The Best TV Shows And Movies Leaving HBO Max In November 2022

Universal Pictures By Mike Shutt/Oct. 24, 2022 5:45 pm EST

The forever-rotating catalog of streaming movies and television has ebbs and flows of availability with what we gain and lose every month. November 2022 happens to be a month when we’ll lose quite a number of great titles to the digital ether from HBO Max. Everything from some recent genre material, Hollywood classics, and films by major auteurs all leave the service by the end of the month. There are enough great films that I could spotlight a dozen or so movies you need to see before they leave HBO Max and are sent to possibly another streaming service or – and I know it’s unthinkable – for digital rental, where you actually have to put down a couple of bucks to watch the movie.

To avoid spending some extra cash before the holiday season burns a hole in your wallet that you will soon regret, here are five films leaving HBO Max this November that you definitely should check out.

Anna Karenina (2012)

Focus Features

It has been a decade since its release, and I am still baffled at the utter dismissal of Joe Wright’s theatrical, sumptuous adaptation of “Anna Karenina.” In an Oscar-bait landscape of bland period costume dramas, Wright is one of the very few filmmakers who throws the filmmaking conventions of the genre out the window and is able to take these stylistic chances on a grand scale. In this case, he sets the entirety of Leo Tolstoy’s tale of adultery and class struggle inside a gorgeous theatre, using everything from the fly space to the manager’s office to, of course, the stage in order to amplify the artificial, societal playacting by every character in the film. Sets will fly in and form around the characters, some costume changes occur on camera as they go from part of the theatre to another, and every single moment is choreographed within an inch of its life.

The titular role is played by Wright’s frequent collaborator (and possibly my favorite working actor) Keira Knightley in a luminous, heartbreaking performance, and the rest isn’t too shabby either, including Jude Law in one of his best performances to date as her cuckolded husband and a revelatory hilarious pre-“Succession” Matthew Macfadyen. This film did not get its due at the time, much like Wright’s “Cyrano” from last year, and I require everyone to bask in it.

Inside Man (2006)

Universal Pictures

Spike Lee’s fantastic heist thriller “Inside Man” holds a special place in my heart, as it was the second R-rated movie I was allowed to see at the cinema when I was 12. I distinctly remember the deliberation as to whether this one would pass muster after the seal had been broken the previous week with “V for Vendetta.” Needless to say, it left an impression. Not only was I mesmerized by the heist plot enacted by Clive Owen and his gang of robbers, but it was an important part in seeing how not every movie looked or felt the same. You had the washed-out color grading of the interrogation scenes, the direct-to-camera address by Owen’s character, and then there’s the iconic Spike Lee shot of a character moving through space on a dolly.

Revisiting it as an adult still gives me the same adrenaline rush as it did when I first saw it over 16 years ago. This is Spike Lee working within mainstream Hollywood at the top of his game, turning what could be a run-of-the-mill “Dog Day Afternoon” riff into a great piece of genre entertainment.

Being There (1979)

United Artists

When we think of Peter Sellers, we obviously think of his larger-than-life character work on screen, like the bumbling Inspector Clouseau of “The Pink Panther” or the titular wheelchair-bound Nazi of “Dr. Strangelove.” But when Sellers puts all the bombast aside, he is still one of the most compelling screen presences of the 20th Century, and nowhere is that better captured than his Oscar-nominated turn in “Being There.” Hal Ashby may not be one of the names that have lingered the most from the days of New Hollywood, but his keen eye for humanity mixed with biting social satire made for some terrific pictures such as this and “Harold and Maude.”

“Being There” sees Sellers play Chance, a simple gardener who really only knows about the world through what he sees on television. When his benefactor dies, the cloistered Chance must venture out into the real world, where he is accidentally hit by the car of an old, wealthy businessman. Chance, his name misheard as “Chauncey Gardiner,” enters high society and politics, where everyone thinks he is some kind of sage, brilliant man but, in actuality, is just as simple as he ever was. The film manages to be slyly funny without ever really making Chance a target for mockery, and it features one of the most beautiful endings in cinema history. This was Sellers’ penultimate film before he died in 1980, and it’s quite a high to go out on.

