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Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman in Batman Returns, standing behind a cartoony cat-head image painted on glass Image: Warner Bros. Pictures

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The best Christmas movies to watch on Netflix, Amazon, Max, and more right now

’Tis the season to watch the best holiday movies

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Christmas season is in full swing, and with it comes the annual feast of all things yuletide-themed and appropriately festive on streaming. Christmas is a holiday that’s inspired a wealth of enduring comedies about the value of family, community, love, and selflessness during the darkest and coldest time of the year. It’s also spawned no shortage of films that push at the boundaries of those well-worn tropes, twisting their holly-jolly exterior into cerebral and occasionally macabre stories that probe at the very darkness the holiday is meant to fend off.

In the spirit of the season and all its incarnations, we’ve pulled together a list of treasured classics and eclectic oddities for audiences to watch in the lead-up to Christmas. Like with Santa’s big ’ol toy sack, there’s something here for everyone!

Christmas rom-coms? We’ve got Christmas rom-coms. Christmas-tinged superhero flicks? You bet. Christmas horror? Yeah, we’ve got some of those too. From undersung hits to all-time classics, here are the best Christmas movies to watch at home this holiday season. Our latest update added Le Pupille, The Shop Around the Corner, and Hawkeye.


A Christmas Prince

Rose McIver looks incredulous. Image: Netflix

Where to watch: Netflix

If you’re looking for 100% confectionary fluff (and aren’t pumping Hallmark’s Christmas schedule directly into your veins), give this so-much-better-than-you-think-it’ll-be Netflix Original a whirl. Amber (iZombie’s Rose McIver) is a journalist sent to the made-up land of Aldovia for the royal passing-of-the-torch to bad-boy bachelor Prince Richard (Ben Lamb). Amber winds up going undercover in the castle to get all the scoops, but... she gets in too deep! The magic of the Christmas season makes everything too romantic, and awww, you know the rest. —Matt Patches

Batman Returns

Bruce Wayne (Michael Keaton) standing in front of a silhouette of the bat signal in Batman Returns. Image: Warner Home Video

Where to watch: Max, Prime, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

Is Batman Returns a superhero movie that happens to take place around Christmas, or a gothic Christmas film that happens to have superheroes and villains in it? In any case, Tim Burton’s 1992 follow-up to his original Batman is an awesome film filled with cool visuals, exciting action sequences, attempted murder, and a nail-biting finale centered around kidnapped babies, a bat-shaped boat, and an army of rocket-strapped kamikaze penguins. It’s also a story about two strange people who find comfort in each other’s strangeness, an orphan who grows up to seek revenge against the parents and society that shunned him, and a nefarious industrialist looking to make a quick buck at any cost. Though it may test the limits of what you might consider a “Christmas movie,” Batman Returns is a fantastic seasonal watch and a fun, weird film for the whole family. —Toussaint Egan

Better Watch Out

Image: Well Go USA

Where to watch: Peacock, Shudder, AMC Plus, for free with a library card on Hoopla or Kanopy, for free with ads on Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, and Crackle

Better Watch Out feels like a reaction piece 26 years removed from the original Home Alone. The latter is a family comedy film whose premise could’ve easily been played out like a home invasion horror movie, if not for the plucky Ferris Bueller-esque charisma of Macaulay Culkin and the dopey oafishness of Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern. Better Watch Out inverts that dynamic, introducing inventive twists and turns that take the unspoken horror story at the heart of that aforementioned film and transforms it into something way darker and more disturbing. This is a not feel-good Christmas story; this is a psychological horror movie that plays with the idea of whether or not the behaviors of a kid like Kevin McCallister could be considered a sign of latent sociopathy. To say any more would risk spoiling the film, but rest assured: Better Watch Out is an engrossing holiday horror drama if you have the stomach for its occasionally gory thrills. —TE

Black Christmas

Olivia Hussey stands next to a bright red Christmas wreath in Black Christmas. Image: Shout! Factory

Where to watch: Peacock, Shudder, for free with a library card on Kanopy, for free with ads on Freevee, Pluto TV, Tubi

