
Halloween Movies on Hulu, Disney+ and Netflix: What to Stream Now
Itâs Halloween, and you know what that means: Itâs time for some scary movies. Unfortunately, you went all-in on streaming and tossed out your physical media, so youâre stuck with whatever the major streamers felt like offering this year. The pickings may look slim, but donât worry. We scoured Netflix, Hulu and Disney+ to find the best Halloween options for audiences of all kinds. Kids, teens, horror fans, superhero fans, classic movie lovers and more!
Halloween Movies Streaming on Netflix
Lizzy Caplan in âCobwebâ (Lionsgate)
âCobwebâ (2023)
If youâve never heard of âCobweb,â just blame the nuclear bomb. And Mattel. Samuel Bodinâs creepy Halloween treat had the terrible luck to open on Barbenheimer weekend, so it wasnât just pummeled by Christopher Nolanâs âOppenheimerâ and Greta Gerwigâs âBarbie,â its existence was darn near erased. Thatâs a shame, because this freaky tale deserves to be a seasonal cult classic. Antony Starr (âThe Boysâ) and Lizzy Caplain (âFatal Attractionâ) play overprotective parents who refuse to let their son go out trick or treating, but thereâs a sinister voice inside his bedroom wall telling him mom and dad are not what they seem. Eerily atmospheric and genuinely surprising.
Joseph Winter in âDeadstreamâ (Shudder)
âDeadstreamâ (2022)
Fans of horror comedies rejoice, because hereâs a great one youâve probably donât know about. Vanessa and Joseph Winter co-wrote, co-directed and co-starred in âDeadstream,â a found footage frightfest about a disgraced YouTuber trying to get his audience back by spending one night in a haunted house. Itâs a real haunted house, of course, so before long heâs besieged by gross ghosts, obsessive fans and his overwhelming guilt over what got him canceled in the first place. Itâs not as cartoonishly extreme as the âEvil Deadâ movies, but itâs a spiritual cousin to that franchise, and should appeal to fans of boo scares and gross-out giggles.
Frank Langella and Kate Nelligan in âDraculaâ (Universal Pictures)
âDraculaâ (1979)
By this point everyone knows Netflix hates older movies, and has little (if anything) to offer film fans from the first 100 years of the art formâs history. But the streamer usually has a few token offerings, and John Badhamâs underrated, ethereal and supernaturally sexy rendition of Bram Stokerâs âDraculaâ is an unusually good acquisition. Frank Langella stars as the title monster, a leering, undead lothario who seduces young women and sucks their blood and must be stopped. Badham assembled one hell of a cast for this production, pitting Dracula against screen legends like Sir Laurence Olivier and âHalloweenâ star Donald Pleasance. Classy, sexy, scary stuff.
Julie Bowen and Adam Sandler in âHubie Halloweenâ (Netflix)
âHubie Halloweenâ (2020)
Adam Sandler has a lot of fans, and film critics typically arenât among them, but his overlooked Netflix original âHubie Halloweenâ is one of his better comedies, late-era or otherwise. Sandler stars as the title character, a well-intentioned dork who spends every Halloween trying making sure everyone stays safe, only to be mocked by his entire community for being a nice guy. When Hubieâs biggest bullies start disappearing, Hubie is accused of murder, and he suspects his next door neighbor, played by Steve Buscemi, might be a werewolf. A great ensemble cast, a costume department that went overboard on everyoneâs amazing Halloween get-ups, and a great big heart make âHubie Halloweenâ a worthy addition to anyoneâs seasonal movie marathon.
Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key in âWendell & Wildâ (Netflix)
âWendell & Wildâ (2022)
âThe Nightmare Before Christmasâ director Henry Selick teamed up with Oscar-winner Jordan Peele for this bizarre and morbid stop-motion kids movie, starring Lyric Ross (âIronheartâ) as Kat, an orphaned outsider who makes a deal with two devils, voiced by Peele and Keegan-Michael Key, to resurrect her parents. They betray her, raise other dead people using magic hair cream â look, just go with it, okay? â and itâs up to Kat to embrace her destiny as a Hell Maiden and save the town. The story is convoluted but just drink in the awesome, ominous vibes, and that beautiful animation, and the incredible jukebox soundtrack from legendary Afro-punk bands like TV on the Radio, Living Colour and Fishbone.
