Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking Here are 27 of the best movies on Disney Plus that you can stream right now. Full of heart, magic and stunning animations, Encanto teaches us that you don’t need magic to be special - and importantly - loved. The Sound of Music is wholesome, family fun that’ll have you singing along to Edelweiss, The Lonely Goatherd, My Favourite Things and How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria (Gee, those nuns were a bit mean, hey?); there’s a reason it’s still so beloved almost 60 years later. The Rise of Skywalker picks up its lightsaber more or less where The Last Jedi left it: Rey is learning to master her Jedi powers under the guidance of General Leia Organa, Kylo Ren (Ben Solo) in on a quest to max out his connection with the Dark side, and Finn, Poe, BB-8, Rose, and our favourite Chewy, they’re all here! The Rise of Skywalker might not be the finale everyone was hoping for, but it’s still a fun way to spend your final hours inside George Lucas’ magnificent universe. The addition of The Rise of Skywalker rounds out the movie collection on Disney Plus. So you can now marathon every movie back to back, and in 4K no less.
Apple TV+ 7-day free trial: Stream Severance, CODA and more award-winning TV shows and moviesHayu 7-day free trial: Reality TV lovers can load up on the drama with hayu’s dedicated streaming serviceBinge 14-day FREE trial: Foxtel’s streaming service offering some of HBO’s most popular seriesPrime Video 30-day trial: Award-winning originals and shopping perksShudder 7-day trial: Dedicated horror service with blood-curdling originals
This is Nicole Kidman at her finest, with excellent performances from Ewan MacGregor as Christian and Jim Broadbent as the zany, larger-than-life host of the Moulin Rouge Harold Zidler. The soundtrack is a jukebox medley of classics from the likes of David Bowie, KISS, The Police, and the film is as every bit whimsical as you’d expect from Aussie powerhouse director Baz Luhrmann. It’s a real tearjerker but its star-studded cast (most before they were stars) and banging soundtrack (Creedence, Cat Stevens, The Temptations) make it more feelgood than not. The Rocketeer, like Indiana Jones before it, takes its inspiration from the rollicking Saturday morning serials of yore. We can’t pretend it’s anywhere near as good as Indy, but it does have a really cool jetpack and you probably haven’t seen it for 25 years. Johnny Depp plays a wobbly, drunken buffoon of a pirate that largely carries the film, while Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley provide the forbidden love angle. It’s a gorgeous but shallow, simple but rollicking adventure, that goes down easily when you want to switch your brain off. This is Pixar at its absolute best, heartbreaking and heartwarming in equal measure. Eschewing the green-screen sets and trade disputes of the prequels, The Force Awakens returns to the practical effects and rollicking adventures that defined the original trilogy. Some critics derided it as derivative… but that was pretty much the entire point. Adam Driver shines as the conflicted big-bad Kylo Ren, and Daisy Ridley, Oscar Issac and John Boyega ooze charisma as the unlikely heroic trio. It’s not as bold (or divisive) as Rian Johnston’s follow-up The Last Jedi, which arrives on Disney+ on December 26, but it captures the original spirit like nothing else. With Taika Waititi at the helm, there’s more quirky irreverence here than you’d expect from a film with a $180 million budget; there are moments when it feels like the most expensive Flight of the Conchords episode ever made. Cate Blanchet is fantastic as the scenery-chewing evil sister Hela, Hemsworth is funnier than ever as Thor, and Jeff Goldblum plays, well, Jeff Goldblum. It’s not only the funniest Marvel movie, it’s the best. The combined musical genius of Howard Ashman and Alan Menken make the 1991 Beauty and the Beast a golden classic that never gets old. While down-to-earth Belle may not be everyone’s favourite Disney Princess (I’m still somewhat torn between Ariel, Belle and Mulan), just listen to the opening number and you’ll be watching impatiently for the on-screen appearances of Lumiere, Chip and Mrs Pott in no time. If that ridiculous set-up doesn’t work for you, we’re very different people. Part Indiana Jones, part The Da Vinci Code, National Treasure holds no pretensions of being high art. It is, however, quite a bit of fun. Unless you’ve been hiding under a rock or have some serious resistance to FOMO, you’ve probably already watched Endgame at least once since its release. But who can get enough of the MCU right? Along with Endgame, you wouldn’t be the only one splurging on an Avengers movie marathon with the 4 preceding Avengers movies (as well as the 3 Captain America movies) also available on Disney+. So go ahead, we’re sure that Endgame will surely be worth another round of your screen time. The beloved flick was sorely missed from the Disney Plus launch library but finally got rolled out on 19 December 2019. So bring out the popcorn already, and maybe a glass of wine (or two). Before Jennifer Lawrence and Mystique became synonymous for fans of X-Men’s soft franchise reboot that began with X-Men: First Class, true X-Men fans grew up with Patrick Stewart’s Charles Xavier and Ian McKellen’s Magneto. If you miss the old Professor Xavier like I do, you can now binge-watch all the old X-Men movies in all their glory on Disney+. Plus, you can even indulge in some extra Hugh Jackman time with two solo Wolverine flicks also available (you won’t find the R-rated Logan though). If you want a refresher to get the hype starting a little early before the long-awaited Avatar 2 rolls out, you know what to watch. The 2019 version may have the star power of Beyoncé and Donald Glover, but our 90s hearts will forever belong to JTT, Rowan Atkinson and Jeremy Irons. Even better, you can watch another generation of children (and parents) fall under the perfect nanny’s spell with the follow-up Mary Poppins Returns. And if the sequel leaves you wishing there had been a Julie Andrews cameo, you can catch her starring in The Sound of Music. If that’s not enough, check out Saving Mr Banks, the story behind the many challenges Walt Disney faced before Mary Poppins made it to the big screen. As Andy heads off to college, Buzz, Woody and co. attempt to make a new life for themselves at the Sunnyside Day Care Centre. But under the tyrannical rule of Lots-O’-Huggin’ Bear, their seemingly idyllic second lease on life turns into a nightmare. Few films about talking toys touch on the tragedy of the human condition and the inevitable passage of time with this much poignancy. Amy Adams is charming as always and Jason Segel is hilarious in the lead human role, but it’s Flight of the Conchords’ Bret Mckenzie’s work as musical supervisor that elevates this to classic status. His tune, “Man or Muppet”, the film’s emotional core, won him an Oscar for best Original Song. It’s not quite the Rainbow Connection for a new generation, but it’s close. If you simply don’t have any better reason to watch Ice Age, hit play so you can at least check out the baby in Ice Age (you decide yourself whether he’ll grow up to be Adam Driver).