
The following 13 Netflix movies (which we found to be an especially appropriate number for the occasion) should amount to the perfect binge for the Halloween season (or any time of year for a true follower of frights), starting with one recent hit that has a little bit of everything you could ask for from a horror film. Stop spending your evenings looking for something to watch and spend the time actually watching something with the best movies and shows to watch this week on Netflix, Hulu, HBO, Amazon, Disney. If playback doesnt begin shortly, try restarting your device. If you do not believe me, than it could mean you have been sleeping on some of Netflix’s scariest exclusives, but after watching the original titles I have collected below, sleep may be more difficult to come by. The Prodigy - Warriors Dance Uncut (Official Video) Info. He also has a blue hat with a bell on the tip, and a scarf attached to a small blue and white tunic. Noot resembles a big fair-skinned fairy with stubby arms, bare legs, black to dark blue eyes, a large head, small, pointy wings, a big squirrel-like tail, and one tuft of orange hair with a design similar to his tail.

Of course, Netflix has more than enough wonderfully weird horror classics available, but, what really helps it stand out as a reliably haunting location is its surprising amount of films in its original line-up that often match, or surpass, the quality in horror you can find on other streaming platforms or even from a theatrical production. Noot is a NPC (Non-playable character) in Prodigy Math Game. Revolving around a young boy and a snowman come to life (a little like Jack Frost, except not terrible), the film ends with a breathtaking flourish, as the pair fly over England’s snowy plains to the melancholy strains of “Walking in the Air“.Of course, any thrill seeker knows the many other places on which the genre thrives digitally - such as the all-horror streaming service Shudder Hulu, which puts the spotlight on content of a spooky variety for its annual “Huluween” celebration or the endless amount of bloody B-movies you can almost always count on to find at Amazon Prime. Though this beautiful, wordless animation is not widely known outside the UK – it was first broadcast on the then fledgling Channel 4 in 1982 and then annually ever since – it is well worth 26 minutes of anyone’s time.

But there is far too much to enjoy in this ensemble romcom to write it off – namely Emma Thompson’s extraordinary, rightly revered performance as the wronged wife of Alan Rickman. The Razer’s buttons are softer, lighter and shorter. The heavy, satisfying and solid action will easily cope with mainstream gaming and esports. They’re firm, with a noticeable bump when they bottom out, and they’re quick. We’ve all read that Jezebel article by now, and know that Love Actually is flawed as hell. The Logitech G213 Prodigys buttons are tall and heavy in that respect they’re very similar to most mechanical keyboards. Read more: Best Christmas films on Netflix Who’d have thought that one of the best interpretations of Charles Dickens’s festive fable would come courtesy of a bunch of wise-cracking puppets? In his role as Ebeneezer Scrooge, Michael Caine vowed to act “like I’m working with the Royal Shakespeare Company”, whatever ridiculous antics were happening around him. Keeping the morals of the original story the Muppet’s add a touch of light-hearted frivolity to an enjoyable family film. The Muppet Christmas Carol (U), 4.35-6.15pm, C4 Michael Caine stars in the Muppet’s take on Dickens’ tale. The film has its detractors – for some, the comic farce leans too far towards genuine emotional trauma – but in the long, slow struggle to make the yuletide a little bit more gay, it’s a great place to start. Starring Kristen Stewart as Abby, a kind-hearted Christmas-sceptic who must pretend to be straight when her closeted girlfriend (Makcenzie Davis) brings her home for the holidays, the film broke streaming records when it premiered on Hulu – the silver lining of its Coronavirus-scuppered cinema release. Speaking of heteronorm-nativity, a glossy, mainstream Christmas romcom with a queer couple at its centre was long overdue – and boy did writer-director Clea DuVall deliver with Happiest Season. And so Todd Haynes’s Carol, a beautifully shot adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel in which department store worker Therese (Rooney Mara) falls in love with a mysterious older woman (Cate Blanchett) in the run up to Christmas, is a welcome break from heteronorm-nativity.

Even Love Actually filmed a queer storyline among its 524 interweaving plots, before deciding it should be cut from the film, leaving that “Colin goes to America” abomination intact. When it comes to Christmas films, there is no shortage of love and romance – but it’s all overwhelmingly straight. Affairs of the heart: Rooney Mara, left, and Cate Blanchett as lovers Therese and Carol in the adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s novel
