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Where to Watch Free Movies Online: The Best Free Movie Streaming Services Right Now

Where to Watch Free Movies Online: The Best Free Movie Streaming Services Right Now

About This Event

You’ve cut the cord. But streaming services have gotten too expensive, so you’ve cut back on them, too. You don’t believe in piracy. Yet you still want to watch movies and TV shows. What is a person to do?

 

Stream for free! There is a bevy of free streaming sites out there that offer an impressive collection of films and television. Granted, you won’t find the newest blockbusters (or even older blockbusters), but these free movie streaming sites are a great way to fill in the gaps in your film history, or discover unique, underground, “hidden gems” that will make you the coolest kid at the party.

 

So pop that popcorn, relax, and check out these great streaming sites that offer free movies online. Most of them can be viewed in a web browser or a dedicated app.

 

And if you do happen to be a subscriber to a streaming service, check out our recommendation lists for the best movies to watch on Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and Disney+!

 

YouTube

 

Youtube is, of course, the king of free streaming original content online and they’re also hosting their own paid subscription service YouTube Red, but hidden away in the weeds of their rental platform is a pretty robust library of ad-supported movies you can stream for free. Current highlights include Child’s Play, the Sylvester Stallone arm-wrestling drama Over the Top, Get Shorty, Bandits, and Killer Klowns from Outer Space.

 

TubiTV

tubitv.com

 

A huge selection of movies and TV shows that are always free, Tubi covers a wide range of genres – that is to say, all genres. You won’t find new releases, but you will find some big hits from the last twenty years or so. Modern classics in their collection include Total Recall, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Train to Busan, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The television collection isn’t as impressive, mostly consisting of old syndicated shows like The Incredible Hulk, Silk Stalkings, and Third Rock From the Sun.

 

Hoopla

hoopladigital.com

 

Remember how exciting it was when libraries started offering movies and audio books for rent? Remember what a pain in the ass it was to go down to the library, only to discover their already meager selection was considerably depleted by other borrowers? Hoopla Digital is like a library you can browse from home. They offer movies, TV shows, audio books, comics, and music. The titles you can expect to find here are the same kind you can expect to find in a library: First Reformed, The Color Out of Space, Ella Enchanted, 13 Going on 30, and What We Do in the Shadows to name a few. The only downside is you have to have a library card to use the site… and the only place you can get a library card is to physically visit a library.

 

Kanopy

kanopy.com

 

Similar to Hoopla Digital, Kanopy offers access to “quality, thoughtful entertainment” for free with your library card or through your university. Their focus seems to be on indie films, documentaries, and foreign films. The only downside is that not all libraries and universities have signed up to be part of Kanopy, so check their list. If you do have access, the service offers a pretty incredible selection of new and older titles alike (as well as tones of informative and educational content), including Lady Bird, Eighth Grade, Chinatown, First Reformed, and Collette. This one is of special note if you’re an A24 fan since they feature a ton of their recent titles.

 

Vudu

vudu.com

 

Vudu is best known as a place to buy and rent digital movies. You know when you buy a Blu-ray and there is a code offering you a free digital download? Frequently, that digital download is through Vudu. The service also offers thousands of movies and hundreds of TV series that are free with ads. You can find Black Hawk Down, Road House, Halloween: H20, Bloodsport and more on Vudu.

 

IMDb TV

imdb.com/tv

 

IMDb isn’t just the ultimate resource for film fans. They also have hundreds of free TV shows and movies streaming on their site, along with IMDb original productions (mostly interviews). Unlike most of the other services, IMDb TV is only available on Fire TV devices or on your computer (because duh, IMDb is owned by Amazon — speaking of which, you can also the available IMDBtv titles through the Amazon Video player). Check out movies like Paddington, Spider-Man, Ghost World, Eat Pray Love, and Blade Runner 2049 the movies section, and Heroes, Fringe, and The Middle in the television section.

 

Crackle

sonycrackle.com

 

Hundreds of free movies, TV shows, and originals, all ad-supported. Unsurprisingly, everything is a Sony project, but they have a lot of good selections here: Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Wes Anderson‘s debut film Bottle Rocket, Cliffhanger, Hollow Man, The Machinist, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and many, many more. TV includes mostly classics like All In the Family, Charlie’s Angels, The Partridge Family, and What’s Happening.

