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From megafranchises to dramatic biopics, there are plenty of options ready to stream. The 21 best movies on Starz to watch again and again
From mega-franchises to dramatic biopics, there are plenty of options ready to stream.
The 21 best movies on Starz to watch again and again
From mega-franchises to dramatic biopics, there are plenty of options ready to stream.
By Ilana Gordon
Ilana Gordon is an entertainment, culture, and comedy writer originally from Connecticut. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
EW's editorial guidelines
and Kevin Jacobsen
on August 19, 2025 08:26AM EDT
Paul Rudd as George Gergenblatt and Jennifer Aniston as Linda Gergenblatt in 'Wanderlust'; Jeremy Renner as Staff Sergeant William James in 'The Hurt Locker'; Tom Cruise as John Anderton in 'Minority Report'. Credit:
Gemma La Mana/Universal Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection; Jonathan Olley/Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection; 20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett Collection.
Wondering what film to watch? The answer is written in the Starz. The platform has curated an impressive collection of the best films from the 20th and 21st centuries, and the only thing standing between you and a quality movie is a login screen.
Also struggling with decision-making fatigue? Don't sweat it — we here at EW have curated a list of our favorite features from nearly every genre. Here are the 21 best movies streaming on Starz.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Adam and Seth Rogen as Kyle in '50/50'.
Chris Helcermanas-Benge/Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection
If you're looking for a lighthearted, romantic romp, *50/50* is not the movie for you. Guaranteed to make you ugly cry and call your loved ones, this black comedy about falling in love in the middle of cancer treatment is beautifully written and acted, and has a lot to say about maternal, platonic, and romantic relationships. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars opposite Seth Rogen, who also executive produces. (The script is based on screenwriter Will Reiser's actual cancer battle, and the character of Kyle is based on Rogen, who is real-life friends with Reiser.)
The film's subject matter could have resulted in a saccharine sob-fest, but EW's critic writes that the jokes and energy Rogen & Co. bring to the project helps evoke a "mash of the sweet and the bracingly coarse, that sells this unusual downer/upper of a life-and-death comedy." *—Ilana Gordon*
Where to watch *50/50*: Starz
**EW grade: **B+ (read the review)
**Director: **Jonathan Levine
**Cast: **Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen, Anna Kendrick, Bryce Dallas Howard, Anjelica Huston
At Middleton (2013)
Andy GarcÃa as George Hartman and Vera Farmiga as Edith Martin in 'At Middleton'.
Young adults finding love at college is a rom-com trope as old as the genre itself. Two parents bonding in the middle of taking their teenagers on a college campus tour, however, is not a film premise you see every day. In *At Middleton*, Andy GarcÃa and Vera Farmiga play two married, middle-aged parents trying to support their children through the college selection process.
Edith (Farmiga) is there with her ambitious daughter, Audrey (played by her younger sister, Taissa Farmiga); George (GarcÃa) is there with his unmotivated son, Conrad. After Edith and George are separated from their tour, they explore the campus together and find themselves connecting with each other and reconnecting with themselves. A true indie, the ending is far from the tidy, conclusive fare generally found in romantic comedies, but it's the perfect way to tie up this slice of life film. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *At Middleton*: Starz
**Director: **Adam Rodgers
**Cast:** Andy GarcÃa, Vera Farmiga, Taissa Farmiga, Spencer Lofranco, Peter Riegert, Tom Skerritt
Back to the Future (1985)
Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly and Christopher Lloyd as Dr. Brown in 'Back to the Future Part II'.
Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection
A high schooler travels into the past via DeLorean, meets his parents when they were his age, and nearly causes a rift that prevents his existence — a tale as old as time! Robert Zemeckis' beloved sci-fi comedy may have an inherently fantastical premise, but what's helped it endure decades later is its foundation of authentic humanity, thanks in large part to Michael J. Fox's endearing performance. His Marty McFly is plucky in the face of unusual circumstances, and his partnership with his friend and mentor Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) makes them one of the all-time great cinematic duos. *—Kevin Jacobsen*
Where to watch *Back to the Future*: Starz through Aug. 31
**Director: **Robert Zemeckis
**Cast: **Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson, Crispin Glover
Bombshell (2019)
Charlize Theron as Megyn Kelly, Nicole Kidman as Gretchen Carlson, and Margot Robbie as Kayla Pospisil in 'Bombshell'. Hilary B. Gayle/Lionsgate
One of the best news stories to come out of Fox in the 2010s was one that took place under the media conglomerate's own roof. *Bombshell* is the story of how women at Fox News — led by longtime network personality Gretchen Carlson (Nicole Kidman) — fought back against the sexual harassment they experienced from the company's Chairman and CEO, Roger Ailes. Charlize Theron stars as former Fox personality Megyn Kelly, and Margot Robbie plays Kayla, a composite character meant to represent the many other Fox employees who accused Ailes of mistreatment.
The film came out three years after Carlson first sued Ailes, and only two years after #MeToo conversations went mainstream. EW's critic writes that "*Bombshell* belongs to its three main female stars. It's their fierce, finely shaded performances that transcend the film's drab visual style and drier episodic moments — not just by speaking truth to power, but by confronting the audience's own ideas of who the right to do that belongs to." *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Bombshell*: Starz
**EW grade: **B+ (read the review)
**Director: ** Jay Roach
**Cast: **Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, Margot Robbie, John Lithgow, Kate McKinnon, Connie Britton, Malcolm McDowell, Allison Janney
The Breakfast Club (1985)
Ally Sheedy as Allison Reynolds and Molly Ringwald as Claire Standish in 'The Breakfast Club'.
Universal/Courtesy Everett
Teenage angst of the '80s variety is on full display in *The Breakfast Club*, an indie coming-of-age dramedy about five high school students who share a memorable Saturday detention together. Writer-director John Hughes knows his way around a teenage trope, but while the film's characters are easily and intentionally put into boxes (the brain, the athlete, the basket case, the princess, and the criminal) their inner lives and the connections they make elevate the story so it's far more than just another teen movie. *The Breakfast Club* is the second movie Hughes ever directed and, as EW proudly claims, it's "the greatest high school movie of all time." *—I.G.*
Where to watch *The Breakfast Club*: Starz through Aug. 31
**Director: **John Hughes
**Cast: **Emilio Estevez, Paul Gleason, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy
Erin Brockovich (2000)
Julia Roberts as Erin Brockovich in 'Erin Brockovich'.
Julia Roberts and Steven Soderbergh ushered cinema into the new millennium with a crowd pleaser: *Erin Brockovich* is a legal drama based on one woman's true story advocating on behalf of a community affected by groundwater contamination. Roberts plays Brockovich, an unemployed single mom who takes a job at a law office, discovers negligence by a California power company, and decides to make it everyone's problem.
Soderbergh performs some of his best directorial magic here, synthesizing the case's jargon-y subject matter into a confident and inspiring story of empathy, purpose, and self-discovery. EW's critic writes, "The arc of the tale may be conventional, but Roberts, in her most forceful dramatic performance, allows us to take in every moment through fresh, impassioned eyes."*—I.G.*
Where to watch *Erin Brockovich*: Starz
**EW grade:** (Read the review)
**Director: **Steven Soderbergh
**Cast: **Julia Roberts, Albert Finney, Aaron Eckhart, Marg Helgenberger, Peter Coyote
The Five-Year Engagement (2012)
Emily Blunt as Violet Barnes and Jason Segel as Tom Solomon in 'The Five-Year Engagement'.
Glen Wilson/Universal
Proposals are supposed to serve as the preamble to marriage, but in the romantic comedy *The Five-Year Engagement*, one couple's extended engagement ends up pushing them farther apart. After Tom (Jason Segel) and Violet (Emily Blunt) get engaged, marriage and a happily ever after spent in San Francisco seem inevitable. But when Violet's career forces the couple to move to Michigan, the engagement — and Tom's mental health — begin to unravel.
