From blockbuster premieres to the return of streaming favorites, this November’s lineup is stacked — and UPROXX is here to help you pick your favorites.
FILM PREVIEW
TV PREVIEW
Causeway
November 4
Enola Holmes 2
november 4
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
november 4
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
november 11
the wonder
november 16
spirited
november 18
the menu
november 18
she said
november 18
The Fabelmans
november 23
Glass Onion
november 23
disenchanted
november 24
Yung Baby Tate
03
coming soon
bones and all
november 23
thirteen lives
August 5
pinnochio
September 8
Blockbuster
November 3
the terminal list
july 1
the crown
november 9
the english
november 11
tulsa king
november 13
yellowstone
november 13
dead to me
november 17
Fleishman In Trouble
november 17
ziwe
november 18
Welcome to Chippendales
november 22
wednesday
november 23
willow
november 30
welcome to wrexham
August 24
Lord of the rings
September 2
close
The Crown
It certainly feels strange to sit through another season of Netflix’s The Crown knowing its central figure no longer reigns over Buckingham Palace with her corgi companions in tow. But then again, this is a show that’s always felt a bit removed from the real royal family, choosing to focus on truths som multiple viewpoints rather than having its story dictated by the ominous, omnipotent Firm. In season 5, Elizabeth Debicki and Dominic West step into the shoes of Princess Diana and Prince Charles as their marriage breaks down to irreparable new lows while Imelda Staunton plays the late Queen Elizabeth amidst this tumultuous period.
- Toomer
Writer: Jessica Toomer, Mel Valentin & Jason Tabrys
Design/Build: Daisy James, Carlos Sotelo Olivas, Joseph Petrolis
Project Creative Direction: Jason Tabrys
close
Manifest
Another network TV rescue saved from cancellation death by Netflix, the final season of this sci-fi-tinged mystery drama airs its first-half this year and picks up two years after the events of season three. The show promises to hang onto its Lost vibes by deep diving into the strange “Callings” some of the survivors of Flight 828 experience, promising answers to some central mysteries before the season’s later half drops sometime next year.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: November 4
close
Blockbuster
Premiere Date: november 3
The bitter irony of Netflix streaming a show about the long-fallen lords of home entertainment will definitely turn heads, but Blockbuster seems more focused on becoming the next Superstore than it is on diving too deeply into the war over Friday night rentals. And while nostalgia for human curation in these algorithmic times is real, nothing is more relatable than quirky co-workers, eyeroll inducing customers, and goofing off with friends.
- Tabrys
Netflix
Season 4: Part 1 — Netflix
Premiere Date: november 9
Season 5 — Netflix
close
The English
Premiere Date: november 11
Amazon
If Emily Blunt’s name doesn’t increase your interest in The English, a new, period-set Western for Amazon Prime, to the level of must-see status, then it’s hard to know what will. Blunt plays Lady Cornelia Locke, presumably the “English” of the title, a Brit-born woman who journeys to 1890s America to uncover the party (or parties) responsible for the death of her son. She allies herself with a Pawnee Nation scout named Eli Whipp (Chaske Spencer) in her quest for a side of cold-served revenge, one filled with shootouts, dust-covered standoffs, and some surprisingly weighty themes.
- Valentin
close
Tulsa King
The track records of Taylor Sheridan (Yellowstone, Hell or High Water, Sicario) and co-showrunner Terence Winters (Boardwalk Empire, The Sopranos) are more than enough reason to move their latest offering, Tulsa King, to the must-see list. Add action star Sylvester Stallone into the mix as Dwight “The General” Manfredi -- an ex-con and full-time mobster, sent to the literal middle of the country to start a criminal operation for his New York City mob bosses – and you’ve got a hyper-compelling crime drama.
- Valentin
Premiere Date: July 12th
Paramount+
close
Yellowstone
Succession with spurs returns as land baron John Dutton (Kevin Costner) is forced to deal with the muck of politics after getting sworn in as Governor of Montana. Not quite a go-along to get-along kinda guy, you can imagine that he's gonna do things his way, breaking norms and pissing people off in the process as the typical power jockeying and messed up family dynamics continue to swirl in Paramount+'s hit drama from Taylor Sheridan.
