So,Watch Hugas Onlinewhat's everyone been watchingthis week? Hmmmm?
Just to get a sense of what everyone's streaming, we've used data from streaming aggregator Reelgood, which gathers viewership numbers from hundreds of streaming services in the U.S. and UK. Each week, the most streamed TV shows and movies come down to a few elements — sheer buzz, a big finale, smart marketing, star power, critical acclaim, or word-of-mouth that leads uninterested people to finally watch it out of spite.
This week, it's all about House of the Dragon. The Game of Thronesprequel shot to the top of our list, surprising nobody after a massive premiere. Marvel's She-Hulk: Attorney At Lawalso had a strong debut. Other newcomers to the list include horror films like Orphan: First Killand The Black Phone.
But just because a lot of people are watching something doesn't make it...good. Here they are, the 10 most streamed TV shows and movies of the week, where to watch them, and what Mashable critics thought.
There is simply no denying the power of Game of Thrones, a franchise that has roared back into our lives with the release of prequel series House of the Dragon. Taking place nearly 200 years before Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen existed, House of the Dragon follows House Targaryen at the height of its power in Westeros. There's just one small problem: King Viserys (Paddy Considine) doesn't have a male heir. With the line of succession in question, you can bet on scheming, bloodshed, and mayhem. Oh, and many, many dragons. Let fire and blood reign! — Belen Edwards, Entertainment Reporter
SEE ALSO: Who's who in 'House of the Dragon': The Targaryen family treeWhat we thought:If you're worried about House of the Dragonafter getting burned by the final season of Game of Thrones,don't be. HBO's epic new series is excellent through and through, juggling memorable characters, high fantasy, and intense emotions with practiced ease. You'll be sucked in faster than you can say "Dracarys." — B.E.
How to watch: House of the Dragon is now streaming on HBO Max. New episodes premiere Sundays at 9 p.m. ET.
The newest hero to burst into the MCU is Jennifer Walters, aka She-Hulk (Tatiana Maslany). She's a lawyer who just happens to be a Hulk, but she'd much rather do good through the legal system than through smashing things. As Jennifer grapples with life, love, and pressing questions about Captain America, she'll team up with MCU mainstays like her cousin Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo) and Wong (Benedict Wong). It's a fun time all around, and Maslany is as charming as humanly possible in her double role. — B.E.
What we thought:She-Hulk: Attorney at Lawis unlike any Marvel show we've seen before. Yes, it's the story of a hero — Jennifer Walters, aka She-Hulk (Tatiana Maslany) — discovering their powers. But this half-hour comedy about a lawyer-turned-Hulk has just as much in common with Ally McBealor Legally Blondeas it does with WandaVisionor Ms. Marvel. It's a smaller-scale take on the MCU with an irreverent, self-referential tone, making for a refreshing change of pace from the MCU's other TV offerings. — B.E.
How to watch: She-Hulk: Attorney At Law is now streaming on Disney+, with new episodes every Thursday.
Director Dan Trachtenberg's Predatorprequel still has huge buzz nearly a month after hitting Hulu. Set in 1719 in the Comanche Nation, Preyis all about Naru (Amber Midthunder), a skilled warrior and hunter whose community is threatened by an advanced alien (yep) predator. So, she sets out to confront it in one hell of a showdown. — Shannon Connellan, UK Editor
What we thought:With spectacular action, compelling characters, and an engrossing story, Preyabsolutely deserves the hype that comes with a large audience. It's a crime that it isn't getting a theatrical release, but do not think for a second that this is a case of a studio dumping a mediocre film direct to streaming. — B.E.
How to watch:Preyis now streaming on Hulu in the U.S. and Disney+ in the UK.
There's something wrong with Esther... again. Isabelle Fuhrman reprises her role from 2009's Orphan in this prequel that takes us deep into Esther's twisted origin story. Julia Stiles and Rossif Sutherland join Furhman as the couple who adopts Esther, but just as in Orphan, their lives take a turn for the horrific pretty quickly. — B.E.
