Skip to main content

If you have to watch one Netflix movie in November, stream this one

A girl leans out of a car window in Woman of the Hour.
Netflix

Few things are more relatable than opening Netflix knowing full well that you have time to watch a movie, and realizing with a pang of panic that you don’t actually know what you want to watch. If you’ve ever found yourself scrolling through Netflix for what feels like hours without a clear sense of purpose, know that you aren’t alone.

Recommended Videos

We’ve tried to take some of the hard work on and save you from that endless scroll by picking out one movie that’s worth making time for this November. Woman of the Hour tells the true story of a woman who went on a dating game show in the 1970s, and almost found herself victimized by serial killer Rodney Alcala, who she chose to be her date. Here are three reasons the movie is worth checking out.

We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Maxand the best movies on Disney+.

It knows where to place the emphasis

Woman of the Hour | Official Teaser | Netflix

Plenty of movies about serial killers wind up spending most of their running time devoted to the killer themselves and their psychology. Woman of the Hour takes the opposite approach, focusing instead on this killer’s various victims, which were all women.

It splits its time between its central character, a struggling actress who goes on a dating game show to raise her profile and decides to ask her own questions instead of the ones she’s been provided, and a series of vignettes in which we follow the killer’s other victims as they are drawn into his web and eventually killed.

A man holds a camera in Woman of the Hour.
Netflix

In telling the story this way, the film’s primary focus turns toward the women who are victimized and then not believed by the men around them who claim they want to help.

It’s tense from moment one

A man holds a mic up to interview a woman.
Leah Gallo / Netflix

Woman of the Hour stars Anna Kendrick, and it’s also the actress’s directorial debut. As it turns out, Kendrick knows what she’s doing. Woman of the Hour is rife with tension, even though most of its most explicit violence happens off screen.

Because we know exactly who the killer is by the time he’s introduced, the entire game show plot is rife with an understanding that, while the show’s other contestants might be a little misogynistic, they pale in comparison to the killer, who knows how to hide his various sinister proclivities.

It’s a genuinely crazy true story

Anna Kendrick in Woman of the Hour.
Netflix

Woman of the Hour is tense and riveting, and it has something clear to say about the way women are oppressed not just by killers but by all the men who don’t lift a finger to help them. The wildest thing about it, though, is that this actually happened.

A serial killer went on a game show in the middle of a killing spree that included at least five confirmed murders, and possibly dozens of others. Thankfully, the real-life contestant did not go on the date she promised to Alcala, recognizing that his vibes were less than ideal.

Woman of the Hour is streaming on Netflix.

Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer at Digital Trends, where he covers Movies and TV. He frequently writes streaming…
3 underrated shows on Netflix you need to watch in March 2025
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in a blue suit wearing sunglasses with two men on either side in a scene from Ballers.

Netflix has some potential hits on tap this month. The streamer is letting John Mulaney host a late-night show, Everybody’s Live with John Mulaney. The comedian had a successful tryout last year with John Mulaney Presents: Everybody's in LA. Super producer Shonda Rhimes is back with her latest show, The Residence, a whodunit set in the White House. When Rhimes puts a show on Netflix, it becomes a hit, i.e., Bridgerton.
March's new shows will be all over the most popular list. Below are three underrated shows to stream in March. Our picks include a prison thriller, a teen sitcom, and a sports drama.
We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Prison Break (2005-2017)
Prison Break - Season 1 Trailer
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to guess the plot of a show named Prison Break. There's an escape attempt from jail, but the details before and after the break make this crime drama extremely entertaining. After being wrongfully accused of murder, Lincoln Burrows (Dominic Purcell) is sent to Death Row. Lincoln's brother, Michael Scofield (Wentworth Miller), devises a plan to save his brother.
Michael's plan does not involve the legal system. Michael commits a crime and gets incarcerated at the same prison as Lincoln. With the two brothers under the same roof, they plan their escape. The more the brothers explore the case, the more they learn about the conspiracy to frame Lincoln. With a Prison Break reboot set in the same universe in development, there's no better time to start a rewatch than now.
Watch Prison Break on Netflix.
Ballers (2015-2019)
Ballers: Season 1 | Mid-Season Official Extended Trailer | HBO

Once "Kane is in the building" from Lil Wayne's Right Above It hit your ears, it was time for Ballers, a sports drama that ran for five seasons on HBO. Dwayne Johnson stars as Spencer Strasmore, a former NFL player forced into an early retirement due to an injury. Needing a second act, Spencer begins working as a financial manager for current NFL players.

Read more
The best new shows to stream on Netflix, Hulu, Max (HBO), and more
Christopher Meloni in Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5.

The early weeks of April were dominated by genre shows including Black Mirror, The Bondsman, and Devil May Cry. This week, reality strikes back on the best new shows to stream, starting with Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5. Peacock saved this spinoff from getting the ax from NBC, but it hasn't gone full TV-MA yet. It's still basically the same series it was on network television.
Meanwhile, Apple TV+ has a pair of offbeat original series this month: Your Friends & Neighbors and Government Cheese. The former is a light-hearted crime series, while the latter is a little bizarre and goes to some strange places. But they're both very entertaining and worthy of your time.
You can find these series and the rest of the best new shows to stream below. We update this list every Friday to keep you up to date on the most binge-worthy new additions.
When you're done here, check out the best new movies to stream this week, as well as the best shows on Netflix, the best shows on Hulu, the best new shows on Max, the best shows on Amazon Prime Video, and the best shows on Disney+.

Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Max, Disney+, Paramount+, Peacock, and Apple TV+ all have one thing in common: They're more expensive than they used to be. We can live with higher rates as long as new shows keep coming, but it's always a good idea to consider signing up for the ad-supported tiers, which are worth it if you can sit through a few commercials. 

Read more
5 underrated movies on Netflix you need to watch in March 2025
Russell Crowe in Unhinged.

The Russo Brothers are back on Netflix with their new film, The Electric State. The sci-fi adventure has Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt teaming up to travel cross-country in a robot-heavy world. Other movies making noise on Netflix include Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Power Rangers, Sicario, and Counterattack.
Many of those movies will crack Netflix's top 10 most popular movies list. Outside of the top 10, we made a list of five underrated movies to watch this month. Our picks include a road-rage thriller, a music documentary, and an icy action adventure.
We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (2022)

How many actors would be willing to play fictionalized versions of themselves? Less than 10? Maybe? No A-listers are taking that risk. Thankfully, Nicolas Cage is a true showman and game for anything. In Tom Gormican's The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent, Cage plays "Nick Cage," a struggling actor whose life continues to fall apart as he exits the spotlight.
After failing to secure a role, Nick accepts an offer of $1 million to meet Javi Gutiérrez (Pedro Pascal), a billionaire celebrating his birthday in Majorca. While in Spain, the CIA recruits Nick to investigate Javi and see if he's involved with the kidnapping of a politician's daughter. It's Nicolas Cage playing fictionalized Nicolas Cage who decides to be a hero for the CIA – need I say more?
Stream The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent on Netflix.
The Ice Road (2021)

Read more