- Tabrys
Premiere Date: november 13
Paramount+
close
Dead to Me
The final season of this darkly-funny crime drama promises more of the things that made fans fall in love with it. More trauma-bonding. More whodunnits. More murders, money laundering, and James Marsden. But most importantly, more time to spend with Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini’s Jen and Judy, the murderous besties we all wish we had (or were). Here’s to the final ride of Judy Five Fingers and B*tch Cassidy.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: November 17
Netflix
close
Fleishman In Trouble
Jesse Eisenberg and Claire Danes are the main parties involved in the messy divorce dramedy that fuels this story based on a book of the same name. Forget a relationship on the rocks, their characters Toby and Rachel have flung themselves against the tide in the hope of escaping each other. In the process, Rachel disappears, abandoning their two tweenagers with her ex who struggles to single-parent and adapt to dating app life.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: november 17
FX
close
Ziwe
Ziwe returns to Showtime, bringing her reliably brash, blunt, and comedically fearless chops to an upcoming slate of interviews that includes Julia Fox, Michael Che, Drew Barrymore, and Joel Kim Booster. What can we say? She repeatedly revitalizes the talk show genre, good-naturedly antagonizing her guests and putting on wild comedy sketches about American Doll toys who just happen to be wives to imperialist colonizers.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: November 18
Showtime
close
Welcome to Chippendales
The true story behind the rise of the Chippendales male revue is one of hard bodies, murder, and deception, all driven by the endless allure of success and one man’s lost odyssey in search of it. Launched at the height of our collective hyper fixation with all things true crime, star Kumail Nanjiani and creator Robert Siegel have a limited series on their hands that is sure to get people’s attention.
- Tabrys
Premiere Date: november 22
Amazon Prime
close
Wednesday
This mysterious, spooky, and all-together kooky Tim Burton spin-off celebrates arguably the best member of the Addams Family, played here by Jenna Ortega. Wednesday is still the devious, morose outsider she always was but in this coming-of-age retelling, she’s tasked with solving a murder mystery while surviving a stint at the terrifying boarding school her parents once attended. Gwendoline Christie plays the institution’s headmistress while Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzmán play Morticia and Gomez Addams. Should this series have dropped closer to Halloween? Sure. Do we mind? Not when it looks this good, no.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: November 23
Netflix
close
Willow
Disney loves to bank on its earned nostalgia to recruit new subscribers – just look at some other entries on this list for proof. But, when you’re revamping a fantasy adventure as weird and winsome as Willow, we’ll forgive the obvious gimmick. This new series invited the great Warwick Davis back to play the sorcerer Willow Ulfgood and recruits some newcomers to aid him on a quest that’s just as grand and dangerous as the original.
- Toomer
Premiere Date: November 30
Disney +
close
Causeway
Jennifer Lawrence can do “toned down,” it’s what made her breakout performance in Winter’s Bone so memorable. Here she plays Lynsey, a young soldier suffering from a traumatic brain injury while serving overseas who returns to her New Orleans home and instantly feels adrift. She finds an anchor in Brian Tyree Henry’s James – a man dealing with his own internal anguish. It’s emotional, weighty stuff that feels destined for award season buzz.
- Toomer
Release Date: November 4 (Apple TV+)
Hulu
close
Enola Holmes 2
If the first edition of this Milly Bobby Brown-starring Sherlock Holmes spin-off didn’t do enough to quell any doubts that the iconic detective could go YA, this sequel sure will. Brown is charming and capable as Holmes’ younger sister Enola, who’s finally striking out on her own with a case that eventually recruits her entire family’s help. It’s not that Enola couldn’t solve the mystery on her own, but when you’ve got Henry Cavill and Helena Bonham Carter signed on, why wouldn’t you want to get them in on the action?
- Toomer
release Date: November 4 (Netflix)
Amazon Prime
close
Weird:
The Al Yankovic Story
release Date: november 4 (roku)
Season 4: Part 2 — Netflix
Unconventional accordion-toting pop culture icon Weid Al Yankovic gets a thoroughly unconventional biopic that’s light on facts and big on wild exaggerations and amazing cameos. More Walk Hard than Walk The Line, the film offers us all the chance to see former Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe in the role he was born to play: that of a nerd turned object of chaos whose descent is fueled by sex, drugs, and ego.
- Tabrys
close
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Release Date: November 11
Season 6: Part 2 — AMC
Ryan Coogler returns to direct this long-awaited sequel, one that promises fans a chance to mourn both the untimely passing of Chadwick Boseman and the commanding superhero he played within the Marvel-verse. Whether the mantle of the Black Panther will be passed onto someone new – or a more familiar face in Letitia Wright’s Princess Shuri – is still the movie’s biggest unknown but the succession issue isn’t the only one Wakanda faces. Tenoch Huerta joins the cast, playing an all-powerful king of another secret kingdom that may pose a threat to Wakanda’s peaceful existence. Expect all of the same elements that made the first film so entertaining in addition to the rare opportunity this sequel gives fans to say goodbye to such a meaningful part of the MCU’s superhero lore.