What we thought:This sinister sequel can't compare to its older sister flick, but it's not without its own ghoulish goodies. Fuhrman is wickedly entertaining in her repulsive reprisal. The turnabout of concept and tone is clever, shifting from a retread of Orphanto a re-imagining of its titular terror with a knowing wink and an unapologetic thirst for chaos. — Kristy Puchko, Film Editor
How to watch: Orphan: First Kill is now streaming on Paramount+.
Better Call Saulhas concluded forever, with the series finale airing after six seasons. So people are naturally streaming the hell out of it. In Vince Gilligan's Breaking Badprequel, Bob Odenkirk takes on the titular role of Albuquerque lawyer Jimmy McGill aka Saul Goodman, joined by the ever-talented Rhea Seehorn as dynamite lawyer Kim Wexler, Giancarlo Esposito as formidable drug distributor Gus Fring, and Jonathan Banks as everyone's favourite fixer Mike Ehrmantraut. Of course, along the way he meets Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul), but you'll have to watch to find out how. — S.C.
What we thought:For several key players, the stakes have never been higher. Reputations, relationships, and lives are on the line, and mounting tension in the first two episodes alone exposes seldom-seen sides of characters we thought we had all figured out. — Nicole Gallucci, former Senior Editor
How to watch:Better Call Saulis now streaming on Netflix and on AMC+.
Neil Gaiman's The Sandmanis dominating streaming sessions right now. The 10-episode comic adaptation from showrunner Allan Heinberg journeys through worlds, human and otherwise, primarily hinging on the exploits of Morpheus, the Dream King (Tom Sturridge). When Morpheus is captured by mortals and his sacred objects stolen, terrible things begin to happen both in our world and realms of fantasy.
SEE ALSO: 5 ways Netflix's 'The Sandman' is different from the comicsBut this just means we get to meet a whole range of weird and wonderful characters, from Kirby Howell-Baptiste as Death; Gwendoline Christie as Lucifer; Vivienne Acheampong as the librarian Lucienne; Jenna Coleman as the kickass Johanna Constantine; Sanjeev Bhaskar and Asim Chaudhry as murder-bound brothers Cain and Abel; David Thewlis as the exceptionally creepy John Dee; and so many more. — S.C.
What we thought:If you've been dreaming of a perfect onscreen version of Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, you're going to have to dream a bit longer, and a bit harder. Netflix's take on the brilliant comic book series has its moments of excellence, but it also suffers from uneven pacing and mountains of exposition. — B.E.
How to watch:The Sandmanis now streaming on Netflix.
Vampires do not see Jamie Foxx coming inDay Shift, a new action thriller from John Wickstuntman J.J. Perry in his directorial debut. Foxx plays Bud Jablonski, who uses a pool cleaning job to cover up the fact that he's part of an international union of vampire hunters — two of which are played by Snoop Dogg and Dave Franco. if you're looking for a big action movie with vampires and big names, give it a spin. — S.C.
How to watch: Day Shift is now streaming on Netflix.
Ethan Hawke terrifies in The Black Phone, a horror flick based on a short story by Joe Hill. Hawke plays the Grabber, a part-time magician who kidnaps boys and keeps them locked in his basement. His latest victim? 13-year-old Finney (Mason Thames), a frightened child whose ordeal brings him face to face with the dead: Finney is able to communicate with the Grabber's previous victims through a phone in the basement. Will this lifeline — or maybe deathline is more accurate — be enough to save him? — B.E.
What we thought:The Black Phonefeels like a miss almost across the board. For years, Hill has been forging his own brand of horror with books and interesting adaptations (Horns, NOS4A2, Locke & Key). This is the weakest yet. A story that feels like he was playing in his father's sandbox to create, trying to formulate something grittier and his own, is puffed up with cheap '70s nostalgia for suburban naivete, old-school technology, and a more casual attitude toward kids cursing and hurling slurs. — K.P.
How to watch: The Black Phone is now streaming on Peacock.