Gaslight (1944)

MGM

In the wake of the recent passing of Angela Lansbury, people have been revisiting some of their favorites, be it “Beauty and the Beast,” “The Manchurian Candidate,” of their favorite episodes of “Murder, She Wrote.” Well, before it leaves HBO Max, check out the film that put Lansbury on the map. 1944’s “Gaslight” was not just the late actor’s first film performance, but it also earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She plays a maid who works for Charles Boyer’s Gregory Anton and his new wife Paula, played by Ingrid Bergman. As the title would suggest, Gregory begins to gaslight his wife into thinking she can’t leave the house and is going crazy, and Lansbury’s maid certainly doesn’t help the situation at all.

I want to remain light on the details of the story for y’all to discover the twists and turns for yourself, but “Gaslight” showcases some top-notch performers working at an incredibly high level in a taut, eerie thriller. Director George Cukor may be better known for his lighter, more comedic work like “The Philadelphia Story” and “My Fair Lady,” but he captures the bleakness in this film just as adeptly. Don’t watch it for me. Do it for Angela.

Domino (2005)

New Line Cinema

Yeah. We’re going to talk about Keira Knightley some more. Tony Scott’s “Domino” was absolutely ravaged by critics when it was released back in 2005, and the “Actually, this film is good” brigade has yet to make its concerted effort to get this film reappraised. Well, you know what? I am going to lead that charge because “Domino” absolutely f***ing rules! This story of real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey, as played by Knightley, is Tony Scott at his most outrageous, most sun-drenched, most visually chaotic self, and I cannot get enough of it.

Knightley’s cool intensity and willingness to try whatever compliments Scott’s wild energy perfectly. Every superimposition, every frantic cut, and every hue of yellow and orange makes for a kaleidoscopic fury of cinematic mayhem. It’s the movie Michael Bay wishes he could make but never could because he isn’t an earnest enough filmmaker. When the credits show up and every actor is credited just by their first name, this isn’t some goofy thing to do. It matches the film’s hard-edged, renegade tone. I love “Domino,” and I want the rest of the world to love “Domino” with me.

Everything leaving HBO Max in November 2022

Miramax

November 2

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, 2014

November 8

Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Dubbed) Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Subtitled)

November 11

Dunkirk, 2017

November 13

Hard Knocks: In Season: The Indianapolis Colts (HBO)

November 16

Godzilla vs. Kong, 2021 (HBO)

November 25

Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops, 2019 (HBO) Inside Man, 2006 (HBO)

November 27

Anna Karenina, 2012 (HBO)

November 30

42, 2013 2021 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony 21 & Over, 2013 (HBO) All the Pretty Horses, 2000 Arsenal, 2017 (HBO) The Aviator, 2004 The Bank Job, 2008 Being There, 1979 Black Dynamite, 2009 Breakdown, 1997 (HBO) Bushwhacked, 1995 (HBO) Butterfield 8, 1960 Chain Lightning, 1950 Child 44, 2015 (HBO) The Day After Tomorrow, 2004 (HBO) Days Of Thunder, 1990 (HBO) Doctor Dolittle, 1967 (HBO) Domino, 2005 (HBO) Dr. Dolittle 3, 2006 (HBO) Dying Young, 1991 (HBO) Exorcist II: The Heretic, 1977 Fast Company, 1979 (HBO) Fatal Attraction, 1987 (HBO) Freddy vs. Jason, 2003 Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, 1991 Friday the 13th, 1980 Full Metal Jacket, 1987 Gaslight, 1944 Girl Most Likely, 2012 (HBO) Godzilla, 1998 Gypsy, 1963 The Happening, 2008 (HBO) Hart’s War, 2002 (HBO) Hasta Que La Boda Nos Separe (aka The Wedding Unplanner), 2020 (HBO) He’s Just Not That Into You, 2009 The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, 2012 (HBO) How to Survive a Plague, 2012 The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, 2013 (HBO) It’s Always Fair Weather, 1955 Ivanhoe, 1952 Jack The Giant Slayer, 2013 (HBO) Jackie Brown, 1997 (HBO) La Leyenda Negra, 2020 (HBO) The Legend Of Hercules, 2014 (HBO) Life Partners, 2014 (HBO) Masters Of The Universe, 1987 (HBO) Midnight Family, 2019 (HBO) My Days Of Mercy, 2017 (HBO) News Of The World, 2020 The Night House, 2020 (HBO) A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge, 1985 A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, 1987 A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, 1989 A Nightmare on Elm Street, 1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street, 2010 Objective, Burma!, 1945 Out of the Past, 1947 Percy Jackson Sea Of Monsters, 2013 (HBO) Perfect Stranger, 2007 (HBO) Poltergeist, 1982 Promising Young Woman, 2020 (HBO) R.I.P.D., 2013 (HBO) Racer And The Jailbird, 2017 (HBO) Remember Me, 2010 (HBO) Return To House On Haunted Hill, 2007 (HBO) Runner Runner, 2013 (HBO) Selena, 1997 The Singing Nun, 1966 Snitch, 2013 (HBO) A Star is Born, 1954 Sunrise at Campobello, 1960 Surrogates, 2009 (HBO) Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride, 2005 Tristan & Isolde, 2006 (HBO) The Truman Show, 1998 The Two Jakes, 1990 (HBO) Unfinished Song, 2012 (HBO) Unforgiven, 1992 W., 2008 (HBO) Waiting To Exhale, 1995 (HBO) Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, 1994 What B***h? 2020 Wicker Park, 2004 (HBO) XXX, 2002 XXX: State of the Union, 2005 Young Guns, 1988 Young Guns II, 1990

