The movie studio at the center of The Player, Robert Altman's searing, hilarious, prescient Hollywood satire, has a memorable slogan: Movies, now more than ever. Perhaps, during the coronavirus pandemic and strict social distancing guidelines, Netflix will want to co-opt that motto for itself.

“You can imagine, all viewing is up. It’s up on Netflix, on CNN, on television in general,” Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos told CNN on Sunday. “The system has been very robust and can help out a lot of people. People certainly are watching a lot more Netflix. As Governor [Andrew] Cuomo said so beautifully, the best thing you can do is stay at home. We are trying hard to help.”

To that end, here are some highlights from Netflix's forthcoming April lineup of original films, television shows, documentaries, and licensed titles.

Can't Hardly Wait (April 1)

A quintessential late '90s teen comedy with a soundtrack that could keep Zoom karaoke parties going late into the quarantined night.

The Social Network and Molly's Game (April 1)

Two Aaron Sorkin movies for the price of one. Let's start with The Social Network, an unimpeachable classic that won Sorkin his only Oscar so far and remains as compulsively rewatchable now as it was a decade ago. (A thought for another day: Is it possible we haven't done enough to make Andrew Garfield into his generation's most in-demand actor?) It isn't entirely fair to compare Molly's Game, Sorkin's directorial debut, to one of the best films released in the last decade, so let's not even bother—and instead focus on what really works in this mostly mixed bag: Sorkin's run amok dialogue, an on-fire Jessica Chastain, and two scenery devouring supporting performances from Michael Cera (playing an actor not-so-loosely based on Tobey Maguire) and Succession favorite Jeremy Strong.

Road to Perdition (April 1):

Much ado was made last year about Sam Mendes, both as 1917 made a late charge through awards season and as his controversial debut, American Beauty, turned 20 years old. Road to Perdition was the long-awaited and less-remembered follow-up to American Beauty. But it's worth revisiting now for a number of reasons, including but not limited to an against-type Tom Hanks, Paul Newman's final live-action film role, and Daniel Craig in an early, pre-Bond role as a sniveling sociopath.

The Matrix films (April 1)

All three films from the Wachowski siblings arrive on Netflix, well in advance of The Matrix 4.

Tigertail (April 10)

Master of None and Parks and Recreation creative whiz Alan Yang makes the leap to feature films with this autobiographical, decades-spanning drama that stars Tzi Ma and Christine Ko.

Extraction (April 24)

If watching Spenser Confidential has grown tiresome, here comes Extraction, which casts Chris Hemsworth as a mercenary who has to kill a bunch of bad guys.

The Artist (April 25)

Is it time to reevaluate The Artist, which went from being a well-reviewed drama to an almost instantaneous punchline whose Oscar wins seemed to represent the Academy falling victim to its worst instincts? That's for viewers to decide. But presuming everyone is still locked at home by the end of April, at least there'll be some time to reconsider.

What's New on Netflix in April 2020

April 1