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22 Movies And TV Shows You Must Stream On HBO Max UK

It’s finally here. After years of watching Americans live their best, most streamlined streaming lives, HBO Max has officially landed in the UK and Ireland. The flagship streaming platform from Warner Bros. Discovery has settled into its new home across the Atlantic, and is giving British audiences direct access to the combined catalogue of HBO and Max originals, Warner Bros. films and TV, and DC Studios — all under one metaphorical roof for the very first time.

But here’s the thing: with a brand new streamer on the block that’s coming in hot, absolutely rammed with movies and series to get stuck into, figuring out where to start can be a bit of a daunting prospect. Luckily for you guys however, our crack team of critics here at Empire are on hand with your essential HBO Max starter pack..

Whether you’re looking for an adrenaline hit from The Pitt, a trip to Westeros with A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms, or a chance to revisit some modern and timeless cinematic classics — from One Battle After Another and Sinners to Lord Of The Rings and Singin’ In The Rain — our list of 22 TV shows and movies you need to watch on HBO Max UK has got you covered.

So pull up a pew, grab some gabagool, and read on for our rundown of what needs to be on your shiny new watchlist…

The Best TV Shows And Movies On HBO Max UK (April 2026)

The Pitt (2025—)

Creator/Showrunner: R. Scott Gemmill

Starring: Noah Wyle, Katherine LaNasa, Patrick Ball, Supriya Ganesh, Taylor Dearden, Isa Briones, Gerran Howell

R. Scott Gemmill’s medical drama The Pitt is the show that’s been withheld from UK audiences the longest, and that HBO Max are most sure you’ll be signing up to see. And honestly? It’s more than earned that billing. Noah Wyle – yes, Dr. Carter from ER, back in his scrubs – stars as Dr. Michael ‘Robby’ Robinavitch, a trauma physician running a punishing shift at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. It’s a simple but effective format, with each episode covering a single hour of the shift in real-time – meaning the tension never lets up, the clock is always ticking, and the patients’ stories range from the bizarre to the heartbreaking. You can devour the whole of Season 1 now, then start tucking into Season 2’s weekly-dropping episodes straight after. And just to seal the deal, we already know Season 3 is well on its way, so there’s no better time to scrub up!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of The Pitt Season 1.

Euphoria (2019—)

Euphoria

Showrunner/Creator: Sam Levinson

Starring: Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney, Jacob Elordi, Hunter Schafer, Maude Apatow

One of the most anticipated — and, if the Hollywood trades have it straight, most toxic — seasons of TV in 2026 is the third instalment of Sam Levinson’s Euphoria, which finally manages to round up its numerous breakout stars (including Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney, Hunter Schafer and Jacob Elordi) and catch up with their chaotic characters several years after high school. Taking aim at America’s synthetic opioids crisis while continuing to dive deeper into its own heady world of sex, trauma, and mental illness, Euphoria Season 3 finds recovering addict Rue (Zendaya) trapped as a drugs mule smuggling gear between ‘Murica and Mexico. Elsewhere, Cassie (Sweeney) is playing tradwife to slimeball Nate (Elordi), while Jules (Schafer) — now in art school — is apparently caught up in a sugar baby situation. All of which is to say, this is maximum Euphoria: proceed with caution.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

One Battle After Another (2025)

One Battle After Another

Director: Paul Thomas Anderson

Starring: Chase Infiniti, Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor, Sean Penn, Benicio Del Toro, Alana Haim

Paul Thomas Anderson has mastered so many genres and tones over the years, you’d think he’d done it all. And yet, in comes One Battle After Another, an entirely singular cinematic experience – part kidnap thriller, part revolutionary drama, part shambling shaggy-dog comedy – in the form of a dad-and-daughter love-letter. Leonardo DiCaprio is hilariously addled as Bob, the former revolutionary who’s been raising his daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti) and numbing his brain ever since his activist group went down. But when the past resurfaces, he has to dredge up his former life to chase Willa down, while pursued by Sean Penn’s bone-chilling Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw. Like the best of PTA’s work, there’s a pace and energy to One Battle that sees its significant runtime fly by – perfectly calibrated to make every gag, every emotional beat, every gut-punch land just right. Deservedly the movie that finally earned PTA his first Best Director and Best Picture Oscars, this is revolutionary cinema, delivered with no fear. Just like Tom Cruise.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of One Battle After Another.

