The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix
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Feeling less “Netflix and chill” and more “Netflix and chill your blood imagining all the ways the world could end” these days? Looking to disassociate yourself into a universe filled with murderous creatures, anarchic nomads, and other assorted existential threats? If so, the streaming giant’s got you covered.
Whether you prefer it when humanity ends with an outbreak (28 Years Later) or with a whimper (Don’t Look Up), read on for Entertainment Weekly’s list of the 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix right now.
28 Years Later (2025)
Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson in ’28 Years Later’.
Miya Mizuno/Columbia
Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later proves the franchise still has a lot to say. Released 18 years after 28 Weeks Later (2007), the third installment in the postapocalyptic horror series is set on one of the British Isles, where a community has flourished, isolated from the more evolved versions of the infected that still terrorize the region. The film follows 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), who must contend with his mother’s growing illness and his father’s inability to help her.
Writer Alex Garland and director Danny Boyle reunite for the first time since 28 Days Later (2002), and their collaboration meditates on British culture and isolationism in a post-Brexit, COVID-impacted world. EW’s writer calls the film “strange, unpredictable, gloriously revolting, darkly funny, and, when you least expect it, rather touching. It’s a full package, and one of the richest horror movies in a very long time.” Its own sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, will premiere in January 2026. —Ilana Gordon
Where to watch 28 Years Later: Netflix
EW grade: A–
Director: Danny Boyle
Cast: Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jack O’Connell, Alfie Williams, Ralph Fiennes
Battleship (2012)
Taylor Kitsch as Lt. Alex Hopper in ‘Battleship’.
Frank Masi
Battleship proves board games aren’t just for basements. With an eclectic cast that includes both Liam Neeson and Rihanna, Battleship is a military science fiction action film that combines a love story, aliens, and good old-fashioned naval warfare — and somehow manages to pull it all off.
Propelled by the best special effects available at the time, while still nodding to the game’s original low-tech roots, Battleship also manages to reunite Friday Night Lights director Peter Berg with FNL star Taylor Kitsch to great effect. If you’re looking for an action film that won’t sink under the weight of your expectations, Battleship, EW’s critic writes, is the “rousing, engaging, and emotionally complex action war picture the silly 2001 action war picture Pearl Harbor only wished it could be.” —I.G.
Where to watch Battleship: Netflix
EW grade: B+
Director: Peter Berg
Cast: Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgård, Rihanna, Brooklyn Decker, Tadanobu Asano, Liam Neeson
Bird Box (2018)
Sandra Bullock as Malorie Hayes in ‘Bird Box’.
Merrick Morton/Netflix
This deeply unsettling Sandra Bullock film finds humanity blindly stumbling to survive after an unseen force drives the bulk of the population to suicide. “It’s a thriller about motherhood,” director Susanne Bier tells EW. “(Bullock’s character is) very forceful, very uncompromising. She’s a very contemporary female hero.”
EW’s critic calls Bird Box “taut and defiantly in the moment.” Watch it, and you’ll never take the luxury of driving without a blindfold for granted again. —Sara Netzley
Where to watch Bird Box: Netflix
EW grade: B
Director: Susanne Bier
Cast: Sandra Bullock, Trevante Rhodes, Danielle Macdonald, Rosa Salazar, Sarah Paulson
Don’t Look Up (2021)
Jonah Hill as Jason Orlean, Leonardo DiCaprio as Dr. Randall Mindy, Meryl Streep as President Orlean, and Jennifer Lawrence as Kate Dibiasky in ‘Don’t Look Up’.
Everett
The mega-comet is real, but it’s a fame and fake news apocalypse that ultimately dooms the Earth in Don’t Look Up. EW’s critic calls the Adam McKay film a “winking indictment of climate-change deniers and alternative-fact peddlers” who are happy to ignore global existential threats as they chase a little more clout. As McKay tells EW, “This movie came from my terror about the climate crisis and the fact that we live in a society that tends to place it as the fourth or fifth news story, or even deny that it’s happening, and how horrifying that is, but at the same time (how) preposterously funny.”
