From 'Five Nights at Freddy's 2' to 'Ann Lee,' 10 movies to stream now
From 'Five Nights at Freddy's 2' to 'Ann Lee,' 10 movies to stream now
Brian Truitt, USA TODAYTue, March 31, 2026 at 10:30 AM UTC
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Just in time for Easter weekend, here come a bunch of killer animatronic creatures. Chuck E. Cheese, eat your heart out.
The robotic menaces of "Five Night at Freddy's" return for the sequel now streaming on Netflix, and it's one of several new flicks on your favorites services such as Hulu, HBO Max, Paramount+ and Amazon's Prime Video. There are theatrical releases to check out at home, like a crime thriller with Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo and Halle Berry, plus original fare including an R-rated college comedy starring "Stranger Things" standout Gaten Matarazzo and "The Goldbergs" breakout Sean Giambrone.
Here are 10 new and notable movies you can stream right now:
'Anaconda'
Jack Black, left, and Paul Rudd play best buds who embark on a treacherous journey to remake their favorite movie in the adventure comedy "Anaconda."
A wedding video director (Jack Black) and his best pal, a Hollywood actor (Paul Rudd), head off to the Amazon to remake their favorite movie from their youth, the 1997 Jennifer Lopez B-flick “Anaconda.” The large snake they were going to use perishes, and deadly shenanigans ensue when their replacement is a gigantic monster reptile.
Where to watch: Netflix
'Ballerina'
Ana de Armas plays a dancer/assassin on a mission of revenge in "Ballerina."
In this fab "John Wick" spinoff, dancer/assassin Eve (Ana de Armas) goes rogue from her crime family to track down the cult who murdered her dad. Her path of vengeance includes an amazing flamethrower shootout and a brawl involving dinner plates as she makes new friends and enemies, plus faces off with Wick (Keanu Reeves) himself.
Where to watch: HBO Max
'Crime 101'
(From left) Chris Hemsworth and Halle Berry cross paths as a thief and an insurance agent, both eyeing a change, in the thriller "Crime 101."
Chris Hemsworth stars in the crime thriller as a high-end jewel thief aiming for a big score. He teams with a disillusioned insurance agent (Halle Berry) for a $11 million heist job - of which she wants a large cut – but a dogged detective (Mark Ruffalo) and a young criminal wild card (Barry Keoghan) could mess up their plans.
Where to watch: Prime Video
'Five Nights at Freddy's 2'
Vanessa (Elizabeth Lail) and Mike (Josh Hutcherson) again have to deal with the murderous animatronic animals of Freddy Fazbear's Pizza in the horror film "Five Nights at Freddy's 2."
In the horror sequel, Josh Hutcherson and Elizabeth Lail return to face new foes as well the old murderous animatronic animals of Freddy Fazbear's Pizza. The robotic characters break free from their restaurant resting place to cause chaos in town, while the villainous Marionette pops up to possess victims for her own nefarious purposes.
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Where to watch: Peacock
'Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice'
Alice (Eiza González, far left) and Mike (James Marsden) are in for one wild night teamed with Present Nick (Vince Vaughn) and Future Nick (Vaughn) in the action comedy "Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice."
In the time-travel action comedy, mob enforcer Mike (James Marsden) is told by his partner Nick (Vince Vaughn) – well, Nick from six months in the future – that he's been framed and their boss wants him dead. To survive the night, Mike has to get help from present-day Nick (also Vaughn) and Alice (Eiza Gonzalez), Nick's wife/Mike's girlfriend.
Where to watch: Hulu
'Pizza Movie'
Gaten Matarazzo (far left), Lulu Wilson and Sean Giambrone play college kids who desperately need pizza to counteract an experimental drug in the comedy "Pizza Movie."
In the gonzo college comedy, Gaten Matarazzo and Sean Giambrone play roommates who find an experimental drug left in the ceiling of their dorm room a decade ago. A pizza is the only thing that will stop the insane phases of their an trip, but they have to battle through two floors of obstacles to get their pie.
Where to watch: Hulu
'Pretty Lethal'
Avantika (far left), Lana Condor, Maddie Ziegler, Millicent Simmonds and Iris Apatow play ballerinas who have to fight their way out of a bad spot in the action thriller "Pretty Lethal."
This action thriller is on pointe with Maddie Ziegler, Lana Condor, Millicent Simmonds, Iris Apatow and Avantika as ballerinas whose bus breaks down going to a major competition in Budapest. They get captured by Hungarian gangsters and have to fight (and kill) their way out of an inn run by a shady former dance prodigy (Uma Thurman).
Where to watch: Prime Video
'Primate'
Simian threat Ben (Miguel Torres Umba) stalks the unsuspecting Hannah (Jessica Alexander) in "Primate."
In this simian spin on the slasher movie, college kid Lucy (Johnny Sequoyah) returns home to Hawaii for a visit with family and Ben, a super-smart chimp and her late mom's research project. One rabid mongoose bite later, and Ben is a skull-crushing, face-ripping menace terrorizing Lucy and her friends.
Where to watch: Paramount+
'The Testament of Ann Lee'
Amanda Seyfried (center) stars as Ann Lee, the founder of the Shakers religious movement in the 18th century, in the historical musical drama "The Testament of Ann Lee."
Amanda Seyfried earned a Golden Globe nod playing the title character, the charismatic founder of the Shakers religious movement and a somewhat controversial figure in 18th-century America. The engrossing historical musical drama digs into Lee's complicated life plus features a slew of amazingly choreographed song-and-dance numbers.
Where to watch: Hulu
'28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'
Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O'Connell) leads a cult of Jimmies in the horror sequel "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple."
You haven't lived until you've seen Ralph Fiennes do fiery performance art and sing Iron Maiden's "The Number of the Beast" in a horror movie. The sequel improves on "28 Years Later" with an excellent study of religion vs. science, featuring Fiennes as a doctor trying to help people and a flamboyantly creepy Jack O'Connell as a satanic cult leader.
Where to watch: Netflix
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: New movies streaming on Netflix, Hulu, HBO Max, Prime Video
Source: “AOL Entertainment”