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Excitement mounts for seven November 2025 debuts. This month matters because streamers are fast-tracking Oscar contenders and family-friendly blockbusters into homes before the holidays. Netflix’s Frankenstein arrives Nov. 7 with awards buzz, while Disney+ puts Marvel’s summer hit on-demand Nov. 5, shifting who actually watches at home. One surprise pick here quietly crossed $100M at the box office and could steal Thanksgiving viewing. Which of these seven should you queue first?
Why these 7 November 2025 streams could upend your holiday watchlist
- Netflix releases Frankenstein on Nov. 7; impact: awards-season attention.
- Disney+ adds The Fantastic Four: First Steps on Nov. 5; impact: blockbuster viewers.
- HBO Max premieres Materialists on Nov. 7; impact: A24 indie hits $100M worldwide.
- Disney+ debuts Freakier Friday on Nov. 12; impact: family streaming spike.
The 7 picks that redefine streaming conversations this November
1 – Frankenstein (Netflix, Nov. 7): Del Toro’s Oscar Hopeful Arrives
Guillermo del Toro’s passion project lands on Netflix Nov. 7 after festival praise and strong critical momentum. If you care about awards chatter, this is the one to watch first.
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2 – Materialists (HBO Max, Nov. 7): The A24 Romantic Hit That Surprised Box Offices
Celine Song’s film crossed $100M worldwide and now hits HBO Max Nov. 7, combining indie cred with mainstream reach. If you loved smart romantic dramas, this one likely scratches that itch.
3 – Freakier Friday (Disney+, Nov. 12): A Nostalgia Sequel Built For Holiday Bingeing
Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis return in a sequel that leans into family viewers and social-media nostalgia. Expect big streaming numbers around Nov. 12 and lots of watch-party memes. You’ll probably rewatch the funniest scene.
4 – Eddington (HBO Max, Nov. 14): Ari Aster’s Strange Turn Lands In Living Rooms
Ari Aster’s black-comic oddity arrives on HBO Max Nov. 14 after a modest theatrical run. The film’s weirdness makes it perfect for water-cooler debates-watch with someone who likes to argue.
5 – Train Dreams (Netflix, Nov. 21): A Quiet Best-Picture Contender For Serious Viewers
Netflix rolls out this critically praised adaptation Nov. 21, a subtle, melancholy film that could convert awards watchers into streamed-night devotees. Short, resonant scenes linger long after credits.
6 – The Fantastic Four: First Steps (Disney+, Nov. 5): The Blockbuster You’ll Rewatch Immediately
Marvel’s summer hit hits Disney+ Nov. 5 after a $521M global theatrical haul; it’s built to dominate holiday streaming. Expect family groups and comic fans to queue it first.

7 – Mickey 17 (Prime Video, Nov. 26): High-Concept Sci‑Fi For Late-November Viewing
Bong Joon Ho’s star-driven sci‑fi arrives on Prime Video Nov. 26, offering the kind of high-concept spectacle that sparks thinkpieces. Save this for a weekend viewing and a long post-film chat.
The key streaming numbers behind November’s biggest premieres
| KPI | Value + Unit | Change/Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Box office (Fantastic Four) | $521M | Drives huge immediate Disney+ viewership |
| Box office (Materialists) | $100M | Unusual indie scale boosts HBO Max buzz |
| Box office (Eddington) | $14M | Low theatrical, high streaming potential |
What will these 7 November streams mean for your 2025 watchlist?
These premieres turn November into a mini streaming festival: awards hopefuls, family sequels, and one big Marvel spectacle all land in weeks. Expect streaming charts to shift and conversation threads to explode over Thanksgiving. Which of these seven will you queue first, and who will you force your relatives to watch?
Sources
- https://variety.com/lists/best-movies-streaming-november-2025/

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.