Don’t Look Up stars Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, and, conservatively, a billion other famous faces. (As tempting a target as Earth is for killer comets, McKay’s gravitational pull on actors is even stronger.) —S.N.
Where to watch Don’t Look Up: Netflix
EW grade: B
Director: Adam McKay
Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, Meryl Streep, Jonah Hill
Edge of Tomorrow (2014)
Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’.
David James
The characters in Groundhog Day and Palm Springs might have thought they were stuck in the worst time loops possible, but they were never forced to die in the same battle over and over again. In Edge of Tomorrow, Tom Cruise stars as Major Cage, a public affairs officer who is more accustomed to running his mouth than discharging his weapons.
After Cage is dispatched to the front lines against aliens known as Mimics who have overtaken Earth, he finds himself repeatedly dying in the same fight — and the only person who believes him is war hero Sgt. Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), who once experienced something similar. Doubted by the Army, including General Brigham (Brendan Gleeson), it’s up to Vrataski and Cage to devise a plan to use Cage’s looping abilities to destroy the Mimics and save humanity. —I.G.
Where to watch Edge of Tomorrow: Netflix
EW grade: B+
Director: Doug Liman
Cast: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Paxton
Elysium (2013)
Matt Damon as Max and Wagner Moura as Spider in ‘Elysium’.
Kimberley French/Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
Matt Damon is a man on a mission to save himself in the 2013 sci-fi thriller Elysium. Damon plays Max, a former car thief living in the dystopic remains of Los Angeles in the year 2154. After Max is accidentally exposed to radiation at work, he learns he has five days left to live. His only chance for survival is to leave Earth and head to Elysium — the artificial world where the wealthy reside — which houses technology capable of curing any ailment. But when Max hijacks information belonging to Elysium’s defense secretary (Jodie Foster), it seems unlikely he will ever reach his intended destination alive.
Directed by Neill Blomkamp, EW’s critic writes, “Elysium confirms the talent — for razory mayhem and shocking satire, for the crazed spectacle of future decay — that Blomkamp showcased in his amazing first feature, District 9 (2009).” —I.G.
Where to watch Elysium: Netflix
EW grade: B+
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Cast: Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley, Alice Braga, Diego Luna, Wagner Moura, William Fichtner
Godzilla Minus One (2023)
Kuranosuke Susaki as Seiji Akitsu and Godzilla in ‘Godzilla Minus One’.
Toho International/Courtesy Everett Collection
Godzilla Minus One won the 2024 Oscar for Best Visual Effects, but the film is so much more than a monster movie with incredible CGI. Set in Japan, a country ravaged by the after-effects of World War II, the film follows a failed kamikaze pilot as he is haunted both by his performance during the war and a gargantuan monster with a heat ray capable of razing Tokyo.
A love story disguised as a horror movie, Godzilla Minus One offers stunning performances, a fascinating historical perspective, and — of course — the kind of city-trampling mayhem one would expect when selecting a Godzilla movie. You know they did a good job when the filmmaker has you sympathizing with both the monster and the citizens rallying to defeat it. —I.G.
Where to watch Godzilla Minus One: Netflix
Director: Takashi Yamazaki
Cast: Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada, Munetaka Aoki, Hidetaka Yoshioka, Sakura Ando, Kuranosuke Sasaki
Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters (2017)
Godzilla in ‘Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters’.
Everett
It’s a Gojira-pocalpyse in Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters, the first in Polygon Pictures’ anime trilogy that follows a group of refugees returning to a ravaged Earth 20,000 years after the cranky lizard drove out all the humans.
Directors Hiroyuki Seshita and Kôbun Shizuno created a visual feast in this fresh, sci-fi-infused take on the monster mythos, continuing in Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle and Godzilla: The Planet Eater, which are also available on Netflix. —S.N.
