A lot has changed in the past few years when it comes to holiday traditions. Yet one thing hasnât: gathering around the TV to watch new and classic movies with family and friends. The problem, if it can be called a problem, is that with each new streaming service comes a shift in which streamers offer what films. Weâre here to helpâand give you a quick and handy guide to a few holiday gems you may never have seen before. Below are 15 titles sure to get even the grinchiest of revelers into the holiday spirit.
Hot Frosty
Yes, Hallmark Channel is the premiere destination for holiday rom-coms about people who in quaint towns who find love and drink from giant mugs at the holidays. Still, one should never discount Netflix's ability to eke out a new niche in a market already saturated with cozy movies starring Lacey Chabert. That niche? A little something we like to call Too Horny for Hallmark. In Hot Frosty, Chabert plays a widow and diner owner who throws her scarf around a, uh, very well-sculpted snowman (Dustin Milligan), bringing him to life. Naturally, he falls in love with her and the film becomes a race to see whether she can return his affections before he melts (?) or gets apprehended by the local sheriff (Craig Robinson), who believes he's responsible for some very small crimes around town. Think of it as a new way to Netflix and chill.
Carol
It's hard to argue Todd Haynes' heartbreaking 2015 film is strictly a Christmas movieâit's about a young woman named Therese (Rooney Mara) who begins an intense relationship with Carol (Cate Blanchett), an elegant woman who shops at the store where she worksâbut it is set during one Christmas in the 1950s, and that's good enough. Based on Patricia Highsmith's novel The Price of Salt, the film lays out what happens to Therese and Carol when they embark on a road trip and draw suspicion from the man Carol is attempting to divorce. Both lush and subdued, it's wrenching right up to its gut-punch finale.
Home for the Holidays
If youâre feeling guilty that you wonât make it to your parentsâ for Thanksgiving this year, this ode to dysfunctional family gatheringsâdirected by Jodie Fosterâmight serve as an all-too-realistic reminder of what itâs really like when your relatives reassemble under one roof. Holly Hunter plays a recently unemployed single mom who heads from Chicago to Baltimore to spend Thanksgiving with her familyâonly to immediately regret the decision. (Yes, weâve all been there.) Hunterâs character might summarize the feeling best when she asks, âWhen you go home, do you look around and wonder: Who are these people? Where did I even come from?â A very preâIron Man Robert Downey Jr. costars.
Happiest Season
Given the increased output of original products that the major streaming networks like Netflix and Amazon Prime are releasing, it was only a matter of time before they all caught the Christmas bug. Last year, that honor went to Hulu, which assembled an impressive cast of actors you wouldnât necessarily expect to see in a holiday rom-com (see: Kristen Stewart) for Happiest Season. When Harper (Halt and Catch Fireâs Mackenzie Davis) invites her girlfriend Abby (Stewart) home for Christmas, she neglects to tell her one thing: Harper has never told her ultra-conservative family that sheâs gay. Though itâs a setup that sounds like it could easily reach Threeâs Company levels of slapstick and double entendres, the earnestness with which itâs played by its stellar castâwhich includes Dan Levy, Alison Brie, Aubrey Plaza, and Mary Steenburgenâpushes it neatly into that enjoyable space between farce and family drama.
The Best Man Holiday
Broadly speaking, the holidays are just the backdrop for Best Man Holiday, but when a movie features Taye Diggs, Terrence Howard, Harold Perrineau, and Morris Chestnut doing a New Edition dance and lip-sync number, does it matter? Nearly 15 years after they all gathered for Lanceâs (Chestnut) wedding (and nearly 15 years after the release of The Best Man), a group of old friends gathers in New York to celebrate Christmas together. As with all friend reunions, everyone simultaneously remembers their closeness and long-simmering issues. No need to spoil it here, but suffice it to say the laughs are heartfelt and the dramaâcancer diagnoses, pregnancies, marriagesâis high. The perfect film for your Friendsgiving.