Directed by Nicholas Stoller and co-written by Stoller and Segel (the duo behind *Forgetting Sarah Marshall*), this is a Judd Apatow film through and through. EW's review calls it a "lively, original, and scattershot-hilarious ramble," but more than that, *The Five-Year Engagement* is a smart, funny interrogation of love, sacrifice, and how people and relationships grow and adapt. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *The Five-Year Engagement*: Starz
**EW grade: **B+ (read the review)
**Director: **Nicholas Stoller
**Cast: **Jason Segel, Emily Blunt, Rhys Ifans, Chris Pratt, Alison Brie
The Holdovers (2023)
Da'Vine Joy Randolph as Mary Lamb in 'The Holdovers'.
Focus Features/Everett Collection
*The Holdovers* transports us back to a very specific time and place. The setting is a 1970 New England boarding school, where cantankerous teacher Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) is tasked with looking after students who have nowhere to go during the Christmas holiday break. He develops a bond with Angus (Dominic Sessa), who has a difficult family situation, as well as Mary (Da'Vine Joy Randolph), the school's head cook who just lost her son in the Vietnam War. Together, the three muddle through the holidays, somehow, finding commonalities in their shared loneliness.
"*The Holdovers* is a warm hug of a movie and the closest thing we've had to a new holiday classic in quite some time," writes EW's critic. "Perhaps largely because it reinvigorates the message of another beloved Christmas film with its poignant reminder that no man is a failure who has friends." *—K.J.*
Where to watch *The Holdovers*: Starz
**EW grade: **A– (read the review)
**Director: **Alexander Payne
**Cast: **Paul Giamatti, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Dominic Sessa
Hot Fuzz (2007)
Simon Pegg as Nicholas Angel and Nick Frost as Danny Butterman in 'Hot Fuzz'.
Everett Collection
The buddy cop genre goes British in *Hot Fuzz, *a film about Sergeant Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) who is transferred to a different district for being too good at his job. Instead of kicking down doors and catching bad guys, Angel finds himself in the charming village of Sandford where the crime rate is nonexistent — but, somehow, the villagers keep winding up dead.
Directed by Edgar Wright — who previously collaborated with Pegg on the zombie hit *Shaun of the Dead* —* Hot Fuzz *is for people who like *Lethal Weapon* and *Bad Boys*, but wish those films offered more of a cottage core aesthetic. EW's critic notes Wright and Pegg's "sharp instincts for the hilarity of cultural differences. They just love mucking around in the pond of temperamental differences that separates the U.K. and the States." *—I.G. *
Where to watch *Hot Fuzz*: Starz
**EW grade:** (Read the review)
**Director: ** Edgar Wright
**Cast: **Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Jim Broadbent
The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023)
Tom Blyth as Coriolanus Snow and Rachel Zegler as Lucy Gray Baird in 'The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes'.
Murray Close/Lionsgate
Suzanne Collins famously only writes when she believes she has something to say, and for a decade, she was quiet. Then, in 2020, she released *The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes*, a prequel to the original trilogy that serves as President Coriolanus Snow's (Tom Blyth) origin story. The film adaptation of the book isn't a musical, but music does feature prominently, thanks to the vocal prowess of Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler), a tribute who is mentored by Snow during his time at school.
Right now is the perfect time to stream the film, as Collins released her newest *Hunger Games* book, *Sunrise on the Reaping*, in March 2025. (You can catch the film adaptation in theaters in November 2026.) *—I.G. *
Where to watch *The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes*: Starz**
**Director: **Francis Lawrence
**Cast: **Tom Blyth, Rachel Zegler, Peter Dinklage, Hunter Schafer, Josh Andrés Rivera, Jason Schwartzman, Viola Davis
The Hurt Locker (2008)
Jeremy Renner as Staff Sergeant William James in 'The Hurt Locker'. Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett
When your job requires you to disable bombs in the heat of battle, you suit up for work each day like it might be your last. In the second year of the Iraq War, Staff Sergeant James (Jeremy Renner) arrives to fill a vacancy in the Bravo Company, but finds that his unwillingness to communicate his plans and gonzo method of defusing bombs doesn't always jive with the rest of his company — especially Sergeant J. T. Sanborn (Anthony Mackie).