Sinners (2025)

Sinners

Director: Ryan Coogler

Starring: Michael B. Jordan, Michael B. Jordan, Miles Caton, Wunmi Mosaku, Hailee Steinfeld, Delroy Lindo, Jack O’Connell

After years spent earning his spurs taking existing IP and making it feel brand new, Ryan Coogler delivered a true original with our pick for the best movie of 2025. On the face of it, Sinners is a vampire siege movie that sees bloodsuckers descending upon twin gangsters Smoke and Stack (Michael B. Jordan, on Best Actor winning form) as they open their juke joint. But a reheat of From Dusk Till Dawn’s nachos this ain’t. Rather, Coogler marries the bloodsucking action with a music-fuelled blues explosion – galvanised by mercurial new talent Miles Caton – indelibly infused with the cultural context of 1930s Mississippi. Come for double Michael B. Jordan and a fearsome, fanged Jack O’Connell: stay for a soul-stirring diegesis on the communal, cultural power of art and the stain on human history that is colonialism. And one helluva soundtrack. That, too.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read the Empire review of Sinners.

Superman (2025)

Superman trailer

Director: James Gunn

Starring: David Corenswet, Nicholas Hoult, Rachel Brosnahan, Nathan Fillion, Isabela Merced, Skyler Gisondo

Bright, zingy, colourful, and positively overflowing with hope and optimism, James Gunn’s DCU directorial debut, Superman, is a far cry from the near-monochromatic Man of Steel that fans found in Zack Snyder’s more po-faced DCEU outings. Sure, it would be fair to say Gunn’s movie — which drops viewers into a world where David Corenswet’s Superman has been known to the world for three years and finds himself facing geopolitical conflict, Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult), and monsters galore all at once — is simultaneously more than a little bit daffy and a little bit much at times. But this cosmic caper, with its Silver Age stylings, terrific ensemble cast, and earnest belief in Supes/Clark Kent’s greatest qualities — his humanity, his resilience, his boundless empathy — is a real bright light amid dark times. In other words, it’s pretty super, man. (Sorry.)

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Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of Superman.

Rooster (2025—)

Rooster

Showrunners/Creators: Bill Lawrence, Matt Tarses

Starring: Steve Carell, Danielle Deadwyler, Phil Dunster, Charly Clive, Lauren Tsai, John C. McGinley

For almost four decades now, Bill Lawrence has been knocking out of the park delivering some of the best TV series on the box — from Spin City and Scrubs to Ted Lasso and Shrinking. And now, having explored the human experience on the pitch, in therapy, at Sacred Heart hospital, and in the mayoral office of NYC, Lawrence (alongside longtime collaborator Matt Tarses) turns his observational eye to faculty matters with sweet ten-part dramedy Rooster. Steve Carell stars — and shines — as Greg Russo, an author whose complicated relationship with his professor daughter Katie (Charly Clive) comes into sharper focus when he finds himself contributing at her college campus and unexpectedly getting in with its frat crowd. By turns cringe-inducing, poignant, and gently profound, Rooster is as Bill Lawrence-y as Bill Lawrence shows gets — but that’s no bad thing.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

The Comeback (2005 — 2026)

The Comeback Season 3

Showrunners/Creators: Lisa Kudrow, Michael Patrick King

Starring: Lisa Kudrow, Laura Silverman, Damian Young, Lance Barber, Dan Bucatinsky

Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King’s (Sex And The City) industry satire The Comeback has really lived up to its title over the years. Unceremoniously cancelled after its first season on HBO back in 2005, Kudrow and King’s show — a mockumentary chronicling ageing sit-com star Valerie Cherish’s attempts to return to the spotlight — came back with a triumphant second season in 2015, and is now back again, eleven years later, in 2026. Embracing the times we’re living in, The Comeback’s swan song opens amid the 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes before jumping to an alt-present day where Valerie, who’s now added a podcast and a stint on The Traitors to her portfolio, finds out the new sit-com she’s making has been written entirely by AI. How absurd! If you dig The Studio, then think of The Comeback as its equally biting, also hilarious telly-centric equivalent. Don’t skip it!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms (2026—)