The Best TV Shows And Movies Leaving HBO Max In November 2022

Universal Pictures

By Mike Shutt/Oct. 24, 2022 5:45 pm EST

The forever-rotating catalog of streaming movies and television has ebbs and flows of availability with what we gain and lose every month. November 2022 happens to be a month when we’ll lose quite a number of great titles to the digital ether from HBO Max. Everything from some recent genre material, Hollywood classics, and films by major auteurs all leave the service by the end of the month. There are enough great films that I could spotlight a dozen or so movies you need to see before they leave HBO Max and are sent to possibly another streaming service or – and I know it’s unthinkable – for digital rental, where you actually have to put down a couple of bucks to watch the movie.

To avoid spending some extra cash before the holiday season burns a hole in your wallet that you will soon regret, here are five films leaving HBO Max this November that you definitely should check out.

To avoid spending some extra cash before the holiday season burns a hole in your wallet that you will soon regret, here are five films leaving HBO Max this November that you definitely should check out.

Anna Karenina (2012)

Focus Features

It has been a decade since its release, and I am still baffled at the utter dismissal of Joe Wright’s theatrical, sumptuous adaptation of “Anna Karenina.” In an Oscar-bait landscape of bland period costume dramas, Wright is one of the very few filmmakers who throws the filmmaking conventions of the genre out the window and is able to take these stylistic chances on a grand scale. In this case, he sets the entirety of Leo Tolstoy’s tale of adultery and class struggle inside a gorgeous theatre, using everything from the fly space to the manager’s office to, of course, the stage in order to amplify the artificial, societal playacting by every character in the film. Sets will fly in and form around the characters, some costume changes occur on camera as they go from part of the theatre to another, and every single moment is choreographed within an inch of its life.

The titular role is played by Wright’s frequent collaborator (and possibly my favorite working actor) Keira Knightley in a luminous, heartbreaking performance, and the rest isn’t too shabby either, including Jude Law in one of his best performances to date as her cuckolded husband and a revelatory hilarious pre-“Succession” Matthew Macfadyen. This film did not get its due at the time, much like Wright’s “Cyrano” from last year, and I require everyone to bask in it.

The titular role is played by Wright’s frequent collaborator (and possibly my favorite working actor) Keira Knightley in a luminous, heartbreaking performance, and the rest isn’t too shabby either, including Jude Law in one of his best performances to date as her cuckolded husband and a revelatory hilarious pre-“Succession” Matthew Macfadyen. This film did not get its due at the time, much like Wright’s “Cyrano” from last year, and I require everyone to bask in it.

Inside Man (2006)

Spike Lee’s fantastic heist thriller “Inside Man” holds a special place in my heart, as it was the second R-rated movie I was allowed to see at the cinema when I was 12. I distinctly remember the deliberation as to whether this one would pass muster after the seal had been broken the previous week with “V for Vendetta.” Needless to say, it left an impression. Not only was I mesmerized by the heist plot enacted by Clive Owen and his gang of robbers, but it was an important part in seeing how not every movie looked or felt the same. You had the washed-out color grading of the interrogation scenes, the direct-to-camera address by Owen’s character, and then there’s the iconic Spike Lee shot of a character moving through space on a dolly.