From former reporter and screenwriter Mark Boal (*Zero Dark Thirty*) and director Kathryn Bigelow, whose work on this film made her the first woman to walk away with the Best Director Oscar, *The Hurt Locker* is realistic, intense, and action-packed, chronicling the many effects war has on the people who fight it. As EW's critic at the time says, "This ain't no war videogame, no flashy, cinematic art piece; there's nothing virtual about this reality." *—I.G.*
Where to watch *The Hurt Locker*: Starz
**EW grade: **A (read the review)
**Director: **Kathryn Bigelow
**Cast:** Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, Brian Geraghty, Evangeline Lilly, Ralph Fiennes, David Morse, Guy Pearce
The King's Speech (2010)
Colin Firth as King George VI and Helena Bonham Carter as Queen Elizabeth in 'The King's Speech'.
Laurie Sparham/The Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett
Colin Firth won his Academy Award for Best Actor playing Prince Albert, the man who shocked the world when he became King George VI, and who surprised himself when he learned to speak as the voice of his people. A historical biopic that grounds its story in the relationship between Bertie (Firth) and his nontraditional speech therapist Lionel (Geoffrey Rush), *The King's Speech *is the story of one man's quest to overcome his lifelong stutter, with global consequences.
Helena Bonham Carter is excellent as Bertie's wife, Queen Elizabeth, but the film soars because of Firth. EW's critic writes, "he endows Albert-turned-George with a poignant dignity even while exposing his past as a lonely little boy who grew up stammering in the shadow of his imperious father and dashing brother." *—I.G. *
Where to watch *The King's Speech*: Starz
**Director: **Tom Hooper
**Cast: **Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush, Helena Bonham Carter, Guy Pearce, Timothy Spall, Derek Jacobi, Jennifer Ehle, Michael Gambon
Knocked Up (2007)
Katherine Heigl as Alison Scott and Seth Rogen as Ben Stone in 'Knocked Up'.
Based solely on the sheer number of films he wrote, directed, and produced during this period, it's reasonable to assume that Judd Apatow was responsible for at least 10 percent of the laughs enjoyed during the mid- to late-aughts. Released two years after the success of Apatow's *The 40-Year-Old Virgin*, *Knocked Up* stars a who's who of comedy legends past, present, and future.
The film follows Alison Scott (Katherine Heigl), an up-and-coming E! News reporter, and Ben Stone (Seth Rogen), a Canadian deadbeat she meets at a Los Angeles nightclub. When a drunken hookup between the two results in an unexpected pregnancy, everyone from Ben's slacker friends to Alison's sister's family get involved as the couple decides to keep the baby and attempt to stay together. Never one to over-edit, Apatow's film runs long, but the jokes are worth it. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Knocked Up*: Starz
**EW grade: **A (read the review)
**Director: **Judd Apatow
**Cast: **Katherine Heigl, Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, Jason Segel, Jay Baruchel, Martin Starr, Charlyne Yi, Leslie Mann, Paul Rudd, Maude Apatow, Iris Apatow
Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013)
Idris Elba as Nelson Mandela in 'Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom'.
Keith Bernstein
It's impossible for anyone to fully capture Nelson Mandela's impact, and the biggest issue in *Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom* is that the film tried. Released only a few months before the activist's death at the age of 95 in December of 2013, *Mandela *is a comprehensive remembering of his story, starting with his political awakening and incarceration, and ending with his rise to power as South Africa's president in a postapartheid world.