A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms

Showrunner/Creator: Ira Parker

Starring: Peter Claffey, Dexter Sol Ansell, Daniel Ings, Shaun Thomas, Cara Harris, Sam Spruell

The main characters may be known as Dunk and Egg, but Ira Parker’s Game Of Thrones spin-off A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms is no yolk, people. Shifting the focus away from Westeros’ halls of power to tell a street-level shaggy dog tale, AKOTSK’s set-up is simple: each episode, we follow as hedge knight Ser Duncan The Tall (Peter Claffey) and his impish squire Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) venture across Westeros, looking to prove their worth and find their purpose as they bond and trade barbs. Unmoored from Thrones’ grander plot (this is set a solid century before winter comes to Westeros), Parker’s show is a refreshingly low-stakes affair full of charm, chivalry, and a brand of thematically important toilet humour that’d bring a tear to Chaucer’s eye. Also! Don’t forget you can cop the whole of Game Of Thrones and House Of The Dragon on HBO Max, too, for even more fantasy fun.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms.

IT: Welcome To Derry (2025—)

IT Welcome To Derry

Creators/Showrunners: Jason Fuchs, Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti

Starring: Bill Skarsgård, Taylour Paige, Jovan Adepo, Brad Caleb Kane, Matilda Lawler, Blake Cameron James

Set within the same world as his two-part Stephen King adaptation (2017’s IT: Chapter One and 2019’s IT: Chapter Two — both also on HBO Max), Andy Muschietti’s IT: Welcome To Derry turns the clock back to 1962, 27 years before The Loser Club’s first encounter with cosmic clown-faced child killer Pennywise, for a chilling, newly invented prequel. Really, this is a tale of two halves: one side of the narrative finds a new batch of outsider kids on a spooky adventure trying to solve a schoolmate’s mysterious disappearance; the other finds Derry’s adults dealing with the real-world terrors of racism, bigotry, and nuclear threat. And amidst it all, lay in wait, is Bill Skarsgård’s Dancing Clown, whose ancient origins are unspooled as his hunger grows. If you’re after legit chills couched in another intricately told coming-of-age tale, then look no further. And yes, a Season 2 is on its way.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of IT: Welcome To Derry.

The White Lotus (2021—)

The White Lotus: Season 3

Showrunner/Creator: Mike White

Starring: Jennifer Coolidge, Carrie Coon, Walton Goggins, Aimee Lou Wood, Jason Isaacs, Parker Posey

With production on The White Lotus Season 4 about to get underway during this year’s Cannes Film Festival, there’s never been a better time to check in to Mike White’s anthological, hotel-based satire. The first three seasons of White’s blackly comic show have whisked us away to luxurious White Lotus hotels from Hawaii to Sicily to Thailand, changing up the locales each time while sticking to the same basic recipe: take a bunch of bougie hotel guests, played by the best and most in-demand actors of the moment, and watch as their secrets, dramas, and fraught relationships unravel over a stay filled with sun, sea, and usually at least a death or two. It all makes for intensely bingeable, frequently eye-widening telly, and frankly it’s way cheaper than actually going on holiday right about now. Winner!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of The White Lotus Season 3.

The Last Of Us (2023—)

The Last Of Us Season 2 Hero

Creators/Showrunners: Craig Mazin, Neil Druckmann

Starring: Pedro Pascal, Bella Ramsey, Isabela Merced, Young Mazino, Gabriel Luna, Kaitlyn Dever

In a landscape historically plagued by lazy videogame adaptations and half-baked dystopian TV, HBO’s The Last Of Us — Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin’s (Chernobyl) adaptation of Naughty Dog’s post-apocalyptic survival horror game — is the cure. Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey share astonishing chemistry as Joel and Ellie, two fiercely guarded souls, both carrying their own deep-rooted traumas, who rediscover their humanity as they traverse an America that’s both figuratively and literally losing its own. The zombie-like Clickers — human beings infected by a terrifyingly plausible fungus-based virus – are scary, but the real nightmare fuel is the series’ sobering depiction of the monstrous things people will do to survive in a broken world. A stunning Season 2 cemented the show’s status among the greats, and we’ve still got a third season to look forward to yet.