If you’re looking for a straightforward, tinsel-lined horror movie, you can’t do better than Bob Clark’s Canadian slasher flick. (Apologies to Jack Frost, the serial-killer snowman movie — Black Christmas is just better!) Originally released in the U.S. as Silent Night, Evil Night, the low-budget horror movie crackles like a warm fire blown by a chilly gust of wind. Clark uses shadows and lurking horrors to turn a sorority house into a something ripped from a Shirley Jackson paperback cover, and while the transgressions within don’t find too much inspiration in Christmas iconography, there is a “wrapping job” that will leave you gasping. —MP

Christmas in Connecticut

Barabara Stanwyck sits on a couch in Christmas in Connecticut. She wears a long sleeve top with a large bow tie and looks in confusion at a man standing above her. Image: Warner Bros.

Where to watch: Max, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

Few movie stars have ever had the impact on the industry as Barbara Stanwyck, and Christmas in Connecticut is a delightful Christmas rom-com showcasing her charm and movie star charisma.

Stanwyck plays Elizabeth Lane, a food writer who purports to write about her life as a Connecticut housewife living on a farm with her husband and baby. There’s just one problem: She’s made the whole thing up. Her publisher — completely unaware that Lane is actually single, lives in New York, and can’t cook — decides Lane should host a lavish Christmas dinner for a soldier returning from war (Dennis Morgan), who is also a big fan. What follows is a delightful screwball comedy that was a smash hit at the time, and continues to thrill decades later.

If you’re looking for more Stanwyck excellence, you can’t go wrong with the all-time classic Double Indemnity, but I also love her pre-code crime drama Night Nurse, co-starring an evil Clark Gable. Both are available for rental or purchase on Amazon, Apple, and Google Play. —Pete Volk

Hawkeye

Kate Bishop and Clint from Avengers in Marvel’s Hawkeye standing back to back with bows and arrows in 30 Rock Plaza Photo: Chuck Zlotnick/Marvel Studios

Where to watch: Disney Plus

I’m cheating a bit here, since this is a show and not a movie, but what is a six-episode miniseries if not a very long movie? Hawkeye is one of the better MCU TV efforts, leaning on the movie star charisma of Hailee Steinfeld as aspiring super-archer Kate Bishop as she teams up with her idol, Clint Barton.

Adapted from the very fun comic run by Matt Fraction and David Aja, Hawkeye is great Christmas fare, too. The show is set during holiday times, and much of the show’s conflict is set around getting Barton’s family back in time for Christmas. It’s the kind of TV Marvel should feel like it can make more of — fewer massive universe stakes, more fun times hanging out with super pals. —PV

Home Alone

Macaulay Culkin holds open a magazine advertising a delicious Christmas dinner in Home Alone. Image: 20th Century Fox

Where to watch: Disney Plus, Starz, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

Hopefully, I don’t have to tell you that Home Alone is a very good movie. I don’t have to talk about how well it captures a child’s-eye view of suburban life (being terrified of your house’s boiler for no reason), the number of immortal one-liners in it (“Keep the change, ya filthy animal”), the music (John Williams!), or the character acting (Joe Pesci! Catherine O’Hara! JOHN CANDY).

Somewhere inside this fusion of the writing talents of John Hughes and the directing prowess of Chris Columbus is a message about how sometimes parents act in boneheaded ways toward their children, but the best of them can find a way to reconnect and apologize — inside a beautiful box wrapped in crisp writing, comedic timing, and a reverse-heist plot line. —Susana Polo

It’s a Wonderful Life

it’s a wonderful life Image: Universal Pictures

Where to watch: Prime Video, for free with ads on Plex and the Roku Channel

If you haven’t seen It’s a Wonderful Life or if it’s just been a while, then you might not know how the film, from intro to credits, is unapologetically weird and transgressive. All that Christmas Carol-esque stuff in which an “angel” shows George Bailey (James Stewart) what his town would have looked like had he never existed is just a fraction of the film. It’s preceded by 30 years of Bailey’s life, punctuated by the Great Depression and World War II. And that helpful angel? He and his “boss” are introduced as sentient cosmic dust. The film is a holiday cobbler stuffed with bits of Charles Dickens, Rod Serling, and Billy Wilder. Don’t let its reputation as sappy holiday detritus get in the way you enjoying of an exceptional film — Christmas or otherwise. —Chris Plante

