Disney’s live-action remake “Lilo & Stitch” already crossed $1.0 billion and hits Disney+ on Sept. 3 — an unusually huge streaming debut for 2025. This list pulls the Top 10 streaming premieres of September (dates, platforms, and one reason each matters) so you don’t waste a weekend. Expect auteur turns from A24, awards-caliber indies, and crowd-pleasing genre fare — and ask yourself: which of these will dominate your watch party conversation? Want memes, hot takes, or a deep-dive later? We’ve left the door open.
What To Know Now About September’s 10 Biggest Streaming Releases
- Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch” Arrives On Disney+ Sept. 3 After $1.0B Box Office.
- A24 Places Three Major Titles On Streaming This Month (Friendship, Warfare, Highest 2 Lowest).
- Spike Lee’s “Highest 2 Lowest” Debuts On Apple TV+ Sept. 5 After Cannes Praise.
- A24’s “Friendship” Grossed $16M Domestically Before Its HBO Max Debut Sept. 5.
- Netflix Adds Several Broad-Appeal Titles (Ice Road: Vengeance, French Lover, Ruth & Boaz).
Top 10 Streaming Picks For September — Quick Reasons To Watch Now
#1 – Lilo & Stitch: A $1.0B Blockbuster Goes From Theaters To Disney+ (Sept. 3)
Technology news today: Wicked: For Good hits theaters, shatters preview records with $30.8M
WWE SmackDown results: AJ Lee returns for WarGames, Cody Rhodes bloodied by Drew McIntyre
Disney’s live-action remake arrives on Disney+ after becoming 2025’s only $1.0B grosser — that box-office gravity makes this a must-see family event at home. Expect spectacle and viral reaction clips; if you loved the cartoon, this update will fuel online arguments about faithful remakes.

#2 – Highest 2 Lowest: Spike Lee’s Big Moral Thriller Lands On Apple TV+ (Sept. 5)
Samuel L Jackson jokes he cheers for Ravens because Lamar is his bastard son on Kimmel
Rama Raju Mantena’s daughter’s Udaipur wedding becomes the event of the year with JLo, Trump Jr joining star-studded celebrations
Spike Lee and Denzel Washington reunite in a New York–set riff on Kurosawa’s High And Low — critics flagged a sensational third act at Cannes. Watching this on Apple TV+ means you’ll be in the room for week-one watercooler debates about ethics and star power.
#3 – Friendship: A24’s Cult Black Comedy Hits HBO Max (Sept. 5)
A24’s Tim Robinson–Paul Rudd satire earned $16M at the indie box office and arrives on HBO Max; its dark laughs already sparked cult buzz. If you like cringe-driven comedies that split audiences, this is your next “love it or hate it” watch.
#4 – Warfare: Alex Garland’s Real-Time Combat Thriller Reaches HBO Max (Sept. 12)
Garland’s tense war picture moves from festivals to streaming with a headline-grabbing concept and an ensemble cast; it’s the sort of dense thriller that rewards attentive viewing. Put this on when you want a conversation-starter with friends who read reviews.
#5 – The Wedding Banquet: A Modern Remake Heads To Paramount+ (Sept. 8)
Andrew Ahn’s film — a contemporary take on Ang Lee’s classic premise — lands on Paramount+, promising witty cultural friction and star turns from Kelly Marie Tran and Lily Gladstone. It’s light on spectacle, heavy on character — perfect for date-night debate.
#6 – All Of You: Brett Goldstein’s Romance Hits Apple TV+ (Sept. 26)
Ted Lasso alum Brett Goldstein co-wrote and stars in this relationship comedy-drama; think warm, bittersweet hooks with an indie sensibility. If you enjoy character-first romcoms, this one quietly aims to be a streaming favorite.
#7 – The Man In My Basement: Willem Dafoe’s Creepy Offer Streams On Hulu (Sept. 26)
Adapted from Walter Mosley, this eerie, character-driven thriller premiered at TIFF and lands on Hulu — Dafoe’s involvement alone raises stakes for awards-season chatter. Put this on when you want unsettling performances rather than big set pieces.
#8 – The Wrong Paris: Miranda Cosgrove’s Rom-Com Lands On Netflix (Sept. 12)
Netflix’s buzzy dating-show twist (Paris, Texas, not France) is a breezy rom-com with obvious viral-meme potential — light, rewatchable, and built for group chats. If you want a palate-cleanser between heavier premieres, this fits.
#9 – Ice Road: Vengeance: Liam Neeson’s New Action Drama Hits Netflix (Sept. 15)
Neeson’s latest joins Netflix with high-altitude thrills and familiar franchise energy; expect it to climb charts fast among action fans. This is the sort of adrenaline pick that boosts weekend viewing numbers.
#10 – French Lover: Omar Sy’s Romantic Comedy Joins Netflix (Sept. 26)
Omar Sy headlines a French-flavored rom-com that adds international charm to Netflix’s fall slate — a good choice if you want feel-good, subtitled (or dubbed) comfort viewing with star charisma.
The Numbers That Change How You Pick What To Stream This Month
| KPI | Value + Unit | Change/Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Titles Listed This Month | 24 Titles | Wide, crowded September slate |
| Lilo & Stitch Box Office | $1.0B | Biggest 2025 theatrical-to-stream event |
| Friendship Domestic Gross | $16M | Strong indie box-office-to-stream signal |
Nine of these picks lean festival/indie while streaming keeps big-ticket tentpoles alive.
Why These 10 September Releases Will Reshape Your Queue In 2025
These ten films show streaming’s double play in 2025: tentpole theatrical winners still drive platform sign-ups, while indie auteurs (A24, Garland, Spike Lee) turn streaming into awards-adjacent real estate. Expect reaction threads, meme cycles, and at least two titles that spark reappraisal pieces next month — which one will you stream first, react to, and send to everyone in your group chat?
Sources
- https://variety.com/lists/best-movies-streaming-september-2025/
- https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/01/arts/television/movies-tv-shows-september-2025-streaming.html
- https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-lists/best-movies-fall-2025-1235385697/

Jessica Morrison is a seasoned entertainment writer with over a decade of experience covering television, film, and pop culture. After earning a degree in journalism from New York University, she worked as a freelance writer for various entertainment magazines before joining red94.net. Her expertise lies in analyzing television series, from groundbreaking dramas to light-hearted comedies, and she often provides in-depth reviews and industry insights. Outside of writing, Jessica is an avid film buff and enjoys discovering new indie movies at local festivals.