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Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of The Last Of Us.

Succession (2018 — 2023)

Succession season 4

Creator/Showrunner: Jesse Armstrong

Starring: Brian Cox, Kieran Culkin, Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, Matthew Macfadyen, Alan Ruck

A recent but very high-ranking addition to our most recent 100 best TV shows list, Jesse Armstrong’s lacerating comedy-drama Succession — which chronicles the personal and professional dramas of the terribly rich and terribly, er, terrible Roy family — is rated so highly for a reason. That the show now so comfortably sits among the very greatest series ever made is a testament to the way its creator, his writers, his cast (Brian Cox! Kieran Culkin! Jeremy Strong! Sarah Snook!), and his crew continuously upped their game season after season. From first frame to devastating last, Armstrong and co never pulled their punches as they skewered the cannibalistic world of the mega-rich with spiky dialogue, barbed banter, and a frankly Shakespearean level of crossing, double-crossing, backstabbing, and familial feuding. Be warned though, the cringe level is high with this one: just you wait until you hear Roman Roy’s birthday rap. Now can we get an L to the mother-effin’ OG?

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of Succession.

The Sopranos (1999 — 2007)

The Sopranos

Showrunner/Creator: David Chase

Starring: James Gandolfini, Lorraine Bracco, Edie Falco, Michael Imperioli, Steven Van Zandt, Robert Iler, Tony Sirico

Decidedly not a documentary about opera singers, The Sopranos is instead a dark, offbeat, psychologically needling drama about a New Jersey gangster with a fixation on the ducks who visit his swimming pool. As the first season wore on, viewers became hooked on creator David Chase’s uncompromising vision of an old-school criminal organisation beset by all the stresses and tensions of the modern day. It’s not hard to figure out why: Chase and his writers locked in on what made Tony and co. work. James Gandolfini delivered a career-best performance as our way into the show, while the family and “family” around him anchored stories that poked below the gangster surface to what made these people truly tick. When you think of HBO, it’s not a coincidence that your brain probably goes straight to The Sopranos. Load up on gabagool and get stuck in. To the show — and then the gabagool.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

The Wire (2002 — 2008)

The Wire

Showrunner/Creator: David Simon

Starring: Dominic West, Lance Reddick, Sonja Sohn, Wendell Pierce, Idris Elba, Michael Kenneth Williams

David Simon famously once said that he intended The Wire as “lean-in” television. Here is a Baltimore-set series that demands your attention, its slow-burn storytelling never less than totally compelling: no scrolling necessary. Simon crafted a series that skips the usual procedural tropes, looking instead at the linked worlds of cops and criminals in a way that highlights the humanity clouded by labels. High stakes, big emotions and even a scene conducted almost entirely with creative use of the F-word are all part of the reasons why this show became one of the greatest. Later seasons expanded the focus to other areas — politics, the school system, and newspapers, to name a few — but the laser accuracy remained the same. The ensemble cast (the likes of Idris Elba and Michael B. Jordan among them) never put a foot wrong. If you’ve somehow never leant in before, then lean in now. You won’t regret it.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Girls (2012 — 2017)

Girls

Girls ©TMDB tv 42282

Showrunner/Creator: Lena Dunham

Starring: Lena Dunham, Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke, Adam Driver, Zosia Mamet, Alex Karpovsky

Pitching itself as a sort of anti-Sex And The City for the post-feminist mumblecore age, Lena Dunham’s Girls— which follows aspiring writer Hannah (Dunham) and her twenty-something gal pals as they navigate their twenties in the Big Apple — garnered a loyal following for its authentic depiction of young womanhood and Dunham’s raw, almost confessional, entirely unapologetic mode of writing. It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that Girls changed the game for half-hour dramedies, blazing a trail the likes of Michaela Coel’s Chewing Gum and Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag would follow. Also, we can thank Girls for Adam Driver’s rise to prominence; his three-time Emmy-nominated supporting role as the at-once rootable and reviling Adam Sackler made the former Marine a household name. All of which is to say: watch Girls.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

The Leftovers (2014 — 2017)

