Entertainment

The 11 best fantasy movies and shows on Netflix in October 2019

"Recuérdameeee!!"

by Corey Plante
Pixar

Fantasy fiction takes us to mystical realms where heroes battle villains to save the world through strength of will and bravery, like Dark Crystal or The Lord of the Rings. In other cases, it means taking a fantastical twist on a more realistic world, like in The Magicians or Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Sometimes we dip into horror, sometimes we dip into the afterlife, but isn’t it all just different shades of fantasy? This October, consider dipping into one of the many fantasy worlds that Netflix has to offer.

Lord of the Rings author J.R.R. Tolkien would refer to as escapist literature. Just because it comes in video format doesn’t mean it’s not “literature,” right?

If you’re looking to step into mystical realms full of magic and the supernatural, here are the 11 best pieces of fantasy on Netflix, with a special emphasis on what’s new, original, and worth getting excited about this month.

11.Big Mouth

Existing at the bizarre cross-section of fantasy, horror, animation, and puberty is Big Mouth, a brilliant, hilarious show about how weird it is growing up. But in this world, hormones and other aspects of human development are personified by creatures that latch onto people like a devil whispering advice into your ear.

After the Season 2 finale explored the Department of Human Resources where all these hormone monsters and shame wizards come from, Season 3 takes a more chaotic, fun-loving approach. One episode steps back in time as the ghost of Duke Ellington recounts his childhood. Another explores toxic masculinity and its impact on kids today.

At every moment, Big Mouth has something interesting to say, and it does so with a bunch of farting and hairy monsters making dick jokes.

  • Big Mouth Season 3 will be released on Netflix October 4, 2019.

10. The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance

The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance returns to the world of Thra for a prequel series to Jim Henson and Frank Oz’s cult 1982 puppet fantasy film, The Dark Crystal. Generations before the original movie, three “Gelfling discover the terrible secret behind the Skeksis’ power” and “they set out on an epic journey to ignite the fires of rebellion and save their world.”

What’s a Gelfling? Who’s a Skeksis? It really doesn’t matter. The Dark Crystal always featured barely comprehensible lore with its magical vocabulary, but those puppets really pull at the heartstrings. Age of Resistance is a mesmerizing experience rife with beauty, heart, and humor.

9. She-Ra and the Princesses of Power

This Netflix reboot of the 1985 Filmation series feels like a woke Dungeons & Dragons adventure. In it, the teenager Adora inspires a rebellion against the evil Hordak and his Horde with a team of different Princesses of Power. Everyone has their strengths and weaknesses. Similar to other animated series like Avatar: The Last Airbender, this one’s a mature enough fantasy adventure for older audiences to thoroughly enjoy while still managing to remain kid-friendly.

Season 3 of She-Ra and the Princesses of Power just hit Netflix in early August, so consider that reason enough to move it higher up on your list.

8. Disenchantment

Longtime fans of The Simpsons who preferred Futurama’s approach to science fiction will find a lot to love in Netflix’s Disenchantment from Matt Groening. The fantasy series feels like Homer Simpson got a little too drunk and thought he might try doing a Game of Thrones recap podcast, and then somebody went and animated the whole thing. If you find Groening’s style of animated comedy a bit outdated or (forgive the vague pun) groanworthy, then maybe steer clear.

Broad City star Abbi Jacobson voices the lead character, Princess Tiabeanie — “Bean” for short. She’s disenchanted with her life as a teenaged princess slated for marriage when all she wants to do is rabble-rouse and drink. Her sidekicks include an elf named Elfo (Nat Faxon) who is similarly bored with his home among the other elves. (Think less Legolas and more Keebler when it comes to these guys.) There’s also Bean’s personal demon Luci (Eric Andre), assigned to corrupt her by some distant villains. Their misadventures get as bizarre as you might expect with a thrilling Season 1 finale that leads right into Season 2’s rollicking new adventure.

  • Disenchantment Season 2 only just hit Netflix on September 20, 2019.

7. The Good Place

In what genre do you place a show about people in the afterlife navigating the harrowing social circles that exist there? The Good Place is a brilliant enigma of modern television, a supernatural sitcom about regular people trying to survive post-death. Kristen Bell stars as Eleanor Shellstrop, a genuinely bad person who may have accidentally wound up in the idyllic titular “good place” after her death.

But as she makes friends and explores the afterlife, she slowly realizes that death might just be even more complicated than life. Like Parks and Recreations before it and The Office before that, The Good Place is NBC’s widely-loved comedy series of the moment. Except this one’s unlike anything else that’s come before it.

  • The Good Place Season 3 only just hit Netflix in late August, and with Season 4 now airing on NBC this fall, it’s time to catch up.