Where to watch Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters: Netflix
Directors: Kōbun Shizuno, Hiroyuki Seshita
Cast: Mamoru Miyano, Takahiro Sakurai, Kana Hanazawa, Yūki Kaji
I Am Mother (2019)
Clara Rugaard as Daughter in ‘I Am Mother’.
Ian Routledge/Sundance Institute
If you like a little sci-fi with your apocalypse, you should meet this Mother. After humanity’s extinction, a strange woman (Hilary Swank) upends the life of a teenager raised in an austere postapocalyptic bunker under the care of a maternal robot voiced by Rose Byrne.
Australian filmmaker Grant Sputore’s debut outing offers a heady mix of rich characters, shifting loyalties, and thought-provoking ideas, along with a fierce performance from Danish actress Clara Rugaard as a young woman grappling with the threat to the only life she’s ever known. —S.N.
Where to watch I Am Mother: Netflix
Director: Grant Sputore
Cast: Clara Rugaard, Rose Byrne, Hilary Swank
Leave the World Behind (2023)
Mahershala Ali as G.H. Scott, Myha’la as Ruth Scott, Julia Roberts as Amanda Sandford, and Ethan Hawke as Clay Sandford in ‘Leave the World Behind’.
JoJo Whilden/Netflix
Based on a book by Rumaan Alam, this star-studded film follows two families who are thrown together when a cyberterror attack knocks society offline. Director Sam Esmail tells EW he wanted to “get inside your mind and unlock the fears that you might really have about our world” in Leave the World Behind, which was produced by Barack and Michelle Obama’s production company. You can’t argue about the film’s pedigree — or the terror of a world without technology. —S.N.
Where to watch Leave the World Behind: Netflix
Director: Sam Esmail
Cast: Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Kevin Bacon
The Martian (2015)
Matt Damon as Mark Watney in ‘The Martian’.
20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett Collection
Based on author Andy Weir’s best-selling novel and fronted by a tour de force performance from Matt Damon, Ridley Scott’s The Martian was nominated for Oscars in multiple categories — including Best Picture — but the real winner here is science. Scott and his team worked closely with NASA experts to nail the specifics, and the movie both educates and entertains.
The Martian begins on Mars in the year 2035, when astronaut Mark Watney (Damon) and his fellow NASA crew members — led by Cmdr. Melissa Lewis (Jessica Chastain) — find their mission interrupted by severe weather. After Watney is knocked out by the storm and presumed dead, the crew departs without him, leaving the astronaut stranded on the Red Planet. Unwilling to give up, Watney, whose area of expertise is botany, must figure out how to connect with comms and survive on Mars. —I.G.
Where to watch The Martian: Netflix
EW grade: A–
Director: Ridley Scott
Cast: Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig, Jeff Daniels, Michael Peña, Sean Bean, Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie, Mackenzie Davis, Benedict Wong, Donald Glover, Chen Shu, Eddy Ko, Chiwetel Ejiofor
The Midnight Sky (2020)
Felicity Jones as Sully in ‘The Midnight Sky’.
Netflix
George Clooney directed, co-produced, and starred in The Midnight Sky, which finds his lushly bearded Arctic scientist attempting to prevent a crew of astronauts, including Felicity Jones and David Oyelowo, from returning to Earth where a global catastrophe awaits them.
Filming took place in Iceland, and the weather proved to be its own mini-catastrophe for Clooney. “It was like 40 below, 60-70-mile-an-hour winds, and it’s tricky because you could get lost 15 feet away from the camera,” he told EW. “I lost like 25 pounds (for the part), so I was pretty weak in general and I’m also directing a big film and you need energy. I was pretty beat up.” —S.N.
Where to watch The Midnight Sky: Netflix
EW grade: B
Director: George Clooney
Cast: George Clooney, Felicity Jones, David Oyelowo, Tiffany Boone, Demián Bichir
Oxygen (2021)
Mélanie Laurent as Elizabeth ‘Liz’ Hansen in ‘Oxygen’.