The classic "twin swap" trope gets a psychological thriller twist in Netflix's Echoes. Michelle Monaghan plays Leni and Gina, two twins who have swapped lives since childhood. When one of them goes missing, their double act threatens to get entirely exposed. There are twists, there are turns, and there are twin shenanigans of the silliest degree. — B.E.
How to watch: Echoes is now streaming on Netflix.
Well, things didn't work out quitelike they thought for our three podcasting heroes at the end of Season 1 of Only Murders in the Building,and Season 2 plunges them into a whole new mystery at the Arconia.
SEE ALSO: Is the liverwurst and marmalade sandwich from 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 2 as good as it sounds?Martin Short, Steve Martin, and Selena Gomez are back as Oliver Putnam, Charles-Haden Savage, and Mabel Mora, three true crime podcast superfans and neighbors in a fancy Upper West Side apartment building who become entangled in each other's lives after murder comes a-knocking. In Season 2, Cara Delevingne joins the cast as artist and gallerist Alice, and Amy Schumer (as herself) moves into Sting's apartment. There are some big questions this time around: Who is Glitter Guy? And why is everyone always wearing sweaters? — S.C.
What we thought:Only Murdersfeels fundamentally messier in Season 2. We're learning more about the OMITBhosts; we're learning about their various neighbors; and we're getting to know a number of new arrivals alongside the rest. It's great stuff from a people perspective. But too often, that character-forward approach leaves the mystery, and by extension the whodunit puzzle we try to solve at home, to languish.— Adam Rosenberg, former Senior Entertainment Reporter
How to watch:Only Murders in the Buildingis now streaming on Hulu in the U.S. and Disney+ in the UK.
* Asterisks indicate the writeup is adapted from another Mashable article.
Topics Streaming
LEGO has revealed its Super Mario launch lineupBoston Dynamics' robot dog Spot is for now saleLyft pledges to go allMaisie Williams and Sophie Turner's latest Twitter exchange may be the sweetest yetEU is investigating Apple Pay and App Store for breaking competition rulesArizona fires seen fuming from spaceMIT unveils wearable guides for the visually impairedFacebook drops, YouTube rises as a source of U.S. news41 times Stephen King's dog Molly was the most evil beast on the internetJuneteenth Google Doodle: 'Let us march on til victory is won'Kim Kardashian wants people to stop prioritizing guns over children's livesWhat to expect at WWDC 2020: Plenty of new features across all Apple devicesGoogle Meet gets its own tab in your phone's GmailEnjoy two brilliantly colorful views of distant nebulae, from HubbleMysterious figure walking across a golf course perplexes the internetThe rise of 'Animal Crossing': Game changer or just another quarantine quirk?Kim Kardashian wants people to stop prioritizing guns over children's livesTwo lucky women had the DisneySassy toddler does NOT want to hear it from any adultWhat is Juneteenth and how to take action on Freedom Day Sometimes the Pie Just Calls Your Name by Rick Bragg “First of All I’m Naked”: On the Collected Poems of Michael Lally Inheriting a Legacy Redux: The Taxman Cometh The #MeToo Poem That Brought Down Korea's Most Revered Poet A Black Artist Named White by Kerry James Marshall Whither the Angel in ‘Angels in America’? Gertrude Stein's Mutual Portraiture Society Contraband Flesh: On Zora Neale Hurston’s Barracoon by Autumn Womack Keeping Tabs on the ’Loids Cooking with Émile Zola by Valerie Stivers Seeing Beyond the Tip of Your Nose David Hockney’s Improbable Inspirations Who Gets to Be “Brooklyn Born”? Listening to Harold Bloom’s Laugh and DeLillo’s Bronx Accent Nietzsche Wishes You an Ambivalent Mother’s Day by John Kaag and Skye C. Cleary What Our Contributors Are Reading This Month by The Paris Review May ’68: Posters of the Revolution You, Too, Can Live in Norman Mailer’s House Joan Quigley, Ronald Reagan’s Guide to the Stars by Jessica Weisberg
2.5298s , 10230.8828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Hugas Online】,Evergreen Information Network