Revisiting it as an adult still gives me the same adrenaline rush as it did when I first saw it over 16 years ago. This is Spike Lee working within mainstream Hollywood at the top of his game, turning what could be a run-of-the-mill “Dog Day Afternoon” riff into a great piece of genre entertainment.

Revisiting it as an adult still gives me the same adrenaline rush as it did when I first saw it over 16 years ago. This is Spike Lee working within mainstream Hollywood at the top of his game, turning what could be a run-of-the-mill “Dog Day Afternoon” riff into a great piece of genre entertainment.

Being There (1979)

United Artists

When we think of Peter Sellers, we obviously think of his larger-than-life character work on screen, like the bumbling Inspector Clouseau of “The Pink Panther” or the titular wheelchair-bound Nazi of “Dr. Strangelove.” But when Sellers puts all the bombast aside, he is still one of the most compelling screen presences of the 20th Century, and nowhere is that better captured than his Oscar-nominated turn in “Being There.” Hal Ashby may not be one of the names that have lingered the most from the days of New Hollywood, but his keen eye for humanity mixed with biting social satire made for some terrific pictures such as this and “Harold and Maude.”

“Being There” sees Sellers play Chance, a simple gardener who really only knows about the world through what he sees on television. When his benefactor dies, the cloistered Chance must venture out into the real world, where he is accidentally hit by the car of an old, wealthy businessman. Chance, his name misheard as “Chauncey Gardiner,” enters high society and politics, where everyone thinks he is some kind of sage, brilliant man but, in actuality, is just as simple as he ever was. The film manages to be slyly funny without ever really making Chance a target for mockery, and it features one of the most beautiful endings in cinema history. This was Sellers’ penultimate film before he died in 1980, and it’s quite a high to go out on.

“Being There” sees Sellers play Chance, a simple gardener who really only knows about the world through what he sees on television. When his benefactor dies, the cloistered Chance must venture out into the real world, where he is accidentally hit by the car of an old, wealthy businessman. Chance, his name misheard as “Chauncey Gardiner,” enters high society and politics, where everyone thinks he is some kind of sage, brilliant man but, in actuality, is just as simple as he ever was. The film manages to be slyly funny without ever really making Chance a target for mockery, and it features one of the most beautiful endings in cinema history. This was Sellers’ penultimate film before he died in 1980, and it’s quite a high to go out on.

Gaslight (1944)

MGM

In the wake of the recent passing of Angela Lansbury, people have been revisiting some of their favorites, be it “Beauty and the Beast,” “The Manchurian Candidate,” of their favorite episodes of “Murder, She Wrote.” Well, before it leaves HBO Max, check out the film that put Lansbury on the map. 1944’s “Gaslight” was not just the late actor’s first film performance, but it also earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She plays a maid who works for Charles Boyer’s Gregory Anton and his new wife Paula, played by Ingrid Bergman. As the title would suggest, Gregory begins to gaslight his wife into thinking she can’t leave the house and is going crazy, and Lansbury’s maid certainly doesn’t help the situation at all.

I want to remain light on the details of the story for y’all to discover the twists and turns for yourself, but “Gaslight” showcases some top-notch performers working at an incredibly high level in a taut, eerie thriller. Director George Cukor may be better known for his lighter, more comedic work like “The Philadelphia Story” and “My Fair Lady,” but he captures the bleakness in this film just as adeptly. Don’t watch it for me. Do it for Angela.

I want to remain light on the details of the story for y’all to discover the twists and turns for yourself, but “Gaslight” showcases some top-notch performers working at an incredibly high level in a taut, eerie thriller. Director George Cukor may be better known for his lighter, more comedic work like “The Philadelphia Story” and “My Fair Lady,” but he captures the bleakness in this film just as adeptly. Don’t watch it for me. Do it for Angela.

Domino (2005)

New Line Cinema

Yeah. We’re going to talk about Keira Knightley some more. Tony Scott’s “Domino” was absolutely ravaged by critics when it was released back in 2005, and the “Actually, this film is good” brigade has yet to make its concerted effort to get this film reappraised. Well, you know what? I am going to lead that charge because “Domino” absolutely f***ing rules! This story of real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey, as played by Knightley, is Tony Scott at his most outrageous, most sun-drenched, most visually chaotic self, and I cannot get enough of it.