Netflix
A nightmare comes to life for claustrophobics everywhere, Oxygen is a French-language sci-fi film that thinks outside the box in terms of action. At the genesis, an unidentified woman (Mélanie Laurent) awakens in an airtight medical unit, unsure of who or where she is. Interactions with the system’s AI — dubbed M.I.L.O. (Medical Interface Liaison Officer) — provide some clarity as to her identity, but no matter what she tries, she cannot escape her prison.
As she seeks to understand who placed her in the box and why, truths about her personal life and the current state of the world come into focus — but her search for context is actually a race to outwit the slowly depleting oxygen levels. Laurent is excellent, and despite being forced to perform on her back, she manages to imbue the film with a strong sense of determination and humanity. —I.G.
Where to watch Oxygen: Netflix
EW grade: B
Director: Alexandre Aja
Cast: Mélanie Laurent, Mathieu Amalric, Malik Zidi
This Is the End (2013)
Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco, and Craig Robinson as themselves in ‘This Is the End’.
Suzanne Hanover/Sony Pictures/Everett
World destruction has never been funnier than in This Is the End, a meta-comedy about Hollywood, the Rapture, and who deserves to survive. What starts out as a party at James Franco’s house — featuring a who’s who of early 2010s comedy talent — quickly devolves into a dystopian hellscape, played with the utmost gravitas by the stars who manage to survive the fiery chaos.
Directors Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg flawlessly satirize the actors’ public personas to deliver a movie that they claim is 85 percent improvised. The jokes might be off-the-cuff, but the premise is rock solid and pristinely executed. As EW’s critic notes, “It’s the wildest screen comedy in a long time, and also the smartest, the most fearlessly inspired, and the snort-out-loud funniest.” —I.G.
Where to watch This Is the End: Netflix
EW grade: A
Directors: Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg
Cast: James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, Michael Cera, Emma Watson
Train to Busan (2016)
Gong Yoo as Seok-woo in ‘Train to Busan’.
Everett Collection
The only thing faster than a bullet train is the zombie infection overtaking its passengers. In the South Korean action horror film Train to Busan, Seok-woo (Gong Yoo) is a work-obsessed hedge fund manager and absentee father who agrees to accompany his young daughter Soo-an (Kim Su-an) on a trip from Seoul to Busan so she can spend her birthday with her mother. As the train departs, a sick woman begins transitioning into a zombie — and infecting everyone around her.
Now barreling full-speed across the country, Seok-woo, Soo-an, and the other passengers must find a way to survive the apocalyptic journey in order to find refuge in Busan. These zombies seem to have studied at the World War Z School of Swarming; they move at the same frenetic speed, aiming to infect everyone in their path. —I.G.
Where to watch Train to Busan: Netflix
Director: Yeon Sang-ho
Cast: Gong Yoo, Jung Yu-mi, Ma Dong-seok, Kim Su-an, Choi Woo-shik, Ahn So-hee, Kim Eui-sung
What Happened to Monday (2017)
Noomi Rapace as one of the Settman siblings in ‘What Happened to Monday’.
Jonas Stolpe/Netflix
Orphan Black lovers will want to check out What Happened to Monday, a 2017 sci-fi action thriller directed by Tommy Wirkola. The film stars Noomi Rapace, giving seven unique performances as septuplet sisters, each named after a different day of the week. The siblings live in a fascist America where overpopulation has necessitated the creation of a Child Allocation Bureau (run by Glenn Close), which imposes a single-child policy on all families.
The septuplets live secretly with their grandfather (Willem Dafoe), share the name Karen Settman (a relic from their dead mother), and are only allowed to leave the house on the day of the week that corresponds with their name. But after Monday goes out and never comes home, it’s up to her sisters to save her — at the risk of exposing themselves. —I.G.
Where to watch What Happened to Monday: Netflix
Director: Tommy Wirkola
Cast: Noomi Rapace, Glenn Close, Willem Dafoe
Δημοσιεύτηκε: 2025-11-01 11:38:00
πηγή: ew.com