Miracle on 34th Street
Natalie Wood is the epitome of precocious as Susan Walker, the wise-beyond-her-years daughter of Doris Walker (Maureen O'Hara), a straight-shooting single mom executive at Macyâs who has always discouraged her daughter from buying into make-believe. But when a Santa Claus look-alike (legally) named Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn) comes into their lives, he challenges their shared distaste for fairy talesâfor the better.
The Preacherâs Wife
This remake of the 1947 film The Bishopâs Wife, directed by Penny Marshall, stars Denzel Washington as an angel named Dudley sent to help a pastor (Courtney B. Vance) who is struggling to keep his New York City church afloat. What happens, though, is that he ends up crushing on, yes, the preacherâs wife, a one-time nightclub singer turned choir star, played by Whitney Houston. Comedy and heartbreak and, ultimately, redemption ensue. If all that heartwarming content isnât enough, it also features a fair bit of Houstonâs forever impeccable voice.
The Nightmare Before Christmas
No, Tim Burton didnât direct The Nightmare Before Christmas (Henry Selick did). But he did come up with the stories and characters and produced it, and his stop-motion-animation-loving fingerprints are all over this masterpiece, which works just as well as a Halloween movie as it does a Christmas film. When Jack Skellington, the Pumpkin King of Halloweentown, accidentally discovers Christmastownâa place thatâs less about scaring people and more about comfort and joyâhe concocts a plan to kidnap Santa Claus and bring him back to Halloweentown so that his fellow townspeople can experience yuletide joy. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the caper doesnât pan out as Jack had hoped. Even today, nearly 30 years after its original release, The Nightmare Before Christmas remains a masterful work that shows the true magic of stop-motion animation.
Home Alone
By now, there are few people who donât know the Home Alone story, but weâll give you the rundown anyway: The night before the McCallister family is headed to France to spend the holidays in Paris, Kevinâannoyed that he has to share a room with his bed-wetting cousin, not to mention that someone ate his pizzaâwishes his family would just disappear. While thatâs not exactly what happens (they just sort of forget heâs sleeping up in the attic when they wake up late for their flight), it does mean that an 8-year-old is left to his own devices at Christmastime. Among the issues heâs forced to confront? A neighbor he believes might be a serial killer and two bumbling burglars who are set on ransacking his familyâs home. Lucky for Kevin, heâs got a seriously sadistic side that allows him to come up with all sorts of inventive ways to nearly murder these intruders as he learns to appreciate his family a little bit more. (Same goes for them.)
If you want to see what happens when a family leaves their young son alone a second time, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York is also streaming on Disney+.
White Christmas
If contemporary stresses have you wishing for a kinder, gentler time, few movies (holiday-themed or otherwise) are as saccharine as White Christmas. Thatâs not a slight, just a very upfront warning that if youâre looking for even a drop of cynicism, youâd better look elsewhere. This holiday rompâwhich features Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera-Ellen, and some of the fakest snow ever seen on cameraâis shamelessly sentimental, which is part of its charm. What is it about? Two WWII buddies turned big-time showmen putting on a Christmas spectacular to help their former commanding officer, whose Vermont snow lodge is about to go under.
The Man Who Invented Christmas
In 2012, Dan Stevens ruined Christmas for millions of Downton Abbey fans when his beloved character, Matthew Crawley, met an untimelyâand rather bloodyâending. Five years later, in what might have been an attempt to make up for that heartbreak, he became The Man Who Invented Christmas. In this meta-ish take on A Christmas Carol, Stevens plays Charles Dickens, who hasnât had a hit book since Oliver Twist. With the Christmas season playing out all around him, inspiration strikes in the form of what will become A Christmas Carol, as the characters reveal themselves to Dickens, and real life and the fictional world merge into one.