Knightley’s cool intensity and willingness to try whatever compliments Scott’s wild energy perfectly. Every superimposition, every frantic cut, and every hue of yellow and orange makes for a kaleidoscopic fury of cinematic mayhem. It’s the movie Michael Bay wishes he could make but never could because he isn’t an earnest enough filmmaker. When the credits show up and every actor is credited just by their first name, this isn’t some goofy thing to do. It matches the film’s hard-edged, renegade tone. I love “Domino,” and I want the rest of the world to love “Domino” with me.

Knightley’s cool intensity and willingness to try whatever compliments Scott’s wild energy perfectly. Every superimposition, every frantic cut, and every hue of yellow and orange makes for a kaleidoscopic fury of cinematic mayhem. It’s the movie Michael Bay wishes he could make but never could because he isn’t an earnest enough filmmaker. When the credits show up and every actor is credited just by their first name, this isn’t some goofy thing to do. It matches the film’s hard-edged, renegade tone. I love “Domino,” and I want the rest of the world to love “Domino” with me.

Everything leaving HBO Max in November 2022

Miramax

November 2

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, 2014

November 8

Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Dubbed) Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Subtitled)

November 11

Dunkirk, 2017

November 13

Hard Knocks: In Season: The Indianapolis Colts (HBO)

November 16

Godzilla vs. Kong, 2021 (HBO)

November 25

Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops, 2019 (HBO) Inside Man, 2006 (HBO)

November 27

Anna Karenina, 2012 (HBO)

November 30

42, 2013 2021 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony 21 & Over, 2013 (HBO) All the Pretty Horses, 2000 Arsenal, 2017 (HBO) The Aviator, 2004 The Bank Job, 2008 Being There, 1979 Black Dynamite, 2009 Breakdown, 1997 (HBO) Bushwhacked, 1995 (HBO) Butterfield 8, 1960 Chain Lightning, 1950 Child 44, 2015 (HBO) The Day After Tomorrow, 2004 (HBO) Days Of Thunder, 1990 (HBO) Doctor Dolittle, 1967 (HBO) Domino, 2005 (HBO) Dr. Dolittle 3, 2006 (HBO) Dying Young, 1991 (HBO) Exorcist II: The Heretic, 1977 Fast Company, 1979 (HBO) Fatal Attraction, 1987 (HBO) Freddy vs. Jason, 2003 Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, 1991 Friday the 13th, 1980 Full Metal Jacket, 1987 Gaslight, 1944 Girl Most Likely, 2012 (HBO) Godzilla, 1998 Gypsy, 1963 The Happening, 2008 (HBO) Hart’s War, 2002 (HBO) Hasta Que La Boda Nos Separe (aka The Wedding Unplanner), 2020 (HBO) He’s Just Not That Into You, 2009 The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, 2012 (HBO) How to Survive a Plague, 2012 The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, 2013 (HBO) It’s Always Fair Weather, 1955 Ivanhoe, 1952 Jack The Giant Slayer, 2013 (HBO) Jackie Brown, 1997 (HBO) La Leyenda Negra, 2020 (HBO) The Legend Of Hercules, 2014 (HBO) Life Partners, 2014 (HBO) Masters Of The Universe, 1987 (HBO) Midnight Family, 2019 (HBO) My Days Of Mercy, 2017 (HBO) News Of The World, 2020 The Night House, 2020 (HBO) A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge, 1985 A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, 1987 A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, 1989 A Nightmare on Elm Street, 1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street, 2010 Objective, Burma!, 1945 Out of the Past, 1947 Percy Jackson Sea Of Monsters, 2013 (HBO) Perfect Stranger, 2007 (HBO) Poltergeist, 1982 Promising Young Woman, 2020 (HBO) R.I.P.D., 2013 (HBO) Racer And The Jailbird, 2017 (HBO) Remember Me, 2010 (HBO) Return To House On Haunted Hill, 2007 (HBO) Runner Runner, 2013 (HBO) Selena, 1997 The Singing Nun, 1966 Snitch, 2013 (HBO) A Star is Born, 1954 Sunrise at Campobello, 1960 Surrogates, 2009 (HBO) Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride, 2005 Tristan & Isolde, 2006 (HBO) The Truman Show, 1998 The Two Jakes, 1990 (HBO) Unfinished Song, 2012 (HBO) Unforgiven, 1992 W., 2008 (HBO) Waiting To Exhale, 1995 (HBO) Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, 1994 What B***h? 2020 Wicker Park, 2004 (HBO) XXX, 2002 XXX: State of the Union, 2005 Young Guns, 1988 Young Guns II, 1990