Jingle All the Way

Sinbad and Arnold Schwarzenegger in Jingle All The Way. Image: 20th Century Fox

Where to watch: Disney Plus, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

What’s more Christmas-y than a story of a loving parent going to whatever lengths necessary to preserve their child’s happiness? ’80s action icon Arnold Schwarzenegger, in a patently bizarre turn of reverse typecasting, stars in Jingle All the Way as Howard Langston, a mattress salesman whose workaholic attitude comes at the cost of his duties as a family man and father. Desperate to fulfill his son’s Christmas wish, Howard embarks on a search for a Turbo-Man action figure. Problem is: It’s Christmas Eve and they’re all but entirely sold out. Complicating his mission is Myron (Sinbad), a postal worker and fellow negligent father who shares the same goal. Jingle All the Way is a Christmas comedy that focuses on the exasperation and escalating stakes between Howard and Myron amid a gauntlet of ruthless holiday shoppers and a jetpack-enabled finale. If that doesn’t scream “Christmas” to you, I don’t know what does. —TE

Le Pupille

The children in Le Pupille gaze out a window Image: Disney

Where to watch: Disney Plus

Italian director Alice Rohrwacher won Best Screenplay at Cannes with Happy as Lazzaro, and her new movie, La Chimera, has received rave reviews on the festival circuit. But around Christmas time, her delightful short Le Pupille is a must-watch.

37 minutes of pure charm and joy, Le Pupille is set during World War II and follows a group of girls at a Catholic boarding school. One of the girls, Serafina, is an outcast who inadvertently draws the nuns’ attention through an act of unintended mischief. This incident snowballs into an avalanche of rebellious behavior, culminating in an uproarious and hilarious crescendo.

Beautifully shot on film, Rohrwacher’s short is both a funny, charming Christmas watch and a gorgeous, deeply felt movie about childhood. Add it to your holiday rotation — you won’t regret it. —PV

Mickey’s Christmas Carol

Scrooge McDuck dressed as Ebenezer Scrooge peers through a frosty window with Jiminy Cricket in Mickey’s Christmas Carol. Image: Disney

Where to watch: Disney Plus, or rent on Amazon and Apple TV

If you watch one adaptation of A Christmas Carol this season, watch The Muppet Christmas Carol (more on that in a second). If you watch two adaptations of A Christmas Carol… you should probably watch the Patrick Stewart one, actually.

But if you watch THREE CHRISTMAS CAROLS THIS SEASON, take some time to consider Mickey’s Christmas Carol, directed by longtime Disney animator/writer Burny Mattinson. The tight 26-minute special gets a jump start by mining Disney’s history of anthropomorphic animal animation for character designs, making it a Kingdom Hearts-worthy mashup of works as disparate as Robin Hood, The Wind in the Willows, Pinocchio, and The Aristocats. And though it may answer an obvious question — “What if Scrooge McDuck was literally his namesake?” — in an obvious way, the whole thing is surprisingly well done, thanks to rousing vocal performances, the vivacity of hand-drawn animation, and a willingness to actually get really scary in a way that the modern House of Mouse tends to eschew. —SP

The Muppet Christmas Carol

The Muppet Christmas Carol, with Michael Caine at the big Christmas dinner, surrounded by Muppets Image: Walt Disney Home Entertainment

Where to watch: Disney Plus, or rent on Amazon and Apple TV

I didn’t grow up with Christmas movies, but my partner did. Every Christmas Eve, their family watches The Muppet Christmas Carol, and it’s a delightful tradition that I feel blessed to be a part of now.

You know the deal — it’s a classic story, but with Muppets. This time, it’s Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, with generational talents Michael Caine as Ebenezer Scrooge and Kermit the Frog as Bob Cratchit.

