You may be busy putting up Halloween decorations and deciding which costume to wear, but there’s another task to handle on your immediate calendar—catching up on the many Netflix films about to expire from the online platform. As usual, November will result in the departure of a number of must-see films from the platform, including at least a few horror titles that are perfect for some pre-trick-or-treating scares. So get streaming now; the candy will still be there when you’re done.



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Get Rich or Die Tryin’ (Nov. 1)

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson stars in his own reverential biopic (directed by Jim Sheridan), which details his tumultuous childhood and rise to hip-hop stardom.

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Hard Candy (Nov. 1)

Ellen Page and Patrick Wilson both delivered breakthrough big-screen performances in this 2005 horror-thriller from director David Slade, about a pedophile who gets more than he bargained for from his latest would-be victim.

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Hugo (Nov. 1)

Martin Scorsese directs this enchanting 2011 children’s fable, about a 1930s boy (Asa Butterfield) who lives in Gare Montparnasse railway station in Paris, and who develops a complicated relationship with a toy store owner (Ben Kingsley).

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Ravenous (Nov. 1)

Guy Pearce and Robert Carlyle get into some seriously deranged—and blackly humorous—cannibal business in this 1999 cult genre effort from director Antonia Bird.

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The Legend of Hell House (Nov. 1)

A millionaire enlists a team of spiritualists and psychics to spend time at a haunted mansion—whose former owner was a six-foot-five serial killer—in this 1973 British chiller starring Roddy McDowall.

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The Matrix 1-3 (Nov. 1)

Keanu Reeves learns that real life is just a dream created by aliens, and then leads a revolution to save everyone from slumbering enslavement, in the Wachowskis’ groundbreaking sci-fi trilogy.

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Twilight (Nov. 1)

Robert Pattinson has gone on to do far better work (see, for example, this year’s Good Time and The Lost City of Z). Yet for a reminder about what first made him a superstar, check him out as brooding vampire hunk Edward Cullen—opposite Kirsten Stewart’s Bella Swan—in this 2008 blockbuster.

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Heavyweights (Nov. 5)

Ben Stiller is the lunatic new owner of a camp for overweight kids, where his hardcore regimen inevitably incites revolt, in this 1995 family film co-written by Judd Apatow.

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The Human Centipede: First Sequence (Nov. 15)

Still one of the most singularly difficult-to-watch films ever produced, Tom Six’s 2009 horror effort concerns three tourists who are kidnapped by an insane German surgeon and then stitched together to form the title creature.

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We Are Still Here (Nov. 15)

Barbara Crampton and Andrew Sensenig are parents who, after the death of their son, move to a new New England home only to discover that it already boasts some undead occupants in this supernatural horror film from director Ted Geoghegan.

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The Warlords (Nov. 17)

Jet Li’s general teams up with Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro’s bandits to help bring order to Civil War-wracked China in this 2007 wartime epic from director Peter Chan.

Nick Schager Nick Schager is a NYC-area film critic and culture writer with twenty years of professional experience writing about all the movies you love, and countless others that you don’t.

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