Michael Giacchino (The Incredibles, Up, Coco, Inside Out) created what I think is the best TV score of all time for Lost. I mean, he used debris from the crashed plane from the pilot episode to create the unique, bizarre sounds you hear each episode. The score is a perfect fit for a unique storyline. More than anything else, Lost is a show that will make you feel. Is every plotline perfect? No. Do the final seasons get a bit complex? Absolutely. But on balance, Lost is one of the most ambitious, strange, beautiful things ever put on television, and it is emotionally satisfying from start to finish. Lost opened the door for serialized sci-fi and genre storytelling on TV, especially character-first narratives with weird, metaphysical themes. What I'm saying is that without Lost, it's hard to imagine Severance, Stranger Things or other TV sci-fi faves. So if you haven't watched it since 2010 -- or if you've never watched it at all -- now's the time. The entire series is available to stream on Hulu, Netflix, Disney Plus and Prime Video for rent. Skip the Reddit threads. Forget the hot takes. Just hit play. And maybe, just maybe, you'll find that Lost didn't lose its way. We just didn't know how to watch it yet. For more, you can explore the 13 best sci-fi shows on Apple TV Plus and the 18 best sci-fi shows on Prime Video.


Buzz Feed
4 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
Olivia Munn Doesn't Let Her Kids Watch Ms. Rachel
Olivia Munn won't let her kids watch Ms. Rachel. In an interview with People, the Your Friends & Neighbors actor shared why she doesn't let her children watch Ms. Rachel's videos or most children's programs, and it's pretty reasonable. Ms. Rachel is a popular YouTuber and Netflix star, famous for making videos that help kids with language development. Olivia has two children, whom she shares with husband John Mulaney — Malcolm, 3, and Méi, 8 months. "I know kids love [Ms. Rachel], but the thing is, if I can't watch it, I'm not going to spend the rest of my life going crazy," Olivia said. "These kid shows drive me crazy." For Olivia, it's not just Ms. Rachel. She's not here for most cartoons in the household. "Malcolm asked for Blue's Clues [recently], and I don't know who showed him Blue's Clues, but they are on my shit list now," Olivia said. "I said, 'Hell no. Not in my house.'" Olivia described how John got Malcolm into the Spider-Man cartoons, which she didn't find "interesting." Her preference is the updated live-action movies. "I put on Tom Holland's Spider-Man: Homecoming and was like, 'If you want to watch the real-life ones, then we can watch that.' It might be a little too old for him, but I can't take the cartoons." But don't worry. There's at least one children's show that makes the cut with Mama Olivia, and that's the PBS children's show Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood for one specific reason. She believes it's a "great program" because it was vital in helping Malcolm understand what it's like to become a big brother to Méi, who was welcomed via surrogate last September. "Daniel Tiger has a little sister, and we'd tell him, 'There's a baby sister coming,'" Olivia said. Even though the typical children's programming might not be on the television when Olivia's around, she's found a system that works for their family. Talking with People, she said when she first introduced Méi to her big brother, she and John made a point not to "change his world and indentity and responsiblities." "A lot of times people will be like, 'Oh, you're a big brother now. You're not the baby anymore. Now you can help mommy get the diapers.' So, all of a sudden, he has all these responsibilities, and he doesn't just get to be carefree anymore," Olivia added. "Instead, we would say, 'Now we have two babies. There's baby Méi Méi and baby Malcolm.'" In the interview, Olivia shared that she and John focus on providing their children equal attention, so, in my opinion, it makes sense that she might not want to throw that balance off with too much Ms. Rachel and animated Spider-Man. Olivia said about her 3-year-old son, "He would say, 'Mommy, come over here. Daddy, come over here,' and if we were holding the baby, we would put her down so that he wouldn't feel that all of a sudden now we can't be there for him." "It's not that we were trying to teach him that everything he says goes, but we wanted him to have the transition with her to know that we're still here whenever he needs us. Then, eventually when he'd say, 'Put Méi Méi down,' we'd say, 'No, she wants to see her mommy too.' He smiles, and he understands," Olivia said. It sounds like Olivia has a system down, and Ms. Rachel (as popular as she may be) might not be for every family. And to be honest, I support Olivia keeping cartoons outside of the house for now, especially when her husband is literally part of a cartoon series that has scenes like this: And this: Perhaps they should wait until Malcolm and Méi are full-grown adults before they start showing them cartoons, in case they become interested in their dad's show. Read the full interview here.