 

Popcorn Flix

popcornflix.com

 

In addition to the standard collection of free, ad-supported movies and a handful of TV shows, Popcorn Flix also has a “viral video” section that is like a curated YouTube. They also offer original films (like Teacher of the Year starring Keegan Michael Key). Some movies to check out: Black Death, Sabrina, The Void, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Hard Rain.

 

pluto.tv

 

This is basically cable TV without the cable. It offers over 100 free streaming channels, including movies, sports, news, classic TV, and semi-recent reality television. There are channels devoted entirely to Doctor Who, Dora the Explorer, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, anime, Comedy Central Roasts, Antiques Roadshow, and Mystery Science Theater 3000. If you want to watch on your own schedule, there is an On Demand section. While it does have some good flicks including The Net, We Own the Night, The Rainmaker, Addams Family Values, and more. The only downside? there is no search feature.

 

CrunchyRoll

crunchyroll.com

 

I don’t know much about anime, but I do know that CrunchyRoll.com is the place to stream anime online. With hundreds of anime series, and a few live-action Japanese dramas, you can stream lower-res, ad-supported videos for free, then chat about them in the community. Bonus points for the “random” button, which will randomly load up the first episode of a series.

 

FilmRise

filmrise.com

 

Billed as a streaming service put together by “industry-leading producers and financiers,” FilmRise.com seems to have films and TV shows that can be found on a lot of other free streaming services (Roseanne, Memento, Monster). The movies can only be viewed on their app – not on your web browser. In addition, their search feature on the website doesn’t work. On the upside, their site is clean and easy to navigate and current highlights include Prom Night, Big Fan, and Whale Rider.

 

Comet

comettv.com

 

Comet is a broadcast TV channel that focuses on science-fiction, including titles like Audrey Rose, Amityville II: The Possession, Futureworld and Journey to the Center of the Earth. They don’t offer anything on-demand, but you can stream the channel for free in a web browser and via a variety of apps.

 

Charge

watchcharge.com

 

From the same people who run Comet comes Charge, which is dedicated to action programming. Like Comet, it is all streaming. Some of their films include UHF, The Family Business, and Rocky I-V.

 

bynwr

bynwr.com

 

Curated by director Nicolas Winding Refn (Drive, The Neon Demon), By NWR features three films per month. Each are handpicked by Refn, fully restored, and are joined by essays by a variety of film critics and historians. The films are mostly grindhouse flicks: nudie-cuties, horror, crime, “hicksploitation,” and other obscure exploitation subgenres. If titles like Satan in High Heels, She-Man: A Story of Fixation, and Cottonpickin’ Chickenpickers don’t pique your interest, you may be dead inside.

 

Internet Archive

archive.org

 

The Internet Archive is a non-profit collection that includes over four million videos. They are largely public domain films; short films uploaded by their creators; TV news reels; movie trailers; and stock footage. Some highlights: George Romero‘s Night of the Living Dead; Ed Wood‘s Plan 9 From Outer Space; The Sheik starring Rudolf Valentino; several Charlie Chaplin classics; 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; episodes of The Three Stooges; vintage cartoons like Woody Woodpecker and Popeye; and my personal favorite, mental hygiene films.

 

CW Seed

cwseed.com

 

CW Seed has a couple-dozen TV series you can watch, in their entirety, for free. This includes the complete run of CW shows like The Secret Circle, Who’s Line Is It Anyway?, and Hellcats; off-network shows like The Ghost Whisperer, Pushing Daisies, and Schitt’s Creek; and original animations like Supernatural: The Anime Series and Constantine: City of Demons.

 

ABC

abc.com

 

Most networks have a handful of episodes of their current shows to stream. ABC.com offers this, but also full runs of a handful of canceled shows, including classics like My So-Called Life and Felicity; newer treats like Ugly Betty and The Muppets reboot; and a couple genre favorites of mine: Reaper and The River.

 

Shout! Factory

shoutfactorytv.com

 

If you are familiar with Shout Factory, then their streaming selection will satisfy your viewing needs. Digging in to the vast Shout Factory catalogue of cult, underground, foreign, and generally weird films, every genre is represented here: horror, sci-fi, comedy, drama, martial arts, western, action, and documentaries. The standouts here are collections of the original Mystery Science Theater 3000 films, Riff Trax, and Elvira’s Movie Macabre. Most of the films come from the 1980s or earlier, so if you are looking for a new release, it’s not here.

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