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As we all eagerly await next weekend’s episode of Saturday Night Live, featuring John Mulaney and Chappell Roan, there’s still plenty of streaming TV and film fare to catch up on over the next few days, as you frantically rush order disparate parts of your Halloween costume online. (Just me?) If you’ve reached your limit of spooky movies, worry not because we’ve rounded up the best movies and TV shows to stream this weekend.
Somebody Somewhere, Season 3
There is, quite possibly, no comedian more delightful than Bridget Everett, and we’re getting a whole lot more of her—and costars Jeff Hiller and Murray Hill—in the season-three return of the Max original Somebody Somewhere. The show is back on Sunday, so prepare for more sorely needed small-town queer representation.
How to watch: Stream on Max.
Woman of the Hour
Who among us isn’t at least a little curious about Anna Kendrick’s directorial debut? Woman of the Hour is based on the terrifying true story of a woman who was matched with a serial killer on the TV show The Dating Game. While Kendrick was originally only signed on to star, she ended up directing the whole thing, and her emphasis on the lived experiences of the victims of brutal violence is particularly refreshing.
How to watch: Stream on Netflix.
What We Do in the Shadows, Season 4
This sly, often laugh-out-loud-funny mystery comedy following four vampire roommates on Staten Island has been quietly chugging along since 2019, but now that the show has entered its sixth and final season (new episodes drop on Sunday nights), we’re feeling compelled to do a full rewatch.
How to watch: Stream on Hulu.
The Remarkable Life of Ibelin
This documentary delves into the secret online life of Mats Steen, a young quadriplegic who died at 25 from a degenerative muscular disease and whose family discovered his passion for World of Warcraft after his death. “This multifaceted multimedia approach to Steen’s virtual adolescence produces a four-dimensional type of world-building that stretches the definition of a documentary film,” Erik Morse wrote of the film in Vogue’s roundup of the year’s greatest documentaries.
How to watch: Stream on Netflix.
Before
Billy Crystal stans, this is our time! The When Harry Met Sally alum stars in this haunting new Apple TV+ series alongside Judith Light and Rosie Perez (two more of the greats), playing a child psychologist who forms a mysterious bond with a troubled young boy brought to him for treatment.
How to watch: Stream on Apple TV+.