The Leftovers

Showrunner/Creator: Damon Lindelof

Starring: Justin Theroux, Carrie Coon, Christopher Eccleston, Liv Tyler, Margaret Qualley, Ann Dowd

Four years and a fistful of blockbuster movie writing gigs after Lost came to an end, co-creator Damon Lindelof returned to our screens with another noodle-twisting, breathtaking work of water cooler television excellence. His adaptation of Tom Perrotta’s novel — co-written with him — for HBO takes place three years after two percent of the global population vanished for reasons that remain unexplained. The world is still trying to cope with the scale of the tragedy and the emotional ramifications, with cults springing up and madness slowly descending. Powerhouse performances from Justin Theroux, Christopher Eccleston, and a particularly outstanding Carrie Coon act as our way into and through a traumatised, fractured America. In lesser hands, this could be a real misery fest, but in Lindelof and Perrotta’s, the story rocks a rich vein of black humour and sticks the landing, cementing its place as one of the most gripping shows of the 21st century. Some would say this is even better than Lost. (We are some.)

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Six Feet Under (2001 — 2005)

Six Feet Under

Showrunner/Creator: Alan Ball

Starring: Peter Krause, Michael C. Hall, Frances Conroy, Lauren Ambrose, Freddy Rodriguez

With dark, surreal comedy and stark, blunt truths about life and death, it’s little wonder that Six Feet Under flowed from the same pen that gave us the equally incredible American Beauty. Alan Ball’s series about a dysfunctional Pasadena family that runs an independent funeral home is a wonderful meditation on family, love and grief. Headed up by Peter Krause as prodigal elder son Nate Fisher and featuring Michael C. Hall, Frances Conroy, Lauren Ambrose and Rachel Griffiths, the cast, like every facet of this compelling production, oozes class, gifted with sharp writing and a finale that — no spoilers here — offers what remains to this day one of the most emotional wrap-ups in telly history. It’s a bit of a hidden gem, but we assure you, it’s dead good.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Friends

Friends

©NBC

Showrunners/Creators: David Crane, Marta Kaufman

Starring: Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, David Schwimmer, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Courteney Cox

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Okay, so technically it isn’t a HBO show, but Friends very much is a HBO Max exclusive — and you can find all ten seasons on the streamer right now. It seems almost redundant to say anything more about the show, because by now we surely all know that this is the perfect sit-com, but over two decades later David Crane and Marta Kaufman’s show remains worth shouting about. In its earliest days, the adventures of six beautiful New York-dwelling pals who apparently earned money by drinking coffee featured writing much sharper than the cuddly exterior suggested. Even when the quality dipped a little mid-run, the ensemble remained perfectly matched and the best comedy collective on TV. And by the time the show reached its conclusion, watching Ross, Rachel, Chandler, Monica, Joey, and Phoebe say their final farewells truly felt like the end of an era. Could it be any more emotional? We think not!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy (2001 — 2003)

Lord Of The Rings

Director: Peter Jackson

Starring: Elijah Wood, Sir Ian McKellen, Viggo Mortensen, Orlando Bloom, John Rhys-Davies, Sean Bean, Cate Blanchett, Sean Astin, Christopher Lee, Dominic Monaghan, Billy Boyd

The Lord Of The Rings: The Hunt For Gollum is heading our way next year. Shadow Of The Past is set to follow soon after. And Prime Video’s The Rings Of Power is due to continue apace with a third season very soon, too. But let’s face it, you just can’t beat the original trilogy, can you? (No, not that original trilogy.) From the idyll of The Shire to the Mines of Moria, the Battle of Helm’s Deep to Frodo’s final journey into the west, Peter Jackson’s epic adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s legendary fantasy saga is as irresistible and powerful as the One Ring itself. A singular tale of friendship, fellowship, and the ultimate triumph of light over darkness — of good over evil — rendered in the grandest cinematic terms, The Lord Of The Rings trilogy exemplifies the immersive escapism that cinema is all about. And now you can rewatch ‘em all, whenever you like. Anyone for second breakfast and a Rings marathon? We’ll bring the Lembas.

Read Empire‘s reviews of Fellowship Of The Ring, The Two Towers and Return Of The King.