- Toomer
close
The Wonder
Florence Pugh consistently proves to be the best thing about any film she’s in. Here, she’s got both a story worth telling and a filmmaker who understands why she’s the one to tell it. Pugh plays Lib, a young English nurse in 1862 who is sent to a small Irish village to investigate why a young woman (Kila Lord Cassidy) hasn’t eaten in four months. Some believe her to be a miracle or a saint and while Lib isn’t convinced, she’s only allowed to witness the girl’s hunger strike, forcing her to make some tough choices about her own faith and moral responsibility.
- Toomer
release Date: November 16 (Netflix)
FX
close
Spirited
Apple TV+ is entering the Christmas movie market with this holiday-themed musical/comedy co-starring Will Ferrell, Ryan Reynolds, and Oscar winner Octavia Spencer. The 3,751st riff (give or take) on Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, Spirited centers on Clint Briggs (Reynolds), a modern-day Scrooge compelled to see the error of his ways by Ferrell’s Ghost of Christmas Present. It’s the classic formula, that also explores the ghost’s POV this time around. At a minimum, expect singing and dancing (sometimes simultaneously) and plenty of laughs.
- Valentin
release Date: November 18 (Apple TV+)
Hulu
close
The Menu
Back of kitchen life is having its moment on-screen this year but this horror-satire from Mark Mylod and Adam McKay proves chefs aren’t just neurotic bad boys with tattooed sleeves and family problems (a la The Bear). No, they can be villains too, especially when played by Ralph Fiennes. The film’s plot is equal parts comedy, tragedy, and pure terror, following a group of elites (Nicholas Hoult among them) and one out-of-place normie (Anya Taylor-Joy) who travel to a remote island for a fine dining experience like no other. Whether they eat the food or become the food is anyone’s guess.
- Toomer
release Date: November 18 (In Theaters)
FX
close
She Said
Another virtual lock to be represented when award season comes around, She Said is an incredibly important story whose gravitas will only add to its viewing experience. Zoe Kazan and Carey Mulligan play journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, who broke the Harvey Weinstein scandal in 2017, setting off a chain of events that ushered in the #MeToo movement. You might think you know the whole story, but you’re bound to learn something new here.
- Toomer
release Date: November 18 (In Theaters)
FX
close
The Fabelmans
So many Steven Spielberg films hold a special place in the hearts and minds of audiences and his fellow filmmakers, with a level of influence that might well be unmatched. That’s why The Fabelmans is so intriguing, with much anticipated performances from Paul Dano, Michelle Williams, and Seth Rogen and a story that glimpses Spielberg’s adolescence, the divide between practicality and creativity, and the allure of storytelling and moving images.
- Tabrys
Release Date: november 23 (In Theaters)
Netflix
close
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
The much-anticipated follow-up to the 2019 whodunnit romp understands the assignment, trading a stuffy mansion for an exotic locale while pairing Daniel Craig’s southern-fried sleuth with the likes of Dave Bautista, Edward Norton, and the great Kathryn Hahn. While few things can match a sweater clad Chris Evans in smirk mode, we’re down to see this crew give it a try. Janelle Monáe and Kate Hudson round out the star-studded cast.
- Tabrys
release Date: November 23 (In Theaters)
Amazon Prime
close
Disenchanted
This Disney+ sequel asks the question: What happens after happily ever after? The answer: A midlife crisis made worse by magic... if you happen to hail from an enchanted land where animals talk and you were once an animated princess. Amy Adams is back as Gisele, said princess who is now happily married to Patrick Dempsey’s regular joe and trying to live a normal life in the suburbs with her blended family. But fitting in is hard without the help of perfectly choreographed song breaks, so she makes a wish that throws the entire town into chaos and paints her as the villain.
- Toomer
release Date: November 24 (Disney+)
Disney+
close
Bones and All
Can a movie about two teen runaways struggling to repress their cannibalism be romantic? Potentially, especially when it’s in the hands of Call Me By Your Name director Luca Guadagnino. Here he reteams with Timothee Chalamet who plays Lee, a breezy bad boy playing side kick to Taylor Russell’s Maren, a young girl disowned by her father in search of her estranged mother. The two hitchhike their way across the country, meeting others who share their peculiar eating habits while trying to understand their own desires.
- Toomer
Release Date: November 23
HBO Max
FILM PREVIEW
Manifest: Season 4 Part 1
november 4
november 4
november 4
UPROXX
TV & FILM
guide