Everything That’s Streaming in Sept 2025
Jodie Foster, Spike Lee, ‘Oz-ploitation’ and more
Summer’s almost over, but the streaming selection never stops. This September, viewing selections include bringing back Wednesday and putting Jude Law in a crime miniseries; the return of Only Murders in the Building and an introdution to Glen Powell’s Chad Powers; a new Spike Lee joint; and much, much more.
Read on for Book & Film Globe’s definitive guide to the top titles this month.
Netflix
BLACK RABBIT (Sept. 18) — This new limited series stars Jude Law as a hotshot NYC restaurateur and Jason Bateman as his gambling degenerate brother. When Bateman shows up on Law’s doorstep with a huge gambling debt to a loan shark (Troy Kotsur), things get dicey.
Haunted Hotel (Sept. 19) — Will Forte continues his streak of voice work in animated series, this time as a ghost who helps his living sister (Eliza Coupe) run a haunted hotel. This new show from the folks behind Rick and Morty also features Skyler Gisondo and Jimmi Simpson. The animation looks fun, and it seems like a slightly more adult humor take on CBS’ Ghosts.
House of Guinness (Sept. 25) — Every streaming service is looking for its own Succession. This seems to be Netflix’s attempt. Steven Knight (Peaky Blinders) swaps Birmingham for Dublin in his latest show, which centers on the Guinness family in the 1860s. Siblings Arthur (Anthony Boyle), Edward (Louis Partridge), Anne (Emily Fairn) and Ben (Fionn O’Shea) are on the cusp of greatness with their beer empire — but will they grow the business, or cause it to crumble?
(We know it thrives. But that doesn’t make for good TV.)
Also playing:
Wednesday Season 3 Part 2 (Sept. 3)
Pokémon Concierge Season 1 Part 2 (Sept. 4)
Tyler Perry’s Beauty in Black: Season 2 (Sept. 11)
Visit Netflix for a full list of releases.
Hulu
Only Murders In The Building Season 5 (Sept. 9) — Charles-Haden, Oliver and Mabel are back to solve another murder mystery, this time with a supporting cast of guest stars including (deep breath): Meryl Streep, Bobby Canavale, Teddy Coluca, Beanie Feldstein, Jermaine Fowler, Keegan-Michael Key, Richard Kind, Nathan Lane, Téa Leoni, Logan Lerman, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Cristolph Waltz, Dianne Wiest and Renée Zellweger. One of ’em’s gotta be the killer.
Blood & Myth (Sept. 4) — This new true crime series is based on the Audible Original audiobook Midnight Son. The story goes that there was once a mythic Native Alaskan tribe — the Iñukuns — that only existed in rumors. That changed when Teddy Kyle Smith, an actor-turned-fugitive who shot two men during a manhunt after he fled the scene of his mother’s death, had an encounter with the Iñukuns that blurred the lines between folklore and true crime.
Author and narrator James Dommek Jr. returns for the filmed version of his audiobook as he seeks more answers to what really happened. From the looks of it, this seems a lot like Hulu’s true crime series Sasquatch from a few years back, which similarly blended fact with legend.
The Lowdown (Sept. 23) — Ethan Hawke teams up with Reservation Dogs showrunner Sterlin Harjo for a new noir series set in Tulsa. Hawke stars as Lee Raybon, a bookstore owner who moonlights as an investigative journalist and uncovers some sinister local goings-on.
Chad Powers (Sept. 30) — Just as Ted Lasso got its start as a series of skits, so did Chad Powers. What began as a joke character on Eli Manning’s EPSN+ docuseries Eli’s Places is now an actual show starring Glen Powell as hotshot quarterback Russ Holliday. Holliday disguises himself as Chad Powers in order to walk on to a struggling Southern college football team. Expect lots of life lessons.
Visit Hulu for a full list of releases.
Disney+
Lilo & Stitch (Sept. 3) — The biggest release on Disney’s streamer this month is the debut of its live-action reimagining of its 2002 hit. The 2025 version made more than $1 billion worldwide, but why watch the new one when you could just watch the animated version?
LEGO Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy: Pieces of the Past (Sept. 19) — Sig Greebling and Dev Greebling are back in this four-episode season 2 of LEGO Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy, featuring a brick-animated sendup of the Star Wars universe.
Marvel Zombies (Sept. 24) — It’s adult animation on Disney+! This four-episode, TV-MA outing from Marvel and the House of Mouse is set in the same alternate timeline from the “What If… Zombies?!” episode of the animated series What If…?. Voice talent includes Awkwafina, David Harbour, Simu Liu, Elizabeth Olsen, Randall Park, Florence Pugh, Paul Rudd, Wyatt Russell, Hailee Steinfeld, Tessa Thompson, Dominique Thorne, Iman Vellani and Todd Williams.
Visit Disney+ for a full list of releases.
Apple TV+
Highest 2 Lowest (Sept. 5) — Spike Lee’s latest joint transports Akira Kurosawa’s High and Low to New York City. In this remake, longtime Spike collaborator Denzel Washington plays David King, a record label executive who is on the cusp of buying back his business when his son and his driver’s son get kidnapped. The ensuing moral dillema about whether to pay the ransom takes David down from his penthouse into the streets of Brooklyn.
If you missed in its limited theatrical run, now’s your chance to watch it at home.
All Of You (Sept. 26) — Brett Goldstein (from Ted Lasso and, less pertinently, his 2025 stadnup show The Second Best Night of Your Life) continues to flex his dramatic writing and acting chops on Apple TV+ after his appearance on the last season of Shrinking.
Here, he plays Simon, who’s best friends with Laura (Imogen Poots). When Laura takes a test that finds her soulmate (this is directed and co-written by Black Mirror writer William Bridges), they drift apart. But they keep popping up in each others’ lives, When Harry Met Sally… style. Will they risk it all for each other?
The Savant (Sept. 26) — Jessica Chastain is The Savant, a suburban mom by day and an undercover agent who investigates online hate groups by night. Aside from just being another one of Apple TV+’s “S shows,” this looks to be another high-profile genre outing from the streamer.
Also playing:
KPOPPED (Sept. 1)
The Morning Show Season 4 (Sept. 17)
Slow Horses Season 5 (Sept. 24)
Visit Apple TV+ for a full list of releases.
Prime Video
The Girlfriend (Sept. 10) — A Freudian slip of a series wrapped in a thriller, this series stars Robin Wright and Laurie Davidson as mother and son, and Olivia Cooke as the son’s girlfriend who may or may not be suspicious — but she’ll definitely drive a wedge between the parent and child.
The Runarounds (Sept. 1) — A group of teens in a band fall in love, get in trouble and find themselves along the way in this series that looks like Outer Banks meets Daisy Jones & the Six.
Hotel Costiera (Sept. 24) — Jesse Williams is Daniel De Luca, a former Marine and the concierge/fixer for the owner of a fancy Italian hotel. When his boss’s daughter goes missing, it’s up to him and his ragtag team to comb the coast of Positano to find her in this action comedy series.
Also playing:
Larry the Cable Guy: It’s a Gift (Sept. 12)
Gen V Season 2 (Sept. 17)
Visit Amazon Prime for a full list of releases.
HBO Max
Task (Sept. 7) — Mare of Easttown season 2 may never happen, but it looks like creator/writer Brad Inglesby re-created that show in the aggregate with Task, his new crime series on HBO Max.
This series focuses on a Philadelphia-based FBI agent (Mark Ruffalo) who oversees a task force charged with ending a string of violent robberies undertaken by an unassuming family man. Inglesby has said that the show “felt like it lives in the same world as Mare.”
Seen & Heard: The History of Black Television (Sept. 9) — This two-part documentary takes viewers on a journey through n a two-part journey through the history of Black representation on television, for the entirety of the medium.
Also playing:
Friendship (Sept. 5)
Warfare (Sept. 12)
Visit HBO Max for a full list of releases.
Peacock
The Paper (Sept. 4) — That sound you just heard is thousands of journalists crying out and weeping and gnashing their teeth that this Office spinoff doesn’t get the profession right. Eh. Whatever happens, it can’t be worse than The Newsroom was at its most self-righteous. Plus, this has Domhnall Gleeson as a newspaper editor.
Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune (Sept. 9) — And that sound you just heard is thousands of trivia fans and game show feinds crying tears fo joy that new episodes of these two American institutions will now be available to stream on Peacock the day after air. What is, a good time?
Downton Abbey Celebrates The Grand Finale (Sept. 10 on NBC; Sept. 11 on Peacock) — Before fans go to the theater to see Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale on Sept. 12, they can treat themselves to this primetime special celebrating Downton Abbey and its legacy. All six seasons of the show are also available to stream on Peacock.
Visit Peacock for a full list of releases.
Shudder
Dangerous Animals (Sept. 5) — If you missed this Ozploitation flick in theaters, you can watch it safely from the comfort of your couch, safe in the knowledge that Jai Courtney’s serial killer Bruce (like the shark in Jaws, get it?) will never feed you to a group of deep sea sharks, like he does to his victims in this movie. That is, Bruce did until he kidnapped Zephyr, a surfer girl determined to escape Bruce’s clutches.
Guts & Glory Season 1 (Sept. 9) — This competition reality show sees its contestants confronted with their worst fears in different scenarios. They must survive the night, or be eliminated.
Night of the Reaper (Sept. 19) — A babysitter slasher set in the 1980s about a young woman who comes home from college and takes a babysitting job, only to discover that her sister’s murder while babysitting the year before may not have been an isolated incident.
House on Eden (Sept. 26) — This found-footage film has been getting rave reviews for how unsettling it is. It centers on a small team of paranormal investigators who plan to investigate a cemetery, but end up going to an abandonded house. Of course, dangerous and spooky stuff starts happening.
Visit Shudder for a full list of releases.
Criterion Channel
All of the following of the Criterion Channel’s block programming will be available starting Sept. 1:
Directed by Robert Altman — Nearly all of Altman’s filmography, from Countdown to A Prairie Home Companion. Check the Criterion site for the entire list.
Starring Jodie Foster — Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, Taxi Driver, Bugsy Maloine, Five Corners, Stealing Home, Little Man Tate, Shadows and Fog, Sommersby, Nell, Panic Room and The Beaver
‘70s Thrillers — The Anderson Tapes, The Long Goodbye, Sisters, Chinatown, The Parallax View, Night Moves, Obsession, Sorcerer and Winter Kills
Nunsploitation — Häxan, The Devils, To the Devil a Daughter, Alucarda, Behind Convent Walls, Killer Nun, Ms .45, Dark Habits and Benedetta
Alan J. Pakula’s Paranoia Trilogy — Klute, The Parallax View and All the President’s Men
Visit the Criterion Channel for a full list of releases.
Paramount+
NCIS: Tony & Ziva (Sept. 4) — NCIS’ favorite will-they-won’t-they couple is back with a new series that’s, as Tony puts it, “part techno thriller, part romantic comedy.” Tony and Ziva are framed for a cybercrime, so they have to go on the run together and try to clear their names.
Tulsa King Season 3 (Sept. 21) — The Taylor Sheridan Machine continues apace, now with another season of Sylvester Stallone’s Dwight Manfredi, who is now seeing his enemies grow at the same pace as his empire.
Visit Paramount+ for a full list of releases.