  • The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, 2014

November 8

  • Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Dubbed)
  • Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma (S5) (Subtitled)

November 11

  • Dunkirk, 2017

November 13

  • Hard Knocks: In Season: The Indianapolis Colts (HBO)

November 16

  • Godzilla vs. Kong, 2021 (HBO)

November 25

  • Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops, 2019 (HBO)
  • Inside Man, 2006 (HBO)

November 27

  • Anna Karenina, 2012 (HBO)

November 30

  • 42, 2013
  • 2021 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
  • 21 & Over, 2013 (HBO)
  • All the Pretty Horses, 2000
  • Arsenal, 2017 (HBO)
  • The Aviator, 2004
  • The Bank Job, 2008
  • Being There, 1979
  • Black Dynamite, 2009
  • Breakdown, 1997 (HBO)
  • Bushwhacked, 1995 (HBO)
  • Butterfield 8, 1960
  • Chain Lightning, 1950
  • Child 44, 2015 (HBO)
  • The Day After Tomorrow, 2004 (HBO)
  • Days Of Thunder, 1990 (HBO)
  • Doctor Dolittle, 1967 (HBO)
  • Domino, 2005 (HBO)
  • Dr. Dolittle 3, 2006 (HBO)
  • Dying Young, 1991 (HBO)
  • Exorcist II: The Heretic, 1977
  • Fast Company, 1979 (HBO)
  • Fatal Attraction, 1987 (HBO)
  • Freddy vs. Jason, 2003
  • Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, 1991
  • Friday the 13th, 1980
  • Full Metal Jacket, 1987
  • Gaslight, 1944
  • Girl Most Likely, 2012 (HBO)
  • Godzilla, 1998
  • Gypsy, 1963
  • The Happening, 2008 (HBO)
  • Hart’s War, 2002 (HBO)
  • Hasta Que La Boda Nos Separe (aka The Wedding Unplanner), 2020 (HBO)
  • He’s Just Not That Into You, 2009
  • The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, 2012 (HBO)
  • How to Survive a Plague, 2012
  • The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, 2013 (HBO)
  • It’s Always Fair Weather, 1955
  • Ivanhoe, 1952
  • Jack The Giant Slayer, 2013 (HBO)
  • Jackie Brown, 1997 (HBO)
  • La Leyenda Negra, 2020 (HBO)
  • The Legend Of Hercules, 2014 (HBO)
  • Life Partners, 2014 (HBO)
  • Masters Of The Universe, 1987 (HBO)
  • Midnight Family, 2019 (HBO)
  • My Days Of Mercy, 2017 (HBO)
  • News Of The World, 2020
  • The Night House, 2020 (HBO)
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge, 1985
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, 1987
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, 1989
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street, 1984
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street, 2010
  • Objective, Burma!, 1945
  • Out of the Past, 1947
  • Percy Jackson Sea Of Monsters, 2013 (HBO)
  • Perfect Stranger, 2007 (HBO)
  • Poltergeist, 1982
  • Promising Young Woman, 2020 (HBO)
  • R.I.P.D., 2013 (HBO)
  • Racer And The Jailbird, 2017 (HBO)
  • Remember Me, 2010 (HBO)
  • Return To House On Haunted Hill, 2007 (HBO)
  • Runner Runner, 2013 (HBO)
  • Selena, 1997
  • The Singing Nun, 1966
  • Snitch, 2013 (HBO)
  • A Star is Born, 1954
  • Sunrise at Campobello, 1960
  • Surrogates, 2009 (HBO)
  • Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride, 2005
  • Tristan & Isolde, 2006 (HBO)
  • The Truman Show, 1998
  • The Two Jakes, 1990 (HBO)
  • Unfinished Song, 2012 (HBO)
  • Unforgiven, 1992
  • W., 2008 (HBO)
  • Waiting To Exhale, 1995 (HBO)
  • Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, 1994
  • What B***h? 2020
  • Wicker Park, 2004 (HBO)
  • XXX, 2002
  • XXX: State of the Union, 2005
  • Young Guns, 1988
  • Young Guns II, 1990