It’s a delightful time filled with memorable songs, one-liner jokes, and the usual Muppet nonsense. But what really pulls the whole thing together is Caine’s moving performance as Scrooge. He treats this Muppet project like he’s performing Shakespeare at The Globe, and it brings an emotional center to what would otherwise be a very enjoyable Muppet romp. —PV

National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation

Chevy Chase in National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation. Image: Warner Home Video

Where to watch: Max, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

I had never seen National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation until a few years ago when a friend of mine, aghast in utter disbelief at this fact, finally forced me to sit down and watch it with them. I understand now why my friend was so shocked: It’s a hilarious comedy, so hilarious in fact that I’m surprised I hadn’t seen it sooner. Chevy Chase is pitch-perfect in the role of Clark Griswold, a salaryman and put-upon father at his wit’s end trying to pull off the perfect family Christmas celebration. As each of his carefully laid plans either hits a snag or utterly falls apart, so too does Clark’s disposition, transforming from a mild-mannered family man into a living powder keg of seething rage barely holding it together under a facade of holiday cheer. At least he’s got a Christmas bonus coming up, right? —TE

The Nightmare Before Christmas

The tall skeleton-like figure of Jack in a Santa Claus outfit kneels before a young boy in a living room with a Christmas tree in the background in The Nightmare Before Christmas. Image: Walt Disney Pictures

Where to watch: Disney Plus, or rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

Christmas movie? Halloween movie? Split the difference: Tim Burton and stop-motion animator Henry Selick’s macabre holiday musical is the perfect Thanksgiving movie. The story of Jack Skellington figuring out how to stay in his holiday lane is still a quirky sight to see, with lots of strange details packed into the every frame. If you’ve seen this one too many times, fall down the YouTube rabbit hole of Danny Elfman performing the soundtrack live. —MP

The Santa Clause

Charlie Calvin (Eric Lloyd) and Scott Calvin (Tim Allen) in The Santa Clause. Image: Walt Disney Pictures

Where to watch: Disney Plus, or for rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

The Santa Clause is a classic Christmas comedy, one that offers a whimsical (albeit slightly macabre) answer for how ’ol Kris Kringle is such a perennial symbol of the holiday despite ostensibly being a bajillion years old. Tim Allen stars as Scott Calvin, a divorced father and toy salesman who, in a Highlander-esque twist of fate, accidentally kills Santa Claus and subsequently becomes the next man in line to hold his title and responsibilities. Through the struggle of coming to grips with his new identity while trying to convince others of his new role, Scott grows as both a person and as a father, learning the true meaning of Christmas through the firsthand embodiment of one of its most central figures. It’s heartwarming and hilarious in a way that’s stood the test of time and a feel-good Christmas movie for the whole family. And there’s a new show out, which we are dutifully watching to track the appearances of Bernard the Hot Elf. —MP

The Shop Around the Corner

(L-R) Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart in The Shop Around The Corner. Image: Warner Home Video

Where to watch: Max, or for rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

One of the all-time great directors and one of the all-time great movie stars team up for one of the all-time great Christmas movies. If you’re a fan of You’ve Got Mail, you owe it to yourself to watch the fantastic original.

From the masterful Ernst Lubitsch, this romantic comedy follows a salesman (James Stewart) and a new employee at his shop (Margaret Sullavan), who can’t stand each other. They get in frequent arguments at work, and the only thing that keeps them going through their misery is a secret love they anonymously write to — each other.

The Shop Around the Corner is endearingly sweet, uproariously funny, and a Christmas classic for good reason. —PV

White Christmas

Vera-Ellen as Judy and Danny Kaye as Phil in White Christmas, dressed in festive red outfits adorned with sparkly red snowflakes and white fur, standing in front of a Christmas tree decorate d with tinsel. Image: Paramount Pictures

Where to watch: Netflix, or for rent on Amazon, Apple TV, and Google Play

White Christmas deserves the biggest and best screen in your home. Director Michael Curtiz shot the 1954 musical in VistaVision, the high-resolution format of its era, and the impact of the decision shows in the modern restoration, a presentation as rich with color and detail as any modern action flick. A huge TV flatters the classic sets and elaborate dance numbers and even though the audio is mono, a nice set of headphones or speakers elevates its classic songs, belted by Christmas music legends Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney. One humongous asterisk: The film does away with the explicitly racist blackface number of its predecessor, Holiday Inn, but it still includes an entire routine dedicated to the joys of a minstrel show. Be prepared to explain the horrific context to younger family members and fend off complaints of sensitivity from any ghoulish relatives. —CP

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