The Muppet Christmas Carol
Speaking of A Christmas Carol: There have been dozens of adaptations of Dickensâ book over the years in virtually every medium. Among the best takes are the 1951 version starring Alastair Sim (which you can rent from Amazon Prime), Richard Donnerâs Scrooged with Bill Murray (which you can also rent on Prime), and The Muppet Christmas Carol, directed by Jim Hensonâs son Brian (in his directorial debut). While itâs as Muppet-y as you can imagine, with Gonzo taking on the role of Charles Dickens and Kermit as Bob Cratchit, the film also stars Michael Caine as Ebenezer Scrooge and features some pretty complicated puppetry.
Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas
If you grew up with HBO in the â80s, you no doubt have long considered Emmet Otterâs Jug-Band Christmas one of Jim Hensonâs best movies. For anyone else, itâs only in recent years that the film has made its way back to the masses with sold-out theatrical screenings nationwide and a new Blu-ray edition in 2018. If you still havenât seen it, or have never even heard of it, itâs time to rectify that horrible wrong. A Muppet-fied take on The Gift of the Magi, the story is about the widowed Ma Otter and her son Emmet, who are struggling to pay their bills but do what they can by picking up odd jobs. When they hear about a talent competition happening in a nearby town with a grand prize of $50, they eachâunbeknownst to each otherâmake a major sacrifice in the hopes of being able to win and give each other a much-wanted gift for Christmas. Then the Riverbottom Nightmare Band shows up. Emmet Otter may be more than 40 years old, and sure, you can see the puppetsâ strings, but thatâs just part of its charm. And the soundtrack still slaps.
It's a Wonderful Life
Frank Capra was a filmmaker who loved a Hollywood endingâand he delivered a big one in Itâs a Wonderful Life. While the filmâs final moments may be kind of sappy (even if they do make you tear up), the bulk of the movieâs running time is actually pretty dark. George Bailey (James Stewart) is a beloved member of the Bedford Falls community with a lovely home, an adoring wife (Donna Reed), and four beautiful children. But George is sick and tired of being âthe dependable oneâ in his family. For years his own dream has been to see the world beyond his hometown, but each time he tries, a new tragedy seems to strike that keeps him there. But Christmas Eve proves to be the breaking point, and George, drunk and suicidal, wishes he had never been born. Sort of like A Christmas Carol, an angel named Clarence (Henry Travers) shows George what his lifeâand the lives of those he lovesâwould be like had he never existed. Cue the waterworks.
Elf
While a fresh crop of holiday movies seems to pop up every year, it takes a special kind of movie to become a true Christmas classic. Elf began spreading its Christmas cheer almost immediately after arriving in theaters, and it has only grown more popular in the nearly two decades since. Jon Favreauâs direction and David Berenbaumâs script deserve much of the credit. But itâs Will Ferrell who steals the show with his endearing performance as Buddy the Elfâa syrup-loving human who, after being raised in the North Pole among Santa and his elves, travels to New York to find his biological father (James Caan). Though Buddy and the Big Apple donât get off on the right foot, his childlike charm eventually gets the best of those around. Well, most of them. Though audiences have been clamoring for a sequel, Ferrell has said no way.
Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale
Not everyone wants their holiday fare sugar-coated and sweet. For those people, thereâs Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale. Something strange is happening in the mountains of northern Finland, where kids are disappearing and reindeer are being murdered. Two young boysâPietari (Onni Tommila) and Juuso (Ilmari Järvenpää)âthink they know whatâs going on: A group of local drillers has uncovered the tomb of Santa Claus. But the man they eventually capture hasnât got a jolly bone in his body.
If you want more holiday horror, be sure to check out Bob Clarkâs Black Christmasâthe original, 1974 version only. Though itâs less well known than John Carpenterâs Halloween, itâs the movie that inspired itâand pretty much all slasher movies that followed. It also doesnât hold back on its scares or gore, so it's best for an adults-only evening. Fun fact: Nine years after Black Christmas, director Bob Clark made yet another holiday classic with 1983âs A Christmas Story. Talk about range!