Idris Elba doesn't look like Mandela, but he doesn't need to: His towering performance captures the former president's spirit and convictions. Released around the same time as *12 Years a Slave*, *Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom *doesn't pack the same emotional punch, but it remains an important biography of a once-in-a-lifetime leader. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom*: Starz
**Director: **Justin Chadwick
**Cast: **Idris Elba, Naomie Harris, Tony Kgoroge, Riaad Moosa, Lindiwe Matshikiza, Jamie Bartlett, Terry Pheto, Deon Lotz
Minority Report (2002)
Tom Cruise as John Anderson and Samantha Morton as Agatha in 'Minority Report'. Everett Collection
One of the gold-standard sci-fi action films from the early aughts, *Minority Report* offers everything a genre fan could want: brow furrowing and sick stunts courtesy of star Tom Cruise, fast-moving direction provided by Steven Spielberg, and a moody, ominous audio aesthetic dreamed up by his frequent collaborator, legendary composer John Williams. With these powers combined, the filmmakers invite us to fast forward to the year 2054, when the country's system of law enforcement has undergone a seismic shift thanks to the introduction of the Precrime unit.
Relying on visions provided by "precogs," clairvoyant humans who can see murders before they happen, the unit is under orders to arrest potential criminals for crimes they are expected to commit in the future. But when Precrime Commanding Officer John Anderton (Cruise) discovers a flaw in the system, it's up to him to avoid capture and arrest from Department of Justice Agent Danny Witwer (Colin Farrell), and find justice for one of the precogs, Agatha (Samantha Morton). A chase movie crossed with an ethical conundrum, *Minority Report* will get your brain thinking and your heart pounding. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Minority Report*: Starz
**Director: **Steven Spielberg
**Cast: **Tom Cruise, Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton, Max von Sydow
Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Duane Jones as Ben in 'Night of the Living Dead'.
Courtesy Everett Collection
We have *Night of the Living Dead* to thank for our modern idea of zombies and the many tropes attached to the subgenre. Legendary director George Romero was inspired by the 1954 novel *I Am Legend* for this independent horror classic, which centers the action on a farmhouse overrun by ravenous, undead "ghouls." The film's allusions to then-current events (as EW's critic writes, "flesh-eating zombies as a Vietnam-era metaphor for America devouring itself") just make it all the more resonant. *—K.J.*
Where to watch *Night of the Living Dead*: Starz
**Director: **George Romero
**Cast: **Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea, Karl Hardman, Marilyn Eastman, Judith Ridley, Keith Wayne, Kyra Schon
Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Dylan Moran as David, Kate Ashfield as Liz, Simon Pegg as Shaun, and Lucy Davis as Dianne in 'Shaun of the Dead'.
Battling the undead has never been as funny as it is in Edgar Wright's romantic zombie comedy *Shaun of the Dead*. Shaun (Simon Pegg) is a man going through the motions — phoning it in at his dead-end job and in his dead-end relationship with his girlfriend of three years. But when London falls victim to a horde of zombies, Shaun finds new purpose in attempting to save himself and his loved ones from the staggering, dead-eyed infiltrators.
An intensely British comedy that uses the undead as a metaphor for the feeling of cruising through the adult years on autopilot, *Shaun of the Dead* is at its best when Shaun and his slacker best friend Ed (Nick Frost) come alive, arguing about zombie murder etiquette and wielding whatever weapons are nearby with varying degrees of success. *—I.G. *
Where to watch *Shaun of the Dead*: Starz through August 31
**EW grade:** (Read the review)
**Director: **Edgar Wright
**Cast: **Simon Pegg, Kate Ashfield, Lucy Davis, Nick Frost, Dylan Moran, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton
Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)
Tom Holland as Peter Parker in 'Spider-Man: No Way Home'.
