The 14 Best Movies You Can Stream On Disney+ Right Now
Fans of Disney’s extensive animation, Marvel, and Star Wars libraries already know about the wealth of content available for streaming on Disney+. If you know already your way around classics starring the likes of Mary Poppins and Iron Man, take a look at 14 other family-friendly films on Disney+ worth checking out.
1. Hidden Figures (2016)
The lives of NASA’s unsung heroes are celebrated in this story of three NASA employees (Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, and Janelle Monáe) who helped bring astronaut John Glenn into orbit during the Space Race of the 1960s. The nonprofit organization Journeys in Film prepared a school curriculum based on the movie.
2. West Side Story (2021)
Steven Spielberg updates the classic 1957 musical for a modern age, with star-crossed lovers Ansel Elgort and Rachel Zegler igniting a New York City turf war. Rita Moreno, the co-star of the 1961 film version, also appears; Spielberg filmed several scenes in Spanish without subtitles to better represent the culture of the characters.
3. Three Men and a Baby (1987)
Ted Danson, Steve Guttenberg, and Tom Selleck star in this ’80s hit about three single guys tasked with caring for a baby that suddenly appears at their door. The film was the subject of an urban legend early on in which some people believed you could see a ghost in one scene. (The apparition was, in fact, just a cardboard cutout of Ted Danson’s character.) The 1990 sequel, Three Men and a Little Lady, is also on the streamer.
4. Remember the Titans (2000)
Denzel Washington brings his formidable screen presence to this true story about a racially-integrated high school football team in 1970s Virginia that has to outmaneuver both the opposing teams and the prejudices of a community. While based in fact, the real-life Titans of Alexandria weren’t exactly underdogs. They went undefeated in their 1971 season.
5. National Treasure (2004)
Nicolas Cage is Benjamin Franklin Gates, an amateur cryptologist who discovers the location of a lost treasure is well within reach—if he can manage to steal the Declaration of Independence—in National Treasure. Thanks to events depicted in the movie, some visitors to the National Archives have asked if there really is a secret map on the back of the document. (Answer: nope.) The 2007 sequel, National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets, is also on the service.
6. The Muppet Movie (1979)
Take a road trip with Kermit and company in their first full-length feature, which sees the frog on his way to Hollywood. Steve Martin and Orson Welles make cameos; so does a very young Tim Burton, playing a puppeteer in the film’s finale.
7. TRON (1982)
Jeff Bridges finds himself trapped inside a computer in this cutting-edge and neon-lit look at a cyber world that marks some of the first use of computer effects in film. Writer and director Steve Lisberger was inspired by a demo reel of computer animation and the video game Pong. The belated sequel, 2010’s TRON: Legacy, is also available.
8. Return to Oz (1985)
This sort-of sequel to 1939’s The Wizard of Oz was considered audacious upon its release. The movie finds Dorothy back in trouble and surrounded by a new group of friends, including Tik-Tok and Jack Pumpkinhead. Star Fairuza Balk was cast after 1000 girls auditioned.
9. Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
Disney and Warner Bros. properties met in this live-action and animated hit that features Bob Hoskins as a private detective out to prove the popular ‘toon rabbit is innocent of murder. Charles Fleischer, the voice of Roger, wore a Roger costume on set while providing the voice so that Hoskins and the other actors could react to something.
10. The Princess Bride (1987)
Fairy tales got a makeover courtesy of screenwriter William Goldman, who adapted his own book about a farmhand named Westley (Cary Elwes) who looks to rescue his sweet Princess Buttercup (Robin Wright) from the clutches of Prince Humperdinck (Chris Sarandon). Encounters with a giant, a Spanish fencing expert, and other colorful characters follow. Elwes was a trooper, filming many of his scenes with a broken toe he sustained after a bumpy ATV ride on the set.
11. Miracle (2004)
There are many vintage Kurt Russell films on Disney+, including 1969’s The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes. But the best is probably this rendition of the true story behind the United States hockey team’s unlikely win against the Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics. The game is considered by some to be the greatest upset in sports history.
12. Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989)
Rick Moranis conducts a science experiment that turns his children into ant-sized little people in this family-friendly hit. The idea was courtesy of Stuart Gordon (1985’s Re-Animator), who was slated to direct but fell ill and was replaced by Joe Johnston.
13. Secretariat (2010)
The adventures of one of the most winning horses in racing gets the biopic treatment: Diane Lane stars as a woman who takes over her father’s stable and eventually comes across a horse destined for equine glory. When the great steed’s life ended in 1989, the veterinarian claimed its heart was 22 pounds—twice the size of a normal horse ticker.
14. Willow (1988)
George Lucas produced this fable about a man named Willow Ufgood (Warwick Davis), who appears destined to protect a small child and overthrow the reign of the evil Queen Bavmorda. Lucas wrote the film especially for Davis, who starred as Wicket the Ewok in 1983’s Return of the Jedi. It was his first onscreen role out of a costume.
A version of this story ran in 2019; it has been updated for 2022.