6. Chilling Adventures of Sabrina

Most millennials probably remember Sabrina the Teenage Witch, a light magical comedy series about a young woman who learns she’s a half-witch from her witch aunts, and they live with a sassy black cat that can talk. Netflix’s Chilling Adventures of Sabrina is something totally different.

Though it has almost all of the same characters, Chilling Adventures is a much darker tale based on the Archie Comics series of the same name. Season 1 explores the dark adventures of Sabrina Spellman, a half-mortal, half-witch who lives with her two aunts and cousin in the quiet — but spooky — town of Greendale. On her 16th birthday, she’s supposed to sign the Book of the Beast, surrendering her soul and free will to the devil in exchange for power.

But when Sabrina rejects this life, instead choosing to live in both the mortal and witch worlds, the supernatural threats keep coming and they don’t stop coming. All of it is devilishly good fun.

5. The Magicians

What up nerds. What if you took Harry Potter, but instead they’re grad school students and they, get this, have sex and do drugs!? That’s essentially the starting premise of Lev Grossman’s best-selling book trilogy. Like Game of Thrones long before it, Syfy’s television adaptation has long outpaced the books and explored new avenues in interesting ways. It’ll continue to do so as Season 5 begins this January.

Quentin Coldwater is an anxious grad student who enrolls at Brakebills College for Magical Pedagogy, and he’s our way into this bizarre magical universe that feels like an alternate reality to our own, a modern fantasy infused with magic. As the series evolves over time, it broadens into an ensemble adventure where a group of friends tests their bonds and fights against all manner of gods and monsters that threaten them — and the rest of humanity.

4. Coco

What better time of year is there to celebrate the land of the dead by watching Pixar’s Coco? Spinning off of Mexican mythology related to Día de Muertos, aka “The Day of the Dead,” Coco is a visually stunning adventure focused on Miguel, a young aspiring musician who travels to the land of the dead seeking help from his deceased musician great-great-grandfather, all so he can return home and reverse his family’s ban on music.

Unsurprisingly, the music is one of the best parts of Coco, but the character and environment design is nothing short of spectacular and stunning. If you haven’t seen Coco yet, doing so at some time in the next two months is a necessity.

  • Coco is scheduled to leave Netflix forever on November 29, 2019.

3. Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and Return of the King

For any real nerds out there, Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings movie trilogy deserves a rewatch marathon at least once every other year, and for the first time in a long time, Netflix is about to give us something very close to that opportunity in one streaming platform. And because this comes just a few short months after the Tolkien biopic hit theaters, you should fast-track your next bingeful journey to Middle-earth.

On September 1, Netflix will add The Two Towers and Return of the King to its library. Why couldn’t they spring for Fellowship of the Ring, too? Maybe because they’re spending so much money keeping Friends until the end of the year. They really bungled this for sure.

Lord of the Rings is the epic trilogy written and published by J.R.R. Tolkien, a veteran of the First World War who studied and taught at Oxford University. All modern fantasy owes everything to Tolkien’s depiction of Middle-earth. Everything from Dungeons & Dragons to Game of Thrones wouldn’t exist without Tolkien. And Peter Jackson’s faithful and inspired trilogy of movies stands as one of the best novel-to-film adaptations of all time.

For anyone who complained loudly online about the Great Super-Dark Battle of Winterfell in the final Game of Thrones season, maybe you should revisit the dazzlingly well-lit Battle of Helm’s Deep in The Two Towers. That’s only one of many reasons to rewatch these fantastic films.

2. Mary Poppins Returns

Despite a few vague and unsettling comparisons to It’s Pennywise the Dancing Clown in how she entices children named Georgie, Mary Poppins is a cherished icon of Disney’s storied history, and the 2018 continuations of the story, Mary Poppins Returns, is a magical spectacle.

Decades after her first visit, Poppins swoops back into the real world to help the Banks siblings and Michael’s children at a trying time. Full of magic, music, wonder, and Lin Manuel Miranda, Mary Poppins Returns is fun for the whole family. It also just might be the single last Disney film to be on Netflix before they all disappear forever to join Disney+ this November.

1. Mary and the Witch’s Flower

Anime is chock-full of oddly specific sub-genres that make Netflix sub-categories look lame by comparison. Mary and the Witch’s Flower is a 2017 Japanese anime feature film all about a school for witches and wizards. (Yes, magic schools are a thing in anime.) The art and animation style of Mary and the Witch’s Flower only enhances the sense of magicality and theatricality to the whole thing.

This is the debut film of Studio Ponoc, which is founded by veterans of Studio Ghibli (Spirited Away, My Neighbor Totoro, Ponyo). Mary is a bright young girl bored with her life as a regular person in a secluded community while her parents are busy, but when she finds an incredibly rare and magical flower by accident, it sends her on a perilous and magical journey. A rich and colorful tale, Mary and the Witch’s Flower should be essential viewing for any fans of anime fantasy.

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