Matt Kennedy/Sony Pictures Releasing/Marvel Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection
Tom Holland's third solo *Spider-Man* movie, *Spider-Man: No Way Home*, ties up some loose ends and touches hearts while doing it. The film's actors and production team were vigilant about keeping spoilers under wraps, and almost five years later, it's still worth protecting some of the movie's most special moments. Suffice it to say that a number of characters return, fans and critics loved the film, and Holland continues to take impeccable care of Peter Parker during his Marvel tour of duty. EW's critic applauds the ending, writing "what seems at first like pure fan service turns out to be some of the best and by far the most meta stuff Marvel has done, tender and funny and a little bit devastating." *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Spider-Man: No Way Home*: Starz
**EW grade: **B+ (read the review)
**Director: ** Jon Watts
**Cast: **Tom Holland, Zendaya, Benedict Cumberbatch, Jacob Batalon, Jon Favreau, Jamie Foxx, Willem Dafoe, Alfred Molina, Benedict Wong, Tony Revolori, Marisa Tomei
The Taking of Pelham 123 (2009)
John Travolta as Blue (center) and Luis Guzmán as Phil Ramos (right) in 'The Taking of Pelham 123'.
Rico Torres/Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
One of the many pieces of adapted material to snag a spot on this list, *The Taking of Pelham 123* has had quite the journey. The story was released as a novel in 1973, before being converted into a film a year later. A TV movie take on the story came out in the late '90s, but the version we can't stop thinking about is the remake released in 2009 starring Denzel Washington and John Travolta.
The premise is a thriller classic: New York City train dispatcher Walter Garber (Washington) is contacted by an anonymous man who refers to himself as Ryder (Travolta). Ryder claims to have hijacked an MTA train car, and threatens to murder the hostages inside unless he is given $10 million within 60 minutes. As the stakes rise and the minutes count down, Walter must find a way to keep Ryder talking, even if it means risking his life. Enhanced by an appearance from James Gandolfini as New York City's mayor, *The Taking of Pelham 123* has wheels, even if the train doesn't go far. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *The Taking of Pelham 123*: Starz
**EW grade:** B+ (read the review)
**Director:** Tony Scott
**Cast: **Denzel Washington, John Travolta, John Turturro, Luis Guzmán, Michael Rispoli, James Gandolfini **
This Is 40 (2012)
Leslie Mann as Debbie and Paul Rudd as Pete in 'This Is 40'.
Universal Pictures/Everett Collection
Judd Apatow expands the *Knocked Up* universe with *This Is 40*. Set five years after Ben and Alison's whirlwind courtship and pregnancy, *This Is 40* follows Alison's sister Debbie (Leslie Mann) and Debbie's husband Pete (Paul Rudd) as they explore what it means to be partners and parents in their 40s. *Knocked Up* was about the beginning of a relationship, but *This Is 40 *explores the gnarly portion in the middle of a marriage when you know everything about your partner, and have to figure out how to love them anyway. *—I.G.*
Where to watch *This Is 40*: Starz
**Director: **Judd Apatow
**Cast: **Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann, John Lithgow, Megan Fox, Albert Brooks
Wanderlust (2012)
Paul Rudd as George Gergenblatt and Jennifer Aniston as Linda Gergenblatt in 'Wanderlust'. Gemma La Mana/Universal
Manhattan real estate is the real enemy in *Wanderlust*, a rom-com about a yuppie couple who find themselves accidentally living on a hippie commune after being priced out of their New York City apartment. Disillusioned by their careers and lackluster marriage, George and Linda (Paul Rudd and Jennifer Aniston) find solace in the commune's nontraditional lifestyle, but can their relationship survive the temptation posed by the group's eccentric residents?
A whimsical ensemble comedy featuring a cast that only gets more impressive as the years pass, *Wanderlust* is a delightful reminder that Aniston is so much more than just Rachel Green. As EW's reviewer says, "It's a pleasure to see Aniston thrive in her comedy zone, secure in the knowledge that for every inch of propriety she's willing to cede, Paul Rudd is ready to get 10 times as crazy." *—I.G.*
Where to watch *Wanderlust*: Starz
**EW grade:** A– (read the review)
**Director: **David Wain
**Cast: **Paul Rudd, Jennifer Aniston, Justin Theroux, Alan Alda, Malin Akerman, Ken Marino, Joe Lo Truglio, Kathryn Hahn
Source: "AOL Movies"
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