Halloween Movies Streaming on Hulu
Ingrid Torelli, David Dastmalchian and Laura Gordon in âLate Night With the Devilâ (Credit: IFC Films)
âLate Night with the Devilâ (2023)
Celebrated character actor David Dastmalchian takes center stage in âLate Night with the Devil,â playing a 1970s talk show host who books a demonically-possessed young girl as a special guest on Halloween night. Itâs a deal with the devil in more ways than one, and the episode eventually gets away from him. Colin and Cameron Cairnesâ feature plays like a lost episode of television, and it owes a lot to Lesley Manningâs even-scarier 1992 tv special âGhostwatch,â but Dastmalchian carries the film like a champ, and it gets pretty darned freaky by the end. If, on the other hand, youâre boycotting any filmmakers who use A.I., then you should know the Cairnes employed the ecologically-dangerous and unethical technology to create some interstitial title cards (which any decent artist could have made for them).
The Wooden Man in âOddityâ (CREDIT: IFC Films)
âOddityâ (2024)
One of the most terrifying films of 2024 â and also, sadly, one of the most overlooked â was Damian McCarthyâs odd cinematic nightmare, âOddity.â Carolyn Bracken stars as a woman who is murdered under mysterious circumstances. She also plays the victimâs twin sister, a blind spirit medium who shows up at her newly-widowered brother-in-lawâs house one night with a life-sized, freaky golem that she plunks down in his kitchen. âOddityâ unfolds in shocking ways, and McCarthy builds tension like nobodyâs business, building to supernatural surprises you never saw coming.
Kaitlyn Dever in âNo One Will Save Youâ (Hulu)
âNo One Will Save Youâ (2023)
Writer/director Brian Duffield took a big swing with âNo One Will Save You.â The film stars Kaitlyn Dever (âBooksmartâ) as a young woman ostracized by her small town, so she canât call for help when aliens arrive in the middle of the night and try to abduct her. âNo One Will Save Youâ has almost no dialogue, and it doesnât need any: Duffieldâs images are nightmarish, his pacing is relentless, and Dever knows how to captivate the screen when nobody else is around. At least, nobody human. Ingeniously conceived, excellently executed, and you probably wonât see that ending coming.
Elijah Wood, Melanie Lynskey and Collin Dean in âOver the Garden Wallâ (Cartoon Network)
âOver the Garden Wallâ (2014)
Weâre fudging the definition of âHalloween moviesâ a little bit, because although you can watch âOver the Garden Wallâ as an episodic, nearly two-hour feature, it originally aired on TV as a mini-series. But itâs one of the best darned TV mini-series of the 21st century. Elijah Wood and Collin Dean play brothers who get lost in the woods and canât find their way home, encountering bizarre creatures â like a town full of disturbing Jack OâLantern people â and eerie mysteries along the way. âOver the Garden Wallâ is often hilarious, and always beautifully animated, but it builds in power as the story progresses, reaching a climax thatâs as emotional as it gets.
Tim Curry in âThe Rocky Horror Picture Showâ (20th Century Fox)
âThe Rocky Horror Picture Showâ (1975)
It wouldnât be Halloween if nobody did The Time Warp, but instead of forcing all your party guests to do it, let the original cast of âThe Rocky Horror Picture Showâ take the lead. Susan Sarandon and Barry Bostwick star as hapless conservative dweebs whose car breaks down, forcing them to take shelter in the castle of Dr. Frank N. Furter, a sexually ambiguous and super-horny mad scientist whose latest creation is a silent sexual dynamo. If you can see âRocky Horrorâ in a theater with an energetic audience, that would beâs ideal, but its reputation as a âbadâ movie that got saved by the midnight circuit is exaggerated. On its own itâs still a fascinatingly subversive and funny horror comedy with one classic song after another.
