“Cruel Intentions,” “Music by John Williams” and “Dune: The Prophecy” arrive, along with “Bad Sisters” Season 2.
Every month, streaming services add movies and TV shows to their libraries. Here are our picks for some of November’s most promising new titles. (Note: Streaming services occasionally change schedules without giving notice. For more recommendations on what to stream, sign up for our Watching newsletter here.)
New to Amazon Prime Video
‘Cruel Intentions’ Season 1
Starts streaming: Nov. 21
The 1999 movie melodrama “Cruel Intentions” became a box office hit and inspired multiple sequels, thanks to its twisty plot and sexual frankness, all borrowed from the novel, play and film “Dangerous Liaisons.” The new TV version carries on the tone of the films, following the bed-hopping and betrayals among a group of rich young men and women. Set at a prestigious college, the “Cruel Intentions” series is mainly about two stepsiblings, Caroline (Sarah Catherine Hook) and Lucien (Zac Burgess), who are adept at seducing and manipulating their classmates. The pair never seems to care how many enemies they make, so long as everyone fears them.
Also arriving:
Nov. 1
“Libre”
Nov. 7
“Citadel: Honey Bunny”
“Look Back”
“My Old Ass”
Nov. 8
“Every Minute Counts”
Nov. 14
“Cross” Season 2
Nov. 19
“Abigail”
“Jeff Dunham’s Scrooged-Up Holiday Special”
Nov. 20
“Wish List Games”
Nov. 21
“Dinner Club”
Nov. 26
“It’s in the Game”
Nov. 28
“Oshi No Ko”
Nov. 29
“The World According to Kaleb: On Tour”
New to AMC+
‘The Creep Tapes’ Season 1
Starts streaming: Nov. 15
The “Creep” franchise of found footage horror films features Mark Duplass (who also co-wrote the series with the director, Patrick Brice) as a serial killer who hires aspiring filmmakers to help him make movies, which inevitably end in actual murders. “The Creep Tapes” offers bite-size versions of this premise, with episodes running under a half an hour and featuring a variety of scenarios. Duplass is back as the villain, who changes his name from victim to victim. His vibe rarely changes, though. He is overly friendly and pushy, to the point of being unpleasant; and yet he also seems pretty harmless, right up to when his shtick turns deadly.
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Source: Movies - nytimes.com