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Netflix has a huge catalog of movies and TV shows, but its powerful algorithms often favor the streamer’s most recent and most watched fare, like Kate Hudson's basketball comedy Running Point, the White House-set screwball whodunnit The Residence and the rediscovered 2010s legal drama Suits. Though many rival studios have clawed back movies and shows for their own streaming services, there are still tons of less popular gems buried on Netflix — from originals such as the sexy Swedish dramedy Love & Anarchy to memorable films like the Oscar-winning Godzilla Minus One. Here are 25 buried treasures to add to your queue.
Dept. Q (2025)
Scott Frank, 65, the mastermind behind The Queen's Gambit, has adapted one of Danish writer Jussi Adler-Olsen’s noir novels into a new series that shifts the action from Copenhagen to Edinburgh, Scotland. Matthew Goode stars as a shellshocked police detective tapped to lead a cold-case squad made up mostly of misfits in the Slow Horses mold. The search for a long-missing prosecutor is intriguing, but the examination of these quirky characters will keep you coming back.
Watch it: Dept. Q
Creed (2015)
Now that director Ryan Coogler's 2025 musical horror film Sinners, starring Michael B. Jordan, is getting buzz as a candidate for the best picture Oscar, it's time to check out his brilliant reboot of the Rocky movies, also starring Jordan, who plays a young boxer who tracks down the man his late father once fought in the ring: Rocky Balboa himself. Sylvester Stallone, 78, has grownup gravitas as the young boxer's trainer. The film packs all the punch of the original pugilist classic, and yet Coogler makes it feel fresh and new. It's a knockout!
Watch it: Creed
The Only Girl in the Orchestra (2024)
It’s rare that you wish that a documentary could be longer, but that’s definitely true of this 35-minute profile of pioneering classical musician Orin O’Brien, a master of the double bass who in 1966 became the first woman in the New York Philharmonic. The film is both fascinating and infuriating, and deservedly was shortlisted for this year's Academy Awards..
Watch it: The Only Girl in the Orchestra
The Åre Murders (Season 1, 2025)
Scandinavian crime dramas continue to sparkle by adding blankets of snow and a lot of grisly mayhem to the usual noir landscapes. In this taut five-episode series, we follow a Stockholm detective who retreats from the big city to a wintry ski resort – where she teams up with a local cop to solve some local murders.
Watch it: The Åre Murders
The Chair (2021)
The fictional Pembroke University seems like a fitting avatar for modern academia, with its stubbornly old-school faculty resisting most efforts toward modernization despite the appointment of the English department’s first female chair. Sandra Oh, in a delightfully flustered performance, faces down both crotchety colleagues and eager-to-cancel students while also nursing her crush on a hotshot colleague (Jay Duplass) who’s been spiraling since the death of his wife. Plus, this sadly short-lived series smartly casts David Duchovny as a celebrity actor-novelist-failed Ph.D. student (like Duchovny himself) who’s recruited as a guest lecturer to boost the department’s visibility.
Watch it: The Chair
Criminal: UK (2019-20, 2 seasons)
This bingeworthy British police procedural breaks the mold with its uniquely claustrophobic approach, setting all of the action in a police station interrogation room, the observation room behind the one-way mirror, or the corridor just outside. The suspects include high-profile stars like David Tennant, 54, and Sharon Horgan, 54, and there are some wonderful twists and surprises in each episode. You may find yourself so absorbed that you’ll seek out the spinoffs in Spain, Germany, and France—each following the same suspect-per-episode format.
Watch it: Criminal: UK
Bodies (2023)
What if four different police detectives — spread out in different time periods over 150 years — stumbled on the body of the same murder victim in London’s Whitechapel? That intriguing premise is at the heart of this eight-part limited series, which adds a time-bending element to the old Jack the Ripper saga.g the much-younger man who will become her fifth husband. It stars Stephen Graham, 51, the eight-time British Academy Award nominee who's got two other superb new critical hits: the Victorian boxing drama A Thousand Blows on Hulu and the buzzy Netflix crime drama Adolescence.
Watch it: Bodies
The Two Popes (2019)
Did you If you liked Conclave, check out this unlikely buddy film from director Fernando Meirelles (The City of God) that imagines a private meeting between the rules-bound Pope Benedict XVI (Anthony Hopkins, 87) and the more liberal future Pope Francis (Jonathan Pryce, 78) about the future of the Catholic Church. Both actors earned Oscar nominations for their work on the drama, which combines serious theological and political discussions with moments of levity involving ABBA, soccer, and pizza.
Watch it: The Two Popes
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