Halloween Movies on Disney+
âThe Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toadâ (Disney)
âThe Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toadâ (1949)
In the late 1940s, Disney pulled back on feature-length animated movies and focused, instead, on anthology films with multiple animated installments. Most of these, like âMake Mine Musicâ and âFun and Fancy Free,â are relatively obscure today, but âThe Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toadâ is still a beloved classic. Partly because the âMr. Toadâ sequence, based on Kenneth Grahameâs âThe Wind in the Willows,â was the basis for the classic theme park attraction âMr. Toadâs Wild Ride,â but mostly because Disneyâs take on Washington Irvingâs âThe Legend of Sleepy Hollowâ is a Halloween perennial. Gorgeously animated and engagingly narrated by crooner Bing Crosby, itâs still the gold standard for Headless Horseman movies (although Tim Burtonâs âSleepy Hollowâ comes close).
âHocus Pocusâ (Credit: Walt Disney Studios)
âHocus Pocusâ (1993)
Itâs always in poor taste to argue that the Salem Witch Trials, a horrific historical event in which 19 people were executed for witchcraft (and more died from torture and mistreatment in jail), were justified. But of course, thatâs what every movie that claims there were real, evil witches in Salem is indirectly â or worse, directly â suggesting. If you can set that aside, âHocus Pocusâ is a pretty fun film. Bette Midler, Kathy Najimy and Sarah Jessica Parker play witches who are resurrected in the present day, run amok (amok! amok! amok!), and have to be defeated by a couple of kids, a talking cat and a friendly zombie. Itâs pretty edgy by modern Disney standards â youâd never see a family film from the Mouse House with virginity as a major plot point these days â and the Sanderson Sisters are campy legends for reason. (As for the sequel, you can skip it. Itâs mediocre at best.)
âThe Nightmare Before Christmasâ (Disney)
âThe Nightmare Before Christmasâ (1993)
Is Henry Selickâs âThe Nightmare Before Christmas,â based on a story by Tim Burton, a Halloween movie or a Christmas movie? The answer is yes. Itâs the perfect way to conclude your Halloween movie marathon because it picks up after October 31st, when Jack Skellington feels completely burnt out by the holiday, and decides to take over Christmas as a change of pace. Selickâs stop-motion animation still dazzles, Danny Elfmanâs songs are still delightfully demented, and the story will probably always be a timeless classic. Watch it for Halloween. Then watch it for Christmas too.
Royal Dano and Jonathan Price in âSomething Wicked This Way Comesâ (Disney)
âSomething Wicked This Way Comesâ (1983)
In the late 1970s and early 1980s Disney was in serious trouble and going through an identity crisis, as the studio struggled to find an approach that appealed to modern audiences. This was the era when they produced truly terrifying childrenâs entertainment, and although âThe Black Hole,â âThe Watcher in the Woods,â âThe Black Cauldronâ and âSomething Wicked This Way Comesâ are all exceedingly strange motion pictures, and have their flaws, theyâre also cult favorites. âSomething Wickedâ stars Jonathan Pryce as Mr. Dark, the ringleader of an unholy circus troupe that steals souls from a small town, leaving only the noble Nightshade family to save the day. Pryce is at his creepy best, and the film â though jumbled up in post-production, and not always coherent â has the unmistakable air of a nostalgic nightmare.
Gael Garcia Bernal in âWerewolf By Nightâ (Marvel Studios)
âWerewolf by Nightâ (2022)
Marvel Studios isnât doing great right now, in part because they donât take very many risks anymore, so their films â even the good ones â are easy to take for granted. âWerewolf by Nightâ was a pretty noble effort though. Directed by Oscar-winning composer Michael Giacchino (âUpâ), this black-and-white horror adventure stars Gael GarcĂa Bernal as the title lycanthrope, who joins a gathering of monster hunters as they search for a strange creature. Stylish, Halloween-themed fun for Marvel fans and horror fans alike. But donât even bother with the color version. What was even their danged point? Were they afraid they made something too interesting?