The Wizarding World Saga (Harry Potter & Fantastic Beasts)

Harry Potter movies ranked

There isn’t a child (or indeed adult) alive who doesn’t know the name of Warner Bros. behemothic blockbuster series of Wizarding World adventures. The Harry Potter franchise is the perfect example of a page-to-screen adaptation done right. Helmed by four distinctive filmmakers, each of whom offer their own unique yet faithful take on J.K. Rowling’s source material across eight blockbuster adventures, this franchise — and its young stars — pulled off something singular. Seeing them — and it — grow and evolve before our very eyes was… well… magical. And even if they had a little rockier a road, David Yates’ Fantastic Beasts movies — which follow Eddie Redmayne’s Magizoologist Newt Scamander and his pals’ adventures and take the Wizarding World global — still have plenty to spellbind. Those eleven films — and HBO Max’s exclusive documentary on the making of Mark Mylod and Francesca Gardiner’s upcoming Harry Potter reboot — should tide you over ‘til Christmas. Accio, remote!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire‘s Harry Potter ranked list.

The Conjuring Universe (2013—)

The Conjuring Last Rites

Boy wizards not so much your thing? Fancy something a little darker to dig into? Well, look no further. While there’s no shortage of horror goodness to get stuck into on HBO Max (The Exorcist, Malignant, Final Destination), one of the streamer’s real boons is having all of The Conjuring Universe in one place. Yes, now you can enjoy/cower in fear from all of couple goals duo Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren’s (Vera Farmiga) paranormal investigations in the four mainline The Conjuring movies, get your creepy doll fix with the complete Annabelle trilogy, and bore — sorry, scare — your socks off with The Nun duology without having to switch platforms once. Heck, you can even watch TCU adjacent flick The Curse Of La Llorona as a spirit-filled chaser if you fancy. And when that Conjuring TV series finally materialises? Yeah, that’ll be on HBO Max as well. You lucky ducks!

Streaming now on HBO Max.

SIngin’ In The Rain (1952)

Singin In The Rain

Director: Stanley Donen

Starring: Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds, Donald O’Connor, Jean Hagen

Another rabbit hole you’ll likely find yourself tumbling down with HBO Max is its seriously deep catalogue of Hollywood classics. We’re talkin’ Gone With The Wind, The Wizard Of Oz, An American In Paris, Barry Lyndon, Gremlins, The Goonies, The Shawshank Redemption, Little Shop Of Horrors, Casablanca, Excalibur for crying out loud! But if we’re going to spotlight a deepcut in the library, and a movie that’s dipped in and out of streaming availability that we’re particularly recommending now that it’s got a permanent digital home, then it’s surely gotta be Stanley Donen’s 1952 shot of pure cinematic sunshine, Singin’ In The Rain. It’s Gene Kelly splashing in puddles. It’s Debbie Reynolds beaming as she sings ‘Good Mornin’’. It’s Donald O’Connor running up the walls — literally — during ‘Make ‘Em Laugh’. And it’s Jean Hagen squeaking “I can’t standim” in glorious three-strip Technicolor. Whether you watch it on your own, with the family, with whoever and indeed wherever, this is the kind of masterpiece that should always be on your watchlist.

Streaming now on HBO Max.

Read Empire’s review of Singin’ In The Rain.

So, there you have it. Whether you’re signing up solely to finally watch The Pitt, working your way through a prestige back catalogue that puts most other streamers to shame, or are just really glad Friends has found its rightful home, HBO Max has arrived in the UK with something for everyone. We didn’t even mention all the Nolan films, or the Tim Burton Batman movies, or Barry, or Deadwood, or… okay, you get the idea. There’s still a lot to explore beyond this list. At its best though, HBO Max is now home to some of the greatest movies and TV shows ever made – and with new Euphoria, House Of The Dragon, Lanterns and an entire wizarding saga still to come, it sounds like it’s going to have been worth the wait.


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Digit

Digit is a versatile content creator with expertise in Health, Technology, Movies, and News. With over 7 years of experience, he delivers well-researched, engaging, and insightful articles that inform and entertain readers. Passionate about keeping his audience updated with accurate and relevant information, Digit combines factual reporting with actionable insights. Follow his latest updates and analyses